NEW COLLEGE, OXFORD


Holywell Street, 'New College, Oxford'.

The old quad of New College, Oxford.

Gate leading to the gardens of New College, Oxford.

Chapel of New College, Oxford.

Inside the chapel of New College, Oxford.


Old college and city wall of New College, Oxford.

'New College' is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom. Its official name, 'College of St Mary', is the same as that of the older Oriel College; hence, it has been referred to as the "New College of St Mary," or simply "New College." One of the most famous of the Oxford colleges, it stands along Holywell Street and New College Lane (known for Oxford's Bridge of Sighs), next to All Souls College and The Queen's College. It is one of the main choral foundations of the University of Oxford. It is also one of the wealthier colleges, with an estimated financial endowment of £127m (as of 2006).[1]

Contents
History
Motto
Notable former students
Academics and teachers
External links
References

History


Despite its name, New College is one of the oldest of the Oxford colleges, having originally been founded in 1379. The second college in Oxford to be dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary, it was founded by William of Wykeham, Bishop of Winchester. It was founded in conjunction with the famous Winchester College, which was envisaged as a feeder to the Oxford college, and the two institutions have striking architectural similarities, both were the work of master mason William Wynford. Both Winchester College and New College were originally established for the education of priests, there being a shortage of properly educated clergy after the Black Death.
As well as being the first Oxford college for undergraduates and the first to have senior members of the college give tutorials, New College was the first college in Oxford to centre on a main quadrangle, with student rooms, a dining hall, a library, and study rooms within the square ring of buildings and gates. The quadrangle design inspired many of the later colleges, perhaps most recently St Catherine's College, Oxford because Arne Jacobsen was an ardent admirer of "the Oval", or oval-shaped lawn in the old quad. (New College's quadrangle is not the first in Oxford, however, merely the first to contain all of the above elements; the first quadrangle was Merton's Mob Quad. Merton's dining hall, though, is in a connecting building outside the quad, as is its chapel.) At the time of its founding, New College had the grandest collection of buildings for a college in Oxford, a testament to Wykeham's experience in administering both ecclesiastical and civil institutions as the Bishop of Winchester and High Chancellor of England.
The New College grounds are among the largest and most beautiful in Oxford. The Cloisters and the Chapel are of particular note, as is the old City Wall (around which the College is built); much of the mediæval stained glass in the antechapel has recently been restored. The gardens are equally impressive and include the decorative Mound (which originally had steps, but is now smooth with one set of stairs).
The bell tower contains one of the oldest rings of ten bells, which is rung by the Oxford Society of Change Ringers and the Oxford University Society of Change Ringers. The college is also in possession of a respectable collection of silver (including the mediæval silver gilt Founder's Crozier, housed in a display case in the chapel), and two notable "unicorn horns" (in fact narwhal tusks).
In addition to its academic reputation and its impressive set of buildings, New College is internationally renowned for its chapel choir. As part of the original College statutes, William of Wykeham provided for a choral foundation of lay and academical clerks, with boy choristers to sing mass and the daily offices. It is a tradition that continues today with the choral services of evensong and eucharist during term. In addition to its choral duties in the chapel, the choir has established a reputation as one of the finest Anglican choirs in the world through its many recordings and concert tours. The chapel organ was built by the firm of Grant, Degens, and Bradbeer in 1969, in a case designed by George Pace; somewhat revolutionary at the time, the instrument remains no less remarkable and idiosyncratic today.

Motto


The College's motto, created by William of Wykeham, is 'Manners Makyth Man'. The motto was in many respects fairly revolutionary. Firstly, it was written in English, rather than Latin, which makes it very unusual in Oxford, and is especially revolutionary considering the College's age; even St Catherine's College, founded in 1965, has a Latin motto ("''Nova et Vetera"'': "the new and the old").
Secondly, the motto makes a social statement. While it might initially seem to be suggesting that it is beneficial to have good manners, this does not really capture its full scope. What it really means is that it is not by birth, money, or property that an individual is defined, but in how he (or she) behaves towards other people.

Notable former students



John Astor

Waldorf Astor

Cuthbert Killick Norman Bardsley Bishop of Coventry from 1956 to 1976.

Kate Beckinsale ''(although she left to pursue her film career before graduation)''

Tony Benn

Peter Bergen

Tim Boswell, MP

James Bowman

Richard Bracewell

Gyles Brandreth

Peter Robert Lamont Brown

Henry Chichele

G.A. Cohen

Jim Cousins, MP

Angus Deayton

Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck

John Farthing

John Fowles

Hugh Gaitskell

Patrick Gale

John Galsworthy

John Gardner (law)

Robert P. George

Victor Gollancz

Robert Goff, Baron Goff of Chieveley

Hugh Grant

J. B. S. Haldane

Christopher Hampton

H. L. A. Hart

Peter Hobbs

Douglas Jardine

Piyush "Bobby" Jindal

Brian Johnston

Harold Laski

Dambudzo Marechera

Charles McCreery

Sir Nicholas Montagu

Kate Mosse

Rageh Omaar

Dennis Potter

Nigel Rees

Sir Bernard Rix (Lord Justice Rix)

Alan Rodger, Baron Rodger of Earlsferry

Neil Rudenstine

Anthony Russell-Roberts

Jonathan Sacks

Paul Seabright

Tim Sebastian

Toby Spence

Rick Stein

Adam Thirlwell

Julian Turner

William Warham

Robert Penn Warren

William Waynflete ''(though the validity of this claim is doubtful – see his page for further discussion)''

John Edgar Wideman

Richard Wilberforce Baron Wilberforce

Naomi Wolf
:See also

Academics and teachers



Michael Atiyah

A. J. Ayer

Isaiah Berlin

Alan Bullock

Paul Campbell

David Cecil

Richard Crossman

Richard Dawkins

Robin Lane Fox

W. D. Hamilton

G. H. Hardy

H.L.A. Hart

Nigel Hitchin

Willis Lamb

Hermione Lee

David Parrott

Rudolf Peierls

Craig Raine

Jane Shaw

Christopher Tyerman

Joe Silk

William Archibald Spooner
:See also .

External links



New College, Oxford

Arcadia Redux - 2007 New College Commemoration Ball

New College JCR, Oxford

New College MCR, Oxford

College choir

A history of the choristers of New College, Oxford

Prints of New College

References


1. New College accounts, 2006


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