CORPUS CHRISTI COLLEGE, OXFORD


'Corpus Christi College' is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom. It tends to perform well academically, and as a small college does surprisingly well in sporting activities within the University (e.g., Women's Rugby and Gentlemen's Cricket). It had won the annual sporting challenge against its larger sister college, Corpus Christi Cambridge, for six consecutive years, until its defeat in 2006; it regained the title in 2007. On 9 May 2005, a team representing Corpus won University Challenge.
The humanistic ideas of the founder are still important to the college today, with a continued emphasis on the teaching of Latin, Ancient Greek, and ancient history.
The college attempts to select the brightest students regardless of their social background. Corpus Christi has around 350 students (of whom roughly 220 are undergraduates). This makes it one of the smallest colleges in Oxford.
The Visitor of the College is ''ex officio'' the Bishop of Winchester, currently Michael Scott-Joynt.

Contents
History
Founding
Religious ferment
Nineteenth century
Notable former students and fellows
Academics/teachers
External links

History


Founding

The college was founded in 1517 by Richard Foxe, the Bishop of Winchester. Although intended as a traditional training college for secular clergy, under the influence of Hugh Oldham it became the foremost humanist enterprise in Oxford, the model for many subsequent foundations. Foxe was a humanist and interested in classical literature. He founded a library which was very progressive for the time. The library included books in Latin, Greek and even Hebrew – and was praised by Erasmus on a visit to Oxford as a "biblioteca trilinguis". The important Spanish humanist Juan Luis Vives taught at Corpus while tutor to Mary Tudor, later Queen Mary I.

Religious ferment


In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the college was again involved in religious ferment. Reginald Pole, a fellow of the college in the 1520s, was Archbishop of Canterbury during the reign of Queen Mary, and a candidate for the papacy. John Rainolds, another fellow, and Corpus's seventh President, was involved in the inception and translation of the King James Version of the Bible, published in 1611.

Nineteenth century


John Keble, a leader of the Oxford Movement, was an undergraduate at Corpus at the start of the nineteenth century, and went on to a fellowship at Oriel and to have a college named after him (Keble College, Oxford).

Notable former students and fellows



Thomas Arnold

Al Alvarez

Max Beloff

Isaiah Berlin

G.E. Berrios

Ian Bostridge - acclaimed tenor

Robert Bridges

Edmund Kerchever Chambers - literary scholar

Ben Cannon

William Cole

David Curry

Kenneth Dover

Paul Grice

David Hartley – signatory to the Treaty of Paris

Charles G. Henderson – historian of Cornwall

Richard Hooker

Thomas Hornsby

Alfred William Hunt

John Keble

Clyde Kluckhohn - American Rhodes Scholar, anthropologist

MC Lars

Patrick McTaggart-Cowan

David Miliband - Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs

Roger Moorey – antiquarian and former Keeper of Antiquities, Ashmolean Museum

Damian Murphy

Henry Nettleship

Henry Newbolt

David Normington – Permanent Secretary at the Home Office

James Oglethorpe

Richard Pate

Henry Phillpotts

Edward Pococke

Reginald Cardinal Pole

Makhdoom Shah Mahmood Qureshi – former minister of finance, planning and development & law, Government of Pakistan

John Rainolds

John Ruskin

C. P. Scott

Vikram Seth

Michael Spencer

Nicholas Udall

Nicholas Wadham

William Waldegrave

★ Sir Bernard Williams
:See also

Academics/teachers



★ Sir Brian Harrison (editor, ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'')
Roman Divalenti, American author

External links



Corpus Christi College JCRJCR/students' union page

Corpus Christi College MCR – MCR page

Virtual Tour of Corpus Christi College

College Choir

College Boat Club

Corpus Wins University Challenge - Oxford News

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