Leiden Uni. The Most Civilised Place on Earth? |
I
have just taught an MA class at the University of Leiden, and fell in
love with the institution. The chairs of both Latin and Greek are held by
wonderful women, a situation I never expected to see at
any university in my lifetime. The students have all learned their excellent
Greek in state schools. They come from diverse social and ethnic backgrounds.
Leiden
was awarded its university in 1575 by William I of Orange, as a reward for
holding out when besieged by the Spanish.
The foundation story claims that the citizens were offered a choice of
reward--advantageous tax breaks or a university-- and chose the latter. The
inhabitants of Leiden are still actually proud that their forefathers chose
intellectual life over lucre.
Gulliver in Brogdingnag |
The
Leiden students, of both sexes, are so tall that I feel like Gulliver in the
land of the outsize Brobdingnagians, whose advanced culture was based on the
practice of reason. They are polite, but I am careful not to offend them. Remember
the tackles with which the enormous Dutch national football team assaulted all
opponents in the 2010 World Cup? These culminated in the final, with Nigel de
Jong’s chest-high kicking of the Spanish midfielder Xabi Alonso. The (British) referee was so scared of de Jong
that he only gave him a yellow card.
Why I am careful not to offend Dutch people |
Perhaps
the Dutch are so tall because of the proteinous dairy products derived from
their glossy Friesian cattle. Perhaps it
was an evolutionary adaptation which helped them fix their windmills without
having to use ladders. Since the Renaissance, they have themselves traced their
height to the rigorous physical training of their forefathers, the glorious tribe of
the Batavi, whom Tacitus described as most courageous.
The
Batavi were exceptional horsemen and swimmers and conducted rebellions against
Rome when they felt they were treated disrespectfully. In my favourite Latin inscription of all time,
a Batavian
auxiliary serving under Hadrian in AD 117 boasts, ‘I swam across the wide
waters of the deep Danube with all my arms; and while a weapon from a bow hung
in the air fell, I transfixed it with an arrow and broke it, I whom no Roman
nor barbarian, no soldier with a javelin nor Parthian was ever able to outdo…’
Fectio, the Dutch Batavian Re-Enactment Society |
The Batavians’ descendants, at least
in their football stadiums, still systematically applaud when their stars
execute violence against their opponents. I am finding this hard to reconcile with the rational
organisation of society and high levels of civilisation and culture which the
country has achieved. Please can someone enlighten me?
No comments:
Post a Comment