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scholae
Scholae ((ギリシア語:Σχολαί)) is a Latin word, literally meaning "schools" (from the singular ''schola'', ''school'' or ''group'') that was used in the late Roman Empire to signify a unit of Imperial Guards. The unit survived in the Byzantine Empire until the 12th century. Michel Rouche succinctly traced the word's development, especially in the West: "The term ''schola'', which once referred to the imperial guard, came to be applied in turn to a train of warrior-servants who waited on the king, to the group of clergymen who waited on the bishop, to the monks of a monastery, and ultimately to a choral society; it did not mean 'school' before the ninth century."〔Rouche, "Private life conquers state and society", in Paul Veyne, ed. ''A History of Private Life: I. From Pagan Rome to Byzantium'' (Harvard University Press) 1987:429.〕 ==The imperial ''Scholae''==
While the singular ''schola'' still was used to refer to learning of singing and a mode of writing, the plural had an independent meaning. Next to the old kind of school, the Scholae Palatinae, established by Constantine the Great as a replacement to the Praetorian Guard, was the training center of the imperial palace guard. It remained based at Constantinople, eventually declining to a purely ceremonial role. However, in the 8th century, the ''Scholae'' were reformed into one of the elite cataphract ''Tagmata'' regiments, and continued to serve until the reign of Alexios I Komnenos.
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