Cardinal Newman in his sketch of its history noted that after this quite promising beginning, no further progress was made in putting the university on a solid foundation: it may well be said that the university never got properly started. The frequently disturbed political conditions in medieval Dublin were no doubt one reason for this, but the key problem seems to have been the lack of funds. Ireland in the
Middle Ages was not a rich country, and the Irish, even if they had wished to do so, were unable to provide the money which could have put the university on a secure financial footing. There was a notable absence of wealthy private
benefactors like those who founded so many colleges at
Oxford and
Cambridge, nor was the
English Crown generous with its
endowments to the university. In 1475, when, as Cardinal Newman remarks, the university could scarcely be said to still exist,
Pope Sixtus IV was persuaded by
John Walton, Archbishop of Dublin, to issue a brief to re-establish it; but very little seems to have been done to comply with the brief. At the
Synod of Dublin in 1494,
Walter Fitzsimon, Walton's successor as
Archbishop of Dublin, levied a contribution on the clergy of the archdiocese for the payment of the lecturers' salaries, and it seems that some funds were made available, although they may have been used as an extra stipend for the canons of the cathedral. ==The end of the university==