
University College, founded with a bequest from William of Durham in 1249, lays claim to be the oldest College endowment in Oxford or Cambridge, and this is its first full-length history for over a century. Drawing extensively on the College's archives, which have not been studied in detail for decades, and many other sources, Robin Darwall-Smith tells the story of University College afresh, from when it began life as a small College of just four Fellows, permitted only to study theology, through its many changes, not least when it began to accept undergraduates in the sixteenth century, down to the present day. A College, however, is above all a community of people, and this book considers all aspects of the College's history, from its servants through to its Fellows, to give some idea of what it has meant to be a member of University College down the centuries. This is also a tale of how wider events can be reflected in one small College, be it the effects of civil and world war, or of political and religious upheavals.Readers will encounter several of the College's most famous Old Members and Fellows, including Clement Attlee and Harold Wilson, Bill Clinton, Bob Hawke, Sir William Jones, C.S. Lewis, and Percy Shelley, but often it is the people now forgotten by posterity who may emerge as the most representative and lively witnesses of their own times.
This work investigates the institutional evolution of University College, Oxford, from its 1249 founding to the modern era, questioning how a single academic community reflects broader historical shifts. Robin Darwall-Smith, an expert in the college's archives, utilizes primary source documents and long-neglected records to construct a comprehensive narrative. The text examines the transition from a small theological fellowship to a modern undergraduate institution, framing the college as a microcosm of English social, political, and religious history. By analyzing the lives of both prominent figures and forgotten members, the author provides a holistic view of the college's development over eight centuries.
What You Will Find
Scholars and historians recognize this work as the definitive modern account of one of Oxford's oldest institutions. Readers frequently note the meticulous archival research and the balanced focus on both elite figures and the everyday lives of college staff and students.
Page Count:
632
Publication Date:
2008-09-15
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199284296
ISBN-13:
9780199284290
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