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INSTITUTE (from Lat. instituere, to e...

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V14, Page 650 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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INSTITUTE (from
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Lat. instituere, to establish or set up)
  , something established, an institution, particularly any society established for an
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artistic, educational, scientific or social purpose . The word seems to have been first applied in
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English to such institutions for the
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advancement of science or
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art as were modelled on the
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great French society, the Institut
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National (see
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ACADEMIES) . It is thus the name of such societies as the Royal Institute of
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British Architects, the Imperial Institute and the like . It is extended to similar organizations, particularly to educational, on a smaller or
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local scale, such as
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Mechanics' or Workmen's Institutes, and is sometimes applied to charitable
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foundations . In the
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United States the word is, in a particular sense, applied to periodic classes giving instruction in the principles of
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education to the teachers of elementary and
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district
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schools . The
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term " institute " is often used to translate the
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Lat. institutio, in the sense of a
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treatise on the elements of any subject, and particularly of law or jurisprudence; thus the compilation of the principles of
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Roman law, made by order of the emperor Justinian, is known as Justinian's Institutes, and hence Coke's treatise on English law, of which the first
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part is better known as Coke upon Littleton, is called The Institute . The same title is borne by Calvin's
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work on the elements of the Christian
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doctrine .

End of Article: INSTITUTE (from Lat. instituere, to establish or set up)
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