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BACHELOR (from Med. See also: young See also: man
.
The word, however, as it possesses several widely distinct applications, has passed through many meanings, and its ultimate origin is still involved in a certain amount of obscurity
.
The derivation from Welsh back, little, is mentioned as " possible " by See also: Skeat (Etymological See also: Dictionary), but is "definitely discarded" by the New See also: English Dictionary, and that given here is suggested as probable
.
The word baccalarius was applied to the See also: tenant of a baccalaria (from baccalia, a herd of cows, bacca being a Low Latin variant of vacca), which was presumably at first a grazing See also: farm and was practically the same as a vaselleria, i.e. the See also: fief of a sub-vassal
.
Just, however, as the character and the See also: size of the baccalaria varied in different ages, so the word baccalarius changed its significance; thus in the 8th century it was applied to the rustici, whether men or See also: women (baccalariae), who worked for the tenant of a nzansus
.
Throughout all its meanings the word has retained the idea of subordination suggested in this origin
.
Thus it came to be applied to various categories of persons as follows.—(1) Ecclesiastics of an inferior grade, e.g. young monks or even recently appointed canons (Severtius, de episcopis Lugdunensibus, p
.
377, in du Cange)
.
(2) Those belonging to the lowest stage of See also: knighthood
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Knights bachelors were either poor vassals who could not afford to take the See also: field under their own banner, or knights too young to support the responsibility and dignity of knights bannerets (see KNIGHTHOOD AND CHIVALRY)
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(3) Those holding the preliminary degree of a university, enabling them to proceed to that of master (magister) which alone entitled them to teach
.
In this sense the word baccalarius or baccalaureu3 first appears at the university of
See also: Paris in the 13th century, in the See also: system. of degrees established under the auspices of See also: Pope See also: Gregory IX., as applied to scholars still in statu pupillari
.
Thus there were two classes of baccalarii: the baccalarii cursores,i.e. theological candidates passed for See also: admission to the divinity course, and the baccalarii dispositi, who, having completed thiscourse, were entitled to proceed to the higher degrees
.
In See also: modern See also: universities the significance of the degree of bachelor, in relation to the others, varies; e.g. at See also: Oxford and Cambridge the bachelor can proceed to his mastership by simply retaining his name on the books and paying certain fees; at other universities a further examination is still necessary
.
But in no See also: case is the bachelor a full member of the university
.
The degree of bachelor (of arts, &c.) is See also: borne by women also
.
(4) The younger or inferior members of a See also: trade gild or city See also: company, otherwise known as "yeomen " (now obsolete)
.
(5) Unmarried men, since these presumably have their fortunes yet to make and are not full citizens
.
The word bachelor, now confined to men in this See also: connotation, was formerly sometimes used of women also
.
Bachelors, in the' sense of unmarried men, have in many countries been subjected to penal See also: laws
.
At See also: Sparta, citizens who remained unmarried after a certain age suffered various penalties
.
They were not allowed to witness the gymnastic exercises of the maidens; and during winter they were compelled to See also: march naked round the market-place, singing a
See also: song composed against them-selves and expressing the See also: justice of their punishment
.
The usual respect of the young to the old was not paid to bachelors (See also: Plot
.
Lye
.
15) . At Athens there was no definite legislation on thisSee also: matter; but certain minor laws are evidently dictated by a spirit akin to the Spartan See also: doctrine (see Schomann, Gr
.
Alterth. i
.
548)
.
At See also: Rome, though there appear traces of some earlier legislation in the.matter, the first clearly known See also: law is that called the Lex Julia, passed about 18 B.C
.
It does not appear to have ever come into full operation; and in A.D
.
9 it was incorporated with the Lex Papia et Poppaea, the two laws being frequently cited as one, Lex Julia et Papia Poppaea
.
This law, while restricting marriages between the several classes of the See also: people, laid heavy penalties on unmarried persons, gave certain privileges to those citizens who had several See also: children, and finally imposed lighter penalties on married persons who were childless
.
Isolated instances of such penalties occur during the See also: middle ages, e.g. by a charter of liberties granted by Matilda I., countess of See also: Nevers, to See also: Auxerre in 1223, an See also: annual tax of five solidi is imposed on any man qui non ha See also: bet uxorem et est bachelarius
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In Britain there has been no See also: direct legislation bearing on bachelors; but, occasionally, taxes have been made to bear more heavily on them than on others
.
Instances of this are the See also: act (6 and 7 Will
.
III.) passed in 1695; the tax on servants, 1785; and the income tax, 1798
.
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