Thesis: the average 18 year old student in, say, York in AD 800 (the middle of the so-called "Dark Ages") had read more, knew more languages, was better trained in logic, could read more music, knew more mathematics and astronomy than the average student from a university today.
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And to that point, it is unlikely that they all knew Latin AND Greek. Usually only a few learned Greek and it was considered a well-respected skill but not widespread among those who were educated.
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If the knowledge of Greek was so widespread, the Medicis would not have had to seek out refugee scholars from the just-fallen Byzantium to teach it to their kids/translate ancient sources for them. And that was in the 1400s, mind, not the 800s.
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