According to the
Lexikon des Mittelalters and
A History of the University in Europe, the origin of the European
doctorate lies in high medieval teaching with its roots going back to
late antiquity and the early days of
Christian teaching of the
Bible. This view does not suggest any link between the
ijazah and the doctorate.
George Makdisi has instead stated that the
ijazah was a type of
academic degree or
doctorate issued in medieval
madrasahs, similar to that which later appeared in European
medieval universities. In 1989, though, he said that the origins of the Christian medieval doctorate ("licentia docendi") date to the
ijāzah al-tadrīs wa al-iftā' ("license to teach and issue legal opinions") in the medieval
Islamic legal education system. According to the 1989 paper, the
ijazat was equivalent to the
Doctor of Laws qualification and was developed during the ninth century after the formation of the ''
Madh'hab'' legal schools. To obtain a doctorate, a student "had to study in a
guild school of law, usually four years for the basic
undergraduate course" and at least ten years for a
post-graduate course. The "doctorate was obtained after an oral
examination to determine the originality of the candidate's
theses," and to test the student's "ability to defend them against all objections, in
disputations set up for the purpose" which were scholarly exercises practiced throughout the student's "career as a graduate
student of law." After students completed their post-graduate education, they were awarded doctorates giving them the status of
faqih (meaning "
master of law"),
mufti (meaning "professor of
legal opinions") and
mudarris (meaning "teacher"), which were later translated into Latin as
magister,
professor and
doctor respectively. Madrasas issued the
ijazat attadris in the Islamic religious law of
Sharia, mathematics, astrology, medicine, pharmacology, and philosophy. Though Sharia Law was the major subject at most of these madrasas the sciences were treated with the same value in Islamicate society, as many discoveries were made in fields such as medicine where the first hospital was invented and pulmonary blood flow was discovered. The Islamic law degree in
Al-Azhar University, the most prestigious madrasa, was traditionally granted without final examinations, but on the basis of the students' attentive attendance to courses. However, the postgraduate doctorate in law was only obtained after "an oral examination." In a 1999 paper, Makdisi points out that, in much the same way granting the
ijazah degree was in the hands of professors, the same was true for the early period of the
University of Bologna, where degrees were originally granted by professors. He also points out that, much like the
ijazat attadris was confined to law, the first degrees at Bologna were also originally confined to law, before later extending to other subjects. However, several other scholars have criticized Makdisi's work. Norman Daniel, in a 1984 paper, criticized an earlier work of Makdisi for relying on similarities between the two education systems rather than citing historical evidence for a transmission. He stated that Makdisi "does not seriously consider the spontaneous recurrence of phenomena", and notes that similarities between two systems do not automatically imply that one has created the other. He further states that there is a lack of evidence for schools in the short-lived Arab settlements of France and mainland Italy, which Makdisi argues may have been links between the Islamic and European educational systems, as well as a lack of evidence of the alleged transmission of scholastic ideas between the two systems altogether. In a discussion of Makdisi's 1989 thesis,
Toby Huff argued that there was never any equivalent to the
bachelor's degree or doctorate in the Islamic madrasahs, owing to the lack of a
faculty teaching a unified curriculum. == Differences between an ijazah and a diploma ==