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CHRIST CHURCH, OXFORD
Christ Church (Latin: Ædes Christi, the temple or house of Christ, and thus sometimes known as The House), is one of the largest and wealthiest of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England, with an estimated financial endowment of £175m (2003), as well as the cathedral church of the diocese of Oxford.
Traditionally it has been seen as the most aristocratic college. It has produced thirteen British prime ministers (the two most recent being Anthony Eden from 1955 to 1957 and Sir Alec Douglas-Home in 1963–1964), which is more than any other Oxford or Cambridge college (and two short of the total number for Cambridge University, at fifteen). However today the proportion of undergraduates from maintained and independent schools is roughly equal, which is typical of most Oxford colleges.
The college is the setting for parts of Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited, as well as Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. More recently it has been used in the filming of the movies of J. K. Rowling's Harry Potter series. Distinctive features of the college's architecture have been used as models by a number of other academic institutions, including the National University of Ireland, Galway, which reproduces Tom Quad. The University of Chicago and Cornell University both have reproductions of Christ Church's dining hall (in the forms of Hutchinson Hall and Risely's dining hall respectively). The city of Christchurch, New Zealand is also named after it.
Organisation
Christ Church is the only college in the world which is also a cathedral (one of the smallest in England), the seat (cathedra) of the Bishop of Oxford. Its corporate title is The Dean and Chapter of the Cathedral Church of Christ in Oxford of the Foundation of King Henry the Eighth, and the Visitor of the House is the reigning British Sovereign. The cathedral has a famous men and boys' choir, and is one of the main choral foundations in Oxford. There is a Senior and a Junior Censor (formally titled the Censor Moralis Philosphiæ and the Censor Naturalis Philosophiæ) who are responsible for undergraduate discipline. A Censor Theologiæ is also appointed to act as the Dean's deputy.
Governing Body
The Governing Body of Christ Church consists of the Dean and Chapter of the Cathedral, together with the Students (pedantically, and rarely, called Official Students), who are not students, but rather the equivalent of the Fellows of the other colleges. Until the nineteenth century, the Students differed from Fellows by the fact that they had no governing powers in their own college.
Student life
The senior members of Christ Church, Oxford, corresponding to the Fellows of other colleges, are called Students or, rarely, Official Students. In order to avoid confusion, the students (in the more common sense of the term) should therefore be called undergraduates or, if they are graduates of Oxford or another university, graduate students.
As well as rooms for accommodation, the buildings of Christ Church include the cathedral (which also acts as the college chapel), a great hall, two libraries, two bars, and common rooms for dons, graduates and undergraduates. There are also gardens and a neighbouring sportsground and boat-house.
Accommodation is provided for all undergraduates, and for some graduates, although some accommodation is off-site. Accommodation is generally spacious with most rooms equipped with sinks and fridges. Many undergraduate rooms comprise 'sets' of bedrooms and living areas. Members are generally expected to dine in hall, where there are two sittings every evening, one informal and one formal (where jackets, ties and gowns are worn and Latin grace is read). The buttery next to the Hall serves drinks around dinner time. There is also a college bar (known as the Undercroft), as well as a Junior Common Room (JCR) and a Graduate Common Room (GCR).
There is a college lending library which supplements the university libraries (many of which are non-lending). Law students have the additional facility of the college law library, which has received large financial supplements from Christ Church law graduates. Most undergraduate tutorials are carried out in the college, though for some specialist papers undergraduates may be sent to tutors in other colleges.
Croquet is played in the Master's Garden in the summer. The sportsground is mainly used for cricket, tennis, rugby and soccer. Rowing and punting is carried out by the boat-house across Christ Church Meadow. The college owns its own punts which may be borrowed by students or dons.
The college beagle pack, which was one of several in Oxford, is no longer connected with the college or the university, but continues to be staffed and followed by undergraduates from across Oxford.
In June 2005, for the first time in 15 years, Christ Church held a white-tie Commemoration ball.
History
In 1525, at the height of his power, Thomas Cardinal Wolsey, Lord Chancellor of England and Archbishop of York, suppressed the Abbey of St Frideswide in Oxford and founded Cardinal College on its lands, using funds from the dissolution of Wallingford Priory. He planned the establishment on a magnificent scale, but fell from grace in 1529, before the college was completed.
In 1531 the college was itself suppressed, and refounded in 1532 as King Henry VIII's College by Henry VIII, to whom Wolsey's property had escheated. Then in 1546 the King, who had broken from the Church of Rome and acquired great wealth through the dissolution of the monasteries in England, refounded the college as Christ Church as part of the re-organisation of the Church of England and made it the cathedral of the recently created diocese of Oxford. It is sometimes referred to as "Christ Church College", but this is strictly incorrect.
Christ Church's sister college in the University of Cambridge is Trinity College, Cambridge, founded the same year by Henry VIII. Since the time of Queen Elizabeth I the college has also been associated with Westminster School, which continues to supply a large proportion of the scholars of the college.
Major additions have been made to the buildings through the centuries, and Wolsey's Great Quadrangle was crowned with the famous gate-tower designed by Sir Christopher Wren. To this day the bell in the tower, Great Tom, is rung 101 times at 21:05 GMT (9 o'clock p.m. solar time) every night for the 101 original scholars of the college. In former times this signalled the close of all the college gates throughout Oxford.
King Charles I made the Deanery his palace and held his Parliament in the Great Hall during the English Civil War.
Buildings
Christ Church has a number of architecturally important buildings. These include:
Coat of arms
The college arms, adopted (as with those of most Oxford colleges) apparently without authority, are those of Cardinal Wolsey, and are blazoned: Sable, on a cross engrailed argent, between four leopards' faces azure a lion passant gules; on a chief or between two Cornish choughs proper a rose gules barbed vert and seeded or. The arms are depicted beneath a red cardinal's hat with fifteen tassels on either side, and sometimes in front of two crossed croziers.
There are also arms in use by the cathedral, which were confirmed in a visitation of 1574. They are emblazoned: Between quarterly, 1st & 4th, France modern (azure three fleurs-de-lys or), 2nd & 3rd, England (gules in pale three lions passant guardant or), on a cross argent an open Bible proper edged and bound with seven clasps or, inscribed with the words "In principio erat Verbum, et Verbum erat apud Deum" and imperially crowned or.
Grace
Before formal Hall each evening, the following Latin grace is recited by a scholar of the House:
Nōs miserī hominēs et egēnī, prō cibīs quōs nōbis ad corporis subsidium benignē es largītus, tibi, Deus omnipotēns, Pater cælestis, grātiās reverenter agimus; simul obsecrantēs, ut iīs sobriē, modestē atque grātē ūtāmur.
Per Iēsum Christum Dominum nostrum.
The remaining words of the full grace replace Per Iēsum Christum, etc. on special occasions:
Īnsuper petimus, ut cibum angelōrum, vērum panem cælestem, verbum Deī æternem, Dominum nostrum Iēsum Christum, nōbis impertiāris; utque illō mēns nostra pascātur et per carnem et sanguinem eius fovēāmur, alāmur, et corrōborēmur.
There is also a similarly long formal grace intended for use after meals, but this is rarely heard. Instead, when High Table rises, by which time the Hall is largely empty, the senior don simply says Benedictō benedīcātur.
Deans of Christ Church
Notable members
- Antony Arthur Acland, Head of the Diplomatic Service
- Sir Harold Acton (1904 - 1994) writer and scholar
- Jonathan Aitken (1942 - ), Conservative politician
- William Pitt Amherst, 1st Earl Amherst (1773 - 1857), Governor-General of India
- Henry William Paget, 1st Marquess of Anglesey (1768 - 1854), soldier and politician
- Robert Armstrong, Baron Armstrong of Ilminster (1927 - ), Head of the Civil Service
- Sir Thomas Armstrong (1898 - 1994), musician
- George Eden, 1st Earl of Auckland (1784 - 1849), politician and Governor-General of India
- W. H. Auden (1907 - 1973), poet
- Sir Alfred Ayer (1910 – 1989), philosopher
- Joseph Banks (1743 - 1820), botanist
- Kenneth Barnes (1878 - 1957), Director of R.A.D.A.
- Lord William Bentinck (1774 - 1839), soldier and Governor-General of India
- Zulfikar Ali Bhutto (1928 - 1979), Prime Minister and President of Pakistan
- Sir Ian Blair (1953 - ), Commissioner of Metropolitan Police
- Robert Blake, Baron Blake (1916 - 2003), historian
- Adam Blakeman (1596 - 1665), preacher and American settler
- Adrian Boult (1889 - 1983), conductor
- James Thomas Brudenell, 7th Earl of Cardigan (1797 - 1868), Soldier and Commander of the Light Brigade at Balaclava
- George Nugent-Temple-Grenville, 1st Marquess of Buckingham (1753 - 1813), statesman
- William Buckland (1784 - 1856), geologist, palaeontologist and omnivore
- Robert Burton (1577 - 1640), writer of 'The Anatomy of Melancholy'
- Shahid Javed Burki (1938 - ), economist and Vice-President of the World Bank
- William Camden (1551 - 1623), antiquarian and historian
- George Canning (1770 - 1827), Prime Minister
- Charles John Canning, 1st Earl Canning (1812 - 1862), politican and Governor-General of India
- Richard Carew (1555 - 1620), translator and antiquary
- Lewis Carroll (1832 - 1898), (real name, Charles Lutwidge Dodgson), writer, clergyman and mathematician
- John Carteret, 2nd Earl Granville (1690 - 1763), diplomat and statesman
- Frederick Alexander Lindemann, 1st Viscount Cherwell (1886 - 1957), physicist and cabinet minister
- Alan Clark (1928 - 1999), politician and diarist
- Charles Abbot, 1st Baron Colchester (1757 - 1829), Speaker of the House of Commons
- Richard Curtis (1956 - ), comedy writer
- James Andrew Broun-Ramsay, 1st Marquess of Dalhousie (1812 - 1860), politician and Governor-General of India
- Sir William Deakin (1913 - 2005), historian and diplomat
- Percy Dearmer (1867 - 1936), priest and liturgist
- Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby (1799 - 1869), Prime Minister
- David Dimbleby (1938 - ), broadcaster
- Sir Richard Doll (1912 – 2005), epidemiologist
- Alec Douglas-Home (1903 - 1995), Prime Minister
- William Dowdeswell (1721 - 1775), Chancellor of the Exchequer
- Tom Driberg, Baron Bradwell (1905 - 1976), politician and writer
- Frederick Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood, 1st Marquess of Dufferin and Ava (1826 - 1902), Governor-General of Canada and Viceroy of India
- Sheridan Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood, 5th Marquess of Dufferin and Ava (1938 - 1988), art patron
- Michael Dummett (1925 - ), philosopher
- Anthony Eden (1897 - 1977), Prime Minister
- Edward VII of the United Kingdom
- Albert Einstein (elected to a five-year Research Studentship in 1931)
- James Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin (1811 - 1863), Governor-General of Canada and Viceroy of India
- Edward Granville Eliot, 3rd Earl of St Germans (1798 - 1877), politician
- Geoffrey Faber (1889 - 1961), publisher
- Michael Flanders (1922 – 1975), actor, writer and broadcaster
- Sir Archibald Garrod (1857 - 1936), physician and pioneer molecular geneticist
- Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury (1830 - 1903), Prime Minister
- Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 7th Marquess of Salisbury (1946 - ), Conservative politician
- William Gladstone (1809 - 1898), Prime Minister
- Erskine William Gladstone (1925 - ), Chief Scout
- Howard Goodall (1958 - ), composer and broadcaster
- Granville George Leveson-Gower, 2nd Earl Granville (1815 - 1891), politician and Foreign Secretary
- William Grenville, 1st Baron Grenville (1759 - 1834), Prime Minister
- Richard Hakluyt (1552 - 1616), writer
- Quintin McGarel Hogg, Baron Hailsham of St Marylebone (1907 - 2001), Lord Chancellor
- Edward Wood, 1st Earl of Halifax (1881 - 1959), Foreign Secretary and Viceroy of India
- Sir Roy Harrod (1900 - 1978), economist
- Robert Hooke (1635 - 1703), scientist and inventor
- Anthony Howard (1934 - ), journalist and broadcaster
- Sir Michael Howard (1922 - ), historian
- Trevor Huddleston (1913 - 1998), Archbishop of Mauritius and anti-Apartheid campaigner
- Ludovic Kennedy (1913 - ), broadcaster and writer
- John Wodehouse, 1st Earl of Kimberley (1826 - 1902), politician and Foreign Secretary
- Nigel Lawson (1932 - ), politician and Chancellor of the Exchequer
- Francis Godolphin Osborne, 5th Duke of Leeds (1759 - 1799), politician and Foreign Secretary
- George Cornewall Lewis (1806 - 1863), writer, Foreign Secretary and Home Secretary
- Matthew Gregory Lewis (1775 - 1818), novelist and dramatist
- Robert Jenkinson, 2nd Earl of Liverpool (1770 - 1828), Prime Minister
- John Locke (1632 - 1704), philosopher
- Francis Pakenham, 7th Earl of Longford (1905 – 2001), politician and social reformer
- Richard Bickerton Pemell Lyons (1817 - 1877), diplomat
- Sir John Maddox (1925 - ), science writer
- William Murray, 1st Earl of Mansfield (1705 - 1793), Lord Chief Justice and Chancellor of the Exchequer
- Sir John Masterman (1891 – 1977), academic, sportsman, author and spymaster
- Gilbert Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound, 1st Earl of Minto (1751 - 1814), politician and Governor-General of India
- Michael Moritz, venture capitalist
- Arthur Wellesley, Earl of Mornington(1978 - ), consultant
- Jan Morris (1926 - ), writer and historian
- Sir Gilbert Murray (1866 – 1957), classical scholar and diplomat
- Thomas George Baring, 1st Earl of Northbrook (1826 - 1904), Viceroy of India and First Lord of the Admiralty
- Robert Peel (1788 - 1850), Prime Minister
- William Penn (1644 - 1718), founder of Pennsylvania
- Charles Portal, 1st Viscount Portal of Hungerford (1893 - 1971) Marshal of the Royal Air Force and Chief of the Air Staff
- William Cavendish-Bentinck, 3rd Duke of Portland (1738 - 1809), Prime Minister
- Hugh Quarshie (1954 - ), actor
- John Rawls, (1921 - 2002), philosopher
- Archibald Primrose, 5th Earl of Rosebery, (1847 - 1929), Prime Minister
- A. L. Rowse (1903 - 1997), historian
- John Ruskin (1819 - 1900), critic, poet and artist
- Gilbert Ryle (1900–1976), philosopher
- Sir Martin Ryle (1918 – 1984, radio astronomer
- Michael Hicks Beach, 1st Earl St Aldwyn (1837 - 1916), Chancellor of the Exchequer
- John Searle (1932 - ), philosopher
- John Theophilus Desaguliers (1683 - 1744), philosopher
- William Petty, 2nd Earl of Shelburne (1737 - 1805), Prime Minister
- Roger Mellor Makins, 1st Baron Sherfield (1904 - 1996), diplomat
- Philip Sidney (1554 - 1586), poet and soldier
- Sir Francis Simon (1893-1956), physicist
- J. I. M. Stewart (Michael Innes) (1906 - 1994), literary critic and novelist
- Donald Swann (1923 – 1994), composer, musician and entertainer
- John Taverner (1490 - 1545), composer
- Henry Hotchkiss Townsend (1874 - 1953), historian and lawyer
- Hugh Trevor-Roper (1914 - 2003), historian
- William Walton (1902 - 1983), composer
- Peter Warlock (1894 - 1930), composer and critic
- Auberon Waugh (1939 - 2001), author and journalist
- Richard Wellesley, 1st Marquess Wellesley (1760 - 1842), Foreign Secretary and Governor-General of India
- Charles Wesley (1707 - 1788), Methodist preacher and hymnist
- John Wesley (1703 - 1791), leader of the Methodist movement
- Sir Denys Wilkinson (1922 - ), nuclear physicist
- Rowan Williams (1950 - ), Archbishop of Canterbury
- Thomas Willis (1621-1675), physician and neurologist
- Sir Martin Wood (1927 - ), engineer
- See also Former students of Christ Church, Oxford.
Christ Church references
"The wind had dropped. There was even a glimpse of the moon riding behind the clouds. And now, a solemn and plangent token of Oxford's perpetuity, the first stroke of Great Tom sounded." Chapter 21, Zuleika Dobson (1922), Max Beerbohm
"I must say my thoughts wandered, but I kept turning the pages and watching the light fade, which in Peckwater, my dear, is quite an experience -- as darkness falls the stone seems positively to decay under one's eyes. I was reminded of some of those leprous facades in the vieux port at Marseille, until suddenly I was disturbed by such a bawling and caterwauling as you never heard, and there, down in the little piazza, I saw a mob of about twenty terrible young men, and do you know what they were chanting We want Blanche. We want Blanche! in a kind of litany." Brideshead Revisited (1945), Evelyn Waugh
"By way of light entertainment, I should tell the Committee that it is well known that a match between an archer and a golfer can be fairly close. I spent many a happy evening in the centre of Peckwater Quadrangle at Christ Church, with a bow and arrow, trying to put an arrow over the Kilcannon building into the Mercury Pond in Tom Quad. On occasion, the golfer would win and, on occasion, I would win. Unfortunately, that had to stop when I put an arrow through the bowler hat of the head porter. Luckily, he was unhurt and bore me no ill will. From that time on he always sent me a Christmas card which was signed "To Robin Hood from the Ancient Briton"" Lord Crawshaw, House of Lords, Hansard, Tuesday 8 Jul 1997
External links
Main Website
History of the cathedral
Cathedral website
Other sites
Virtual Tours
References
- Reginald Adams (1992). The college graces of Oxford and Cambridge. Perpetua Press. ISBN 1870882067.
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