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Latest revision as of 08:00, 12 March 2024

Corpus Christi College


UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD

Oxford,
Oxfordshire

President: Helen Moore
Website: https://www.ccc.ox.ac.uk
 
 
 
 
 
Location
Grid reference: SP51620606
Location: 51°45’3"N, 1°15’13"W

Corpus Christi College is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford. Founded in 1517, it is the 12th oldest college in Oxford.

The college stands on Merton Street, between Merton College and Christ Church. It is one of the smallest in Oxford by student population, having around 250 undergraduates and 90 graduates. It is academic by Oxford standards, averaging in the top half of the university's informal ranking system, the Norrington Table, in recent years, and coming second in 2009–10.

The college's role in the translation of the King James Bible is historically significant. The college is also noted for the pillar sundial in the main quadrangle, known as the Pelican Sundial, which was installed in 1581.[1] Corpus achieved notability in more recent years by winning University Challenge on 9 May 2005 and once again on 23 February 2009, although the latter win was later disqualified.[2][3]

The Visitor of the college is ex officio the Bishop of Winchester.

History

Foundation

Corpus Christi College was founded by Richard Foxe, Bishop of Winchester, and an accomplished statesman. After entering the clergy, Foxe worked as a diplomat for Henry Tudor. He became a close confidant of his and, during Henry's reign as Henry VII, Foxe was appointed Keeper of the Privy Seal and promoted up the bishoprics, eventually becoming Bishop of Winchester. Throughout this time he was involved in Oxford and Cambridge Universities: he had been Visitor of Magdalen College and of Balliol College, had amended Balliol's statutes for a papal commission, was master of Pembroke College, Cambridge, for 12 years and had been involved in the foundation of St John's College, Cambridge, as one of Lady Margaret Beaufort's executors.[4]

Foxe began to build from 1513. He bought a nunnery, two halls, two inns and the Bachelors' Garden of Merton College.[5] Building was probably completed by 1520.[6]

Foxe was assisted in his foundation by his friend Hugh Oldham, Bishop of Exeter, and Oldham's steward, William Frost. Oldham was a patron of education and donated £4,000 and land in Chelsea towards the foundation. For this, he was styled præcipuus benefactor (principal benefactor) by Foxe, remembered in daily prayers and a scholarship was established for students from Lancashire, where Oldham was born.[7][8] Frost bequeathed his estate in Mapledurwell to the college, for which he and wife were remembered in a yearly prayer and a scholarship was founded for his descendants.[9][10]

Foxe was granted letters patent for the foundation by Henry VIII in 1516.[11] The college was officially founded in 1517, when Foxe established the college statutes.[12] These specified that the college was to contain 20 fellows, 20 students, three lecturers, two priests, two clerks and two choristers.[13]

The library of the college was "probably, when completed, the largest and best furnished library then in Europe".[14] The scholar Erasmus noted in a letter of 1519 to the first President, John Claymond, that it was a library "inter praecipua decora Britanniae" ("among the chief beauties of Britain"), and praised it as a "biblioteca trilinguis" ("trilingual library") containing, as it did, books in Latin, Greek and Hebrew.[15]

Founding fellows of the College included Reginald Pole, who would become the last Catholic Archbishop of Canterbury.[16]

Later developments

In its first hundred years, Corpus hosted leading divines who would lay the foundations of the Anglican Christian identity. John Jewel was Corpus' Reader of Latin, worked to defend a Protestant direction of the Church of England and the Elizabethan Religious Settlement.[17] John Rainolds, elected president in 1598, suggested the idea of the King James Bible and contributed to its text.[18] Richard Hooker, author of the influential Of the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity, was deputy professor of Hebrew.[19]

No one county in England bare three such men (contemporary at large) [Jewel, Rainolds and Hooker] in what college soever they were bred, no college in England bred three such men, in what county soever they were born.
—Thomas Fuller in The Church History of Britain

The Spanish humanist Juan Luis Vives taught at Corpus during the 1520s while tutor to Mary Tudor, later Mary I of England. At the start of the 19th century, John Keble, later a leader of the Oxford Movement, was an undergraduate at Corpus: he went on to a fellowship at Oriel and to have a college named after him (Keble College, Oxford).

Having been founded nearly half a millennium earlier as a college for men only, Corpus Christi was among many of Oxford's men's colleges to admit its first female undergraduate students in 1979 (though women graduate students had been admitted five years earlier).[20]

Buildings and gardens

Buildings

The main buildings on the main college site are the Main Quad, the West Building, the MBI Al Jaber Auditorium, the Fellows' Building, Gentleman-Commoners' Quad and Thomas Quad.

The aisle of the library

The Main Quad was built for the college's foundation and designed in a late Mediæval style. The quad was constructed by distinguished builders associated with Henry VIII's Office of Work: master mason William Vertue, master mason William East and carpenter Humphrey Coke (Warden of the Worshipful Company of Carpenters in London).[21] The quad's architecture later inspired that of Oglethorpe University.[22]

The chapel adjoins the library and is just off the Main Quad. Its location is unusual: many colleges (even small ones) had their chapel in their main quad, with some colleges placing them on the first floor to fit them in (e.g. Lincoln and Brasenose).[23] Its lectern is one of the first bronze eagle lecterns in Oxford; it is the only pre-Reformation one and was a gift of the first president. The chapel's altarpiece is a copy of Ruben's Adoration of the Shepherds, a gift from the antiquarian Sir Richard Worsley.[24][25]

Later buildings on the main site include the Fellows' Building of 1706–1716, the Gentlemen Commoners' Building of 1737 and the Emily Thomas Building, designed by T.H. Hughes, of 1928.[8][26]

On the corner of Merton Street and Magpie Lane, lie the Jackson and Oldham buildings and Kybald Twychen, which all house students. In 1884–85, the architect T. G. Jackson had first installed a 'New Building and Annexe', replacing town houses on Magpie Lane.[27] In 1969, this work was trimmed and modified to make space for a further new building created by Philip Powell and Hidalgo Moya using a modernist beehive design, while leaving Jackson's Annexe substantially intact. Powell and Moya's building uses local limestone rubble and has the architects' characteristically large windows mounted within an exposed concrete frame. Particular attention was paid to placing the design within the existing architectural context, including the plain wall of Oriel College, Merton's Gothic chapel and Jackson's heavily ornamented Annexe.[28] In 2017, the New Building and Annexe were substantially renovated and renamed the Oldham and Jackson Buildings, respectively.

Corpus also owns several buildings further afield: the Liddell Building on Iffley Road (built with Christ Church in 1991), the Lampl Building on Park End Street (completed in 2014 and named after Sir Peter Lampl)[29] and houses on Banbury Road.

Pelican Sundial

The Pelican Sundial is the large pillar in the centre of Corpus' main quad and dates from 1579. The sundial is named after the gold-painted Pelican on an armillary sphere at the top of the pillar.[30] "Pelican Sundial" is a misnomer, as the pillar contains 27 separate sundials.[31] Nine of the sundials are found easily: four on each face of the square frustum beneath the pelican, four beneath each coat of arms on the cuboid and one facing south on the curved pillar shaft.[32] The remaining sundials are found on the hollows and scallops surrounding the east and west arms. The symbols surrounding the sundials are used to reckon feast days and the signs of the Zodiac.[33] The pillar shaft is covered by three tables: one for calculating the dates of the movable and fixed feasts and the Oxford and legal terms; one being a perpetual calendar and one for finding the time by moonlight.[34]

The Pelican Sundial was not the first sundial at Corpus. Before it was erected, one had been designed for the college by Nicholas Kratzer, an astrologer and horologer for Henry VIII.[35] Like Juan Luis Vives, he was probably one of Cardinal Wolsey's lecturers who resided at Corpus while waiting for the completion of Cardinal College.[36] Kratzer designed many dials, however only three can definitely be attributed to him: fixed ones for the University Church of St Mary the Virgin and Corpus and a portable one for Cardinal Wolsey. Only Wolsey's survives;[37][38] Kratzer's Corpus dial stood in the garden until around 1706, when the gardens were remodelled for the construction of the Fellows' Building.[39]

Gardens

View from Small Garden towards Main Quad

Aspects of the evolution of the college's ornamental gardens (Grade II listed) have been documented since the late 16th century.[40] By the turn of the 19th century, a series of strict, geometrical layouts had given way to more informal features, including a lawn in the main garden, bordered by a dense shrubbery.[40][41]

In their present form, as tended by David Leake since 1979, the gardens are considered some of the university's most unusual and exuberant.[42] Described as 'wild' gardens, the stated aim is to blend a "range of wild and cultivated flowers into a vivid yet harmonious landscape."[43] Attention to detail marks even the most intimate of spaces, such as those around the 'small garden' linking the front quad to the main garden at the back of the college.[44]

The main garden is flanked on one side by the distinctive neoclassical architecture of the Fellows' Building, which is exuberantly bordered by ornamental shrubs and perennials, overseen by climbing roses and wisteria.[45] Across the lawn, a bank shaded by a dominant copper beech leads up to a vantage point on the old city wall (above Dead Man's Walk[46]), where a line of three lime trees traces the course of a terraced avenue that was originally raised in 1623.[41] The views from here across Christ Church Meadow and into the gardens of neighbouring colleges suggest a "pleasant gardening outpost."

The style of gardening is, in Leake's words, "much less formal than [in] most other colleges, but sympathetic to the atmosphere."[47] Accordingly, the library windows in the front quad are framed by seven bamboo plants.[47] Beekeeping echoes the founder's wish for the college to be a hive of activity.[42]

Use of herbicides and fertilisers is avoided even on the main lawn, which characteristically is allowed to incorporate plants that have self-seeded, in keeping with an overall wildlife-friendly approach (for example, spontaneous red valerian can provide a food plant for caterpillars of the hummingbird hawk-moth).[47]

Examples of exotic plants that have been cultivated include Campsis radicans (trumpet vine), Dracunculus vulgaris (dragon lily), Gunnera manicata (Brazilian giant-rhubarb), Philadelphus microphyllus (littleleaf mock-orange), and Zantedeschia aethiopica (arum lily). Trees include a Wollemi pine (a species rediscovered in Australia in 1994) and quince (whose fruit is given to college fellows and friends).[42]

The greenhouse was designed by Rick Mather, the creator of the college's auditorium. Almost frameless, it presents itself as a display cabinet in which a variety of horticultural and other informal exhibits are watched over by a surreally attired mannequin named Madame Lulu.[42][47]

Pictures

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Corpus Christi College, Oxford)

Outside links

References

  1. Pattenden 1979, p. Template:Page needed
  2. Corpus Wins University Challenge – Oxford News
  3. "University Challenge team disqualified". BBC. 2 March 2009. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7919830.stm. 
  4. Fowler 1898, pp. 6-7.
  5. Fowler 1898, pp. 38–40.
  6. Fowler 1898, p. 41.
  7. {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=encyclopaedia }} (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  8. 8.0 8.1 A History of the County of Oxford - Volume 3 pp 219-228: Corpus Christi College (Victoria County History)
  9. Charles-Edwards & Reid 2017, pp. 70, 264.
  10. Fowler 1898, p. 15.
  11. Fowler 1898, p. 32.
  12. Fowler 1898, p. 18.
  13. "1", The Foundation Statutes of Bishop Fox for Corpus Christi College in the University of Oxford A. D. 1517, Longman, Brown, Green and Longmans, 1843, p. 3, https://books.google.com/books?id=lgdeAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA3 
  14. Fowler 1898, Appendix A.
  15. Fowler 1898, pp. 34–35.
  16. Fowler 1898, pp. 33–34.
  17. Charles-Edwards & Reid 2017, pp. 64, 75–81.
  18. Charles-Edwards & Reid 2017, pp. 131–132.
  19. Gibbs, Lee W. (15 February 2008). "Life of Hooker". in Kirby, Torrance. A Companion to Richard Hooker. Brill's Companions to the Christian Tradition. 8. Brill. pp. 8–9. ISBN 978-90-04-16534-2. 
  20. Charles-Edwards & Reid 2017, p. 403.
  21. Tyack 1998, pp. 72–73.
  22. Hudson, Paul Stephen (21 November 2016). "Oglethorpe University". http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/education/oglethorpe-university. 
  23. Charles-Edwards & Reid 2017, p. 31.
  24. Sherwood & Pevsner 1974, pp. 29, 131.
  25. Fowler 1898, p. 45.
  26. Corpus Christi College, Oxford: An Inventory of the Historical Monuments in Oxfordshire, Volume {{{1}}}, pages 48-54
  27. Fowler 1898, pp. 46, 222.
  28. Tyack 1998, p. 315.
  29. The Lampl Building. Corpus Christi College, Oxford. 2 September 2013. 10. https://www.ccc.ox.ac.uk/data/uploads/pelicanrecord%20and%20sundial/Sundial_Issue2_web_AW6.pdf. 
  30. Pattenden 1979, p. 26.
  31. Pattenden 1983, p. 322.
  32. Pattenden 1983, p. 322–323.
  33. Pattenden 1983, p. 322–325.
  34. Pattenden 1979, p. 30.
  35. Pattenden 1979, p. 12.
  36. Pattenden 1979, pp. 11–12.
  37. "Polyhedral Dial, by Nicolaus Kratzer?, English, 1518–30". Museum of the History of Science. https://www.mhs.ox.ac.uk/collections/search/displayrecord/?invnumber=54054. 
  38. Pattenden 1979, p. 14.
  39. Pattenden 1979, pp. 21–22.
  40. 40.0 40.1 {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=encyclopaedia }}
  41. 41.0 41.1 Richardson 2018, p. 67.
  42. 42.0 42.1 42.2 42.3 Garth, John (16 March 2015). "Root and branch: John Garth meets the extraordinary creator of one of the most storied and unusual Oxford college gardens". www.oxfordtoday.ox.ac.uk. http://www.oxfordtoday.ox.ac.uk/interviews/root-and-branch. 
  43. "Corpus Christi College Oxford - The Gardens". https://www.ccc.ox.ac.uk/The-Gardens/. 
  44. Richardson 2018, p. 64.
  45. Richardson 2018, pp. 66-67.
  46. "Oxford City Wall - South Wall: Christ Church, with Bastions 20 & 21". http://www.oxfordhistory.org.uk/city_wall/09_chch_meadow.html. 
  47. 47.0 47.1 47.2 47.3 Beck, Caroline (23 April 2016). "Me and my garden: 'It's like paradise, surrounded by beautiful buildings and overlooking Christ Church meadow'". The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2016/apr/23/how-garden-grow-david-leake-corpus-christi-oxford. 
  • Charles-Edwards, Thomas; Reid, Julian (July 2017). Corpus Christi College, Oxford: A History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-879247-5. 
  • Fowler, Thomas (1898). Corpus Christi. Oxford University College Histories. Bloomsbury, London: F. E. Robinson & Co.. https://archive.org/details/corpuschristi01fowlgoog. 
  • Pattenden, Philip (1979). Sundials at an Oxford College. Roman Books. ISBN 0-9506644-0-5. 
  • Pattenden, Philip (June 1983). "Pelican Sundials in America". Bulletin of the National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors, Inc. XXV (3). SSN 0027-8688. 
  • Richardson, Tim (2018). "Corpus Christi College". Oxford College Gardens. White Lion Publishing. pp. 61–70. ISBN 978-0-7112-3978-4. 
  • Nikolaus Pevsner: The Buildings of England: Oxfordshire, 1974 Penguin Books ISBN 978-0-300-09639-2
  • Tyack, Geoffrey (19 March 1998). Oxford: An Architectural Guide. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-817423-3. 


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