Citations:artistæ

Noun: plural of

 * 1835, Henry Malden, On the Origin of Universities and Academical Degrees, John Taylor; page #101:
 * Thus we have seen that at Paris the bishop was the chancellor of the faculty of theology ; the chancellor of St. Geneviève of the rest of the university : at Bologna, the archdeacon was the chancellor of the lawyers, physicians, and artistæ ; the bishop, of the theologians.
 * 1884, Joseph Stevenson in The Month; Volume LI, page #467:
 * Minute rules are given for the safe custody of the books, vestments, and common seal ; also for the servants, the bursar, and the money in the common chest : The Master and Fellows may permit certain “ artistæ ” to attend lectures on civil or canon law.
 * 1906, William Francis Thomas Butler, The Lombard Communes, T. Fisher; page #182:
 * He evidently distinguishes artistæ from popolo, but it seems much more likely that he is misled by the customs of his own day, and that the artistæ were really members of the arti or guilds which composed the popolo.