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Christ's College, Cambridge - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Christ's College, Cambridge

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Colleges of the University of Cambridge

Christ’s College

Christ’s College heraldic shield
                     
College name Christ’s College
Named after Jesus Christ
Established 1505
Previously named God’s-house (1437-1505)
Location St. Andrew’s Street
Admittance Men and women
Master Frank Kelly
Undergraduates 420
Graduates 110
Sister college Wadham College, Oxford
Official website
Boat Club website

Christ’s College is one of the colleges of the University of Cambridge. It is widely reputed for its high academic standards - in recent years, it has consistently dominated the Tompkins Table of colleges, and is recognised as the top Cambridge College for academic excellence over the 20 year period of which this has been running.[1] As well as this, the College has performed admirably in sporting activities in recent years with the rugby and football teams both performing extremely well in inter-collegiate events.

Contents

[edit] College history

The college grew from God’s House founded in 1437 on land now occupied by King’s College Chapel. It received its first royal licence in 1446. It moved to its present site in 1448 when it received its second royal licence. It was renamed Christ’s College and received its present charter in 1505 when it was endowed and expanded by Lady Margaret Beaufort, mother of King Henry VII.

[edit] Buildings

First Court: O Staircase, Chapel, The Master's Lodge with large wisteria and part of the Hall.
First Court: O Staircase, Chapel, The Master's Lodge with large wisteria and part of the Hall.

The original 15th/16th century college buildings now form part of First Court, including the chapel, Master’s Lodge and Great Gate tower. The gate itself is curiously disproportionate: the bottom has been cut off to accommodate a rise in street level, which can also be seen in the steps leading down to the foot of L staircase in the gate tower. The college hall, by George Gilbert Scott, the younger, was added in 1875-1879. The lawn of First Court is famously round, and an impressive wisteria sprawls up the front of the master’s lodge.

The Great Gate.
The Great Gate.
Fellows' Building viewed from the Fellows' Garden
Fellows' Building viewed from the Fellows' Garden

Second Court is fully built up on only three sides, one of which is formed by the 1640s Fellows’ Building. The fourth side backs onto the Master’s garden.

The Stevenson Building in Third Court was designed by J. J. Stevenson, in the 1880s. In 1935 Professor Richardson designed the second building, the neo-Georgian Chancellor's Building (Y staircase). Third Court's Memorial Building (W staircase), a twin of the Chancellor's building was completed in 1953 for £80,000.[2] Third Court is also noted for its display of irises in May and June, a gift to the college in 1946.[3]

Third Court: Chancellor's Building - Y Block on L, Stevenson Building on R
Third Court: Chancellor's Building - Y Block on L, Stevenson Building on R
New Court, the Lasdun Building
New Court, the Lasdun Building

The controversial tiered concrete New Court (often dubbed ‘the Typewriter’) was designed in the Modernist style by Sir Denys Lasdun in 1966-70, and was described as ‘superb’ in Lasdun’s obituary in the Guardian[1]. Design critic Hugh Pearman comments ‘[Lasdun] had big trouble relating to the street at the overhanging rear’ [2]. It appears very distinctively in aerial photographs, forming part of the northern boundary of the college.

An assortment of neighbouring buildings have been absorbed into the college, of which the most notable is The Todd Building, previously Cambridge’s County Hall.

Through an arch in the Fellows’ Building is the Fellows’ Garden. It includes two mulberry trees, of which the older was planted in 1608, the same year as Milton’s birth. Both trees have toppled sideways, the younger tree in the Great Storm of 1987, and are now earthed up round the trunks, but continue to fruit every year.[4]

[edit] College societies

The Junior Combination Room, Christ’s College Students’ Union, is involved in every aspect of student life. Representative of the student body, it organises social and welfare events, and negotiates on the students’ behalf on important issues. The Middle Combination Room (MCR) represents the graduate students of Christ's College.

The Marguerites Club is one of the oldest surviving College societies, reformed in 1899 by G.L.Jessop the then captain of CUCC. It is believed to have originally formed some ten years earlier, but was soon disbanded. Originally the society was confined to captains and secretaries or those with colours in 3 sports. The name originated from the club's original blazer, which was navy blue in colour with the Foundress's 'rebus' or badge, signifying her name, embroidered on the pocket. Described in the 1908 issue of the college magazine: "The Marguerites have been the premier club of the College in the past, and claim to represent something more than mere athletic distinction"

Also of note are the football club, the CCAFC; the rugby club, the CCRFC; the rowing club, CCBC; a very active college RAG the Music Society(founded 1711) and the Chapel Choir.

The College hosts a biennial May Ball, the most recent occurring on 22 June 2006 with a theme of Elysium to very good reviews.

[edit] Proctors of God’s House

  • 1439-1451 William Byngham
  • 1451-1458 John Hurt
  • 1458-1464 William Fallan
  • 1464-1477 William Basset
  • 1477-1490 Ralph Barton
  • 1490-1505 John Sickling

[edit] Masters of Christ’s

See also: Category: Fellows of Christ's College, Cambridge

  • 1505–1507 John Sickling
  • 1507–1510 Richard Wyot
  • 1510–1517 Thomas Thompson
  • 1517–1530 John Watson
  • 1530–1548 Henry Lockwood
  • 1548–1553 Richard Wilkes
  • 1553–1556 Cuthbert Scot
  • 1556–1559 William Taylor
  • 1559–1582 Edward Hawford
  • 1582–1609 Edmund Barwell
  • 1609–1622 Valentine Cary
  • 1622–1646 Thomas Bainbridge
  • 1646–1654 Samuel Bolton
  • 1654–1688 Ralph Cudworth
  • 1688–1722 John Covel
  • 1723–1745 William Towers
  • 1745–1754 George Henry Rooke
  • 1754–1780 Hugh Thomas
  • 1780–1808 John Barker

See Christ’s College by John Peile (1900)

[edit] Famous alumni

See also: Category:Alumni of Christ's College, Cambridge

Name Birth Death Career
William Ames 1576 1633 Reformed Theologian
Richard Bancroft 1544 1610 Archbishop of Canterbury, Organiser of James I Bible
Jagdish Chandra Bose 1858 1937 Bengali physicist
Sir Anthony Caro 1924 Sculptor
Sacha Baron Cohen 1971 Comedian
Frederick Cornwallis 1713 1783 Archbishop of Canterbury
John James Cowperthwaite 1916 2006 Credited with policies allowing Hong Kong’s economic boom in the 1960s
Charles Darwin 1809 1882 British naturalist
Patrick Arthur Devlin, Baron Devlin 1905 1992 Jurist, Lord of Appeal in Ordinary
Colin Dexter 1930 Novelist
Ra'ad bin Zeid 1936 Iraqi Prince
Sir Martin Evans 1941 Biochemist, Nobel laureate in medicine
Edmund Grindal 1519 1583 Archbishop of Canterbury
John Healey 1960 British politician
Zeid Ra’ad Zeid Al-Hussein 1964 Iraqi Prince
Matthew Hutton 1693 1758 Archbishop of Canterbury
Derry Irvine, Baron Irvine of Lairg 1940 Lord Chancellor
David Konstant 1930 Bishop of Leeds
Sir John Kotelawala 1897 1980 Prime Minister of Ceylon (Sri Lanka)
Richard Luce 1936 Lord Chamberlain
Michael Lynch 1965 Founder of Autonomy Systems
Allama Mashriqi 1883 1963 Founder of the Khaksar Tehreek
David Mellor 1949 British politician
John Milton 1608 1674 English poet
Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma 1900 1979 British Admiral of the Fleet and statesman
William Paley 1743 1805 English theologian and philosopher
William Perkins 1558 1602 Leading Puritan Theologian of the Elizabethan Era
Sir John Plumb 1911 2001 British historian
Thomas Plume 1630 1704 English clergyman, founder of the University's Plumian Chair of Astronomy and Experimental Philosophy
Beilby Porteus 1731 1809 Bishop of Chester and Bishop of London, leading reformer and abolitionist
Peter Rawlinson, Baron Rawlinson of Ewell 1919 2006 Attorney General
Forrest Reid 1875 1948 Cambridge apostle, novelist, literary critic
Thomas Robinson, 2nd Baron Grantham 1738 1786 British Foreign Secretary
Nicholas Saunderson 1682 1739 British mathematician
David Say 1939 2006 British bishop
Simon Schama 1945 British historian, author, and television presenter
Jan Smuts 1870 1950 Prime Minister of South Africa, Field Marshal, and Commonwealth statesman
C. P. Snow, Baron Snow 1905 1980 British novelist and philosopher
Jeffrey Tate 1943 Conductor
Andrew Turnbull, Baron Turnbull 1945 Cabinet Secretary and Head of the Civil Service
Kieran West 1977 Olympic gold medalist rower
Richard Whiteley 1943 2005 British television presenter
Rowan Williams 1950 British theologian, Anglican Archbishop of Canterbury
Christopher Zeeman 1925 British mathematician

[edit] References

  1. ^ Christ's top of 20-year table of Cambridge colleges - Education News, Education - The Independent
  2. ^ Christ's College Magazine, Michaelmas 1953
  3. ^ Christ's College Magazine no. 228, p 53, 2003
  4. ^ Christ's College Magazine no. 228, p 56, 2003

[edit] External links

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