Alma mater (; : almae matres) is an allegory Latin phrase meaning 'nourishing mother'. It personifies a school that a person has attended or graduated from.
target="_blank" rel="nofollow"> "alma", Oxford Dictionaries. Retrieved October 11, 2018. The term is related to alumnus, meaning 'nursling', which describes a school graduate.
In its earliest usage, alma mater was an epithet for various , especially Ceres or Cybele. Shorter Oxford English Dictionary, 3rd edition Later, in Catholicism, it became a title for Mary, mother of Jesus. By the early 17th century, the nursing mother became an allegory for universities. Used by many schools in Europe and North America, it has special association with the University of Bologna, whose motto Alma Mater Studiorum ("nurturing mother of studies") emphasizes its role in originating the modern university.
Several university campuses in North America display artistic representations of alma mater, depicted as a robed woman wearing a laurel wreath crown. The earliest and most famous of these is the bronze Alma Mater statue at Columbia University, designed in 1901 by Daniel Chester French. In the US the term alma mater is often used to describe a school song.
After the fall of Rome, the term was used in Christian liturgy to describe Jesus' mother, Mary. "Alma Redemptoris Mater" is a well-known eleventh century antiphon devoted to Mary.
The earliest documented use of the term to refer to a university is in 1600, when the University of Cambridge printer, John Legate, began using an emblem for the university press. The first-known appearance of the device is in William Perkins', A Golden Chain, a book first printed by Legate in 1600. On the title-page, the Latin phrase Alma Mater Cantabrigia ("nourishing mother Cambridge") is inscribed on a pedestal bearing a lactating woman wearing a mural crown.
In reference works of English etymology, often the first university-related usage is cited as 1710, when an academic mother figure is mentioned in a remembrance of Henry More by Richard Ward.
The Alma Mater Europaea in Salzburg, Austria, an international university founded by the European Academy of Sciences and Arts in 2010, uses the term as its official name.
In the United States, the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, has been called the "Alma Mater of the Nation" because of its ties to the founding of the country.
At Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, and the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, British Columbia, the main student government is known as the Alma Mater Society.
Other tributes to alma mater include Lorado Taft 1929 sculpture at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and Cyrus Dallin's 1925 sculpture at the Mary Institute in 1925, commissioned by Washington University supporters.
An altarpiece mural in Yale University's Sterling Memorial Library, painted in 1932 by Eugene Savage, depicts the Alma Mater as a bearer of light and truth, standing in the midst of figures representing the arts and sciences.
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