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St Catharine's College, Cambridge - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

St Catharine's College, Cambridge

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Colleges of the University of Cambridge

St Catharine’s College

St Catharine’s College heraldic shield
                     
College name St Catharine’s College
Latin name Collegium sive aula D. Catharinæ in Universitate Cantabrigiensi
Motto For the wheel! (unofficial)
Named after Saint Catharine of Alexandria
Established 1473
Previously named Katharine Hall (1473-1860)
Location Trumpington Street
Admittance Men and women
Master Prof. Dame Jean Thomas FRS
Undergraduates 436
Graduates 165
Sister college Worcester College, Oxford
Official website
Boat Club website

St Catharine’s College is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Cambridge. Most Cambridge students refer to it by the nicknameCatz”. Catz has a reputation for being a well-balanced college.

St Catharine's College at night
St Catharine's College at night

The College has always generously contributed to the Cambridge team in the University boat race, providing three of the eight team members in both 2003 and 2004. The college was placed at the top of the Tompkins Table, which ranks the colleges by the class of degrees obtained by their undergraduates, for the first time, in 2005.

Apparently, there is a long-running but good-natured feud with Queens’ College which derives from Queens’ disapproval of Catz having built its court in front of Queens’, turning Cambridge’s former High Street into a back alley. In the 1970s St Catharine’s built a modern block of flats named St Chad’s near the University Library, in which the rooms are octagonal to resemble the Catharine wheel on the college crest. Second year students reside in St Chad’s while the First and Third years stay at the main college site. A good number of Fourth years are also resident on the Island Site. The proximity of St. Chad's to Robinson College has led to the fruition of another friendly rivalry, between Catz and Robinson, apparently stemming from an incident in which unidentified St. Catharine's students appropriated Robinson's disco ball from a bop. Allegedly, this is the disco ball now hanging in St. Catharine's College Bar.

Contents

[edit] History

Robert Wodelarke, Provost of King’s College, had begun preparations for the founding of a new college as early as 1459 when he bought tenements on which the new college could be built. The preparation cost him a great deal of his private fortune (he was suspected of diverting King’s College funds), and he was forced to scale down the foundation to only three Fellows. He stipulated that they must study theology and philosophy only.

Wodelarke may have chosen the name in homage to the mother of King Henry VI who was called Catharine, although it is more likely that it was named as part of the Renaissance cult of St Catharine, who was a patron saint of learning. At any rate, the college was ready for habitation and formally founded on St Catharine’s day (November 25) 1473. There are six Saints Catharine, but the college was named for Saint Catharine of Alexandria. It was initially known as Katharine Hall.

St Catharine’s College, as seen from Trumpington Street, showing the open court.
St Catharine’s College, as seen from Trumpington Street, showing the open court.

The initial foundation was not well-provided for. Wodelarke was principally interested in the welfare of Fellows and the College had no undergraduates at all for many years. However, by 1550 there was an increasing number of junior students and the focus of the College changed to that of teaching undergraduates. A rapid growth made it necessary to expand the college and short-lived additions were made in 1622. By 1630 the College began to demolish its existing buildings which were decaying, and started work on the current buildings. The three-sided court, which is almost unique among colleges in Cambridge (with the exceptions of Jesus and Downing in addition to St Catharine’s sister college – Worcester – which has a three-sided quad, which may well be the same thing), was built during the period 1675 to 1757. Proposals for a final range of buildings to complete the fourth side of the court have been made on many occasions up to the 20th century.

In 1637 the College came into possession of the George Inn (later the Bull Inn) on Trumpington Street. Behind this Inn was a stables which was already famous for the practice of its manager, Thomas Hobson, not to allow a hirer to take any horse other than the one longest in the stable, leading to the expression “Hobson’s choice” meaning no choice at all.

The college was granted new statutes in 1860 and adopted its current name. In 1880, a movement to merge the college with King’s College began. The two colleges were adjacent and it seemed a solution to King’s need for more rooms and St Catharine’s need for a more substantial financial basis. However, the Master (Charles Kirkby Robinson) was opposed and St Catharine’s eventually refused.

A history of the college was written by W.H.S. Jones in 1936.

In 2006 the first woman was appointed as Master of the college, Prof. Dame Jean Thomas.

[edit] Famous alumni

See also: Alumni of St Catharine’s College

Name Birth Death Career
John Addenbrooke 1680 1719 Founder of Addenbrooke's Hospital
Herbert Rowse Armstrong 1870 1922 Only English solicitor to be hanged for murder
Harivansh Rai Bachchan 1907 2003 20th century Indian poet
Nathaniel Bacon 1640 1676 Revolutionary in Virginia
John Bayliss 1919 1978 Poet
Peter Boizot Founder of Pizza Express
John Bradford 1510 1555 Martyr of the English reformation
Sir Kenneth Bradshaw 1922 2007 Clerk of the House of Commons
Howard Brenton 1942 Playwright
Adam Buddle 1662 1715 After whom the Buddleia is named
Henry William Bunbury 1750 1811 Caricaturist
Oliver Cromwell 1623 Second son of Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell
John Cutts 1661 1707 MP and army commander
Ian Day 1954 N/A Speed Sailing record holder 1982 for 6 years
John Bacchus Dykes 1823 1876 Victorian hymn-writer
Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed 1905 1977 Fifth President of India
Richard Finn Regent of Blackfriars, Oxford
Jenny R. Fray First female Captain with British Airways
Leo Genn 1905 1978 Actor
Peter Hall 1930 Stage manager and director
Leslie Halliwell 1929 1989 Film reviewer
Roger Harrabin 1955 Journalist and reporter
Joanne Harris 1964 Author
Sir Peter Hirsch 1925 Materials scientist
Sir Robert Howe 1893 1981 Last British Governor-General of the Sudan
Emyr Jones Parry 1947 United Nations diplomat
Malcolm Lowry 1909 1957 Writer
Sir Ian McKellen 1939 Actor
Roy MacLaren 1934 Canadian diplomat
Nevil Maskelyne 1732 1811 Astronomer Royal
Michael Morris 1936 Former Deputy Speaker of the House of Commons
Geoffrey Pattie 1936 Former Minister of State for Information and Technology
Former Minister of State for Defence Procurement during the Falklands War
Jeremy Paxman 1950 Television journalist
Sam Pickering 1941 Professor of English at the University of Connecticut
Inspiration for the Keating character in the film Dead Poets Society
Steve Punt 1962 Comedian
Tunku Abdul Rahman 1903 1990 First Prime Minister of Malaysia
John Ray 1627 1705 Naturalist
Thomas Sherlock 1678 1761 Theologian
James Shirley 1596 1666 Elizabethan poet and playwright
Arun Singh Former Defence Minister of India
Donald Soper 1903 1998 Methodist minister and campaigner
John Strype 1643 1737 Historian
Noel Thompson Television journalist
Tim Waterstone 1939 Bookseller
William Wotton 1666 1727 Historian
Terence Young 1915 1994 British film director

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

Coordinates: 52°12′10.50″N 0°7′0.4″E / 52.2029167, 0.116778 (St Catharine’s College)


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