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What Is a Provost?

The title provost dates back to the 10th century.

From Random House Dictionary of the English Language, Second Edition:

  1. a person appointed to superintend or preside.
  2. an admininstrative officer in any of various colleges and universities who holds high rank and is concerned with the curriculum, faculty appointments, etc.
  3. the chief dignitary of a cathedral or collegiate church.
  4. the steward or bailiff of a medieval manor or an officer of a medieval administrative district.

Excerpts from the Oxford English Dictionary, Second Edition, 1989:

...One set or placed over others; a superintendent, president, head, chief; used generally as an equivalent of the uses of præpositus in ancient and medieval Latin, and of the descended terms in French and other languages, and spec. as the proper title of certain ecclesiastical and secular officers in England and Scotland, or as a rendering of French prevost, prévüt, formerly used to designate various officials...

  1. In ecclesiastical and scholastic use....
  2. The specific title of the heads of certain educational colleges.
    In earlier instances, a survival from the ecclesiastical establishments in which these originated; in later instances an extension of the name to subsequent foundations. The title is borne by the heads of Oriel, Queen's, and Worcester Colleges at Oxford, King's College, Cambridge, and Trinity College, Dublin; also of Eton College, and now or formerly of certain other colleges in England, Scotland, the United States, etc.

   Updated 2008 August 20
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