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Corpus Christi College, Cambridge

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Corpus Christi College, Cambridge
Corpus Christi's Crest
Full name The College of Corpus Christi and the Blessed Virgin Mary in Cambridge
Motto None.
There is a toast, Floreat antiqua domus ('May the old house flourish'), from which the college's nickname, 'Old House', is derived
Named after The city's Guilds of Corpus Christi and the Blessed Virgin Mary
Previous names None; the college was once popularly known as Bene't College, though this seems to have died out in the 1820s
Established 1352
List of Oxbridge sister colleges>Sister College(s) Corpus Christi College, Oxford
Master Prof. Haroon Ahmed
Location [Trumpington Street]
Undergraduates 250
Postgraduates 150
[Homepage] [Boatclub]

Inside the New Court facing the Chapel
Enlarge
Inside the New Court facing the Chapel

Corpus Christi College (full name: The College of Corpus Christi and the Blessed Virgin Mary) is a College of the University of Cambridge. It is notable for being the only college to have been founded by Cambridge townspeople, having been founded in 1352 by the Guilds of Corpus Christi and the Blessed Virgin Mary. It is the second-smallest college (after Peterhouse).

History

The licence to build an eighth college in the University of Cambridge was granted by Edward III in 1352 to the newly merged guilds of Corpus Christi and St Mary in the parish of St Bene't's. They immediately began the construction of a single modest court near the parish church and in 1356 it was ready to house a Master and two fellows, who drew up the college's statutes. Continuing their studies in theology and Canon law, they served as chaplains to the guild.

The college's first couple of centuries saw its wealth increase, which was put on display as part of the Corpus Christi guild's annual procession. This involved parading through the streets to Magdalene bridge, before returning for an extravagant dinner. The parade continued until Henry VIII put a stop to it in 1535.

Corpus is exceptionally rich in silver, but its greatest treasure is the Parker Library, one of the finest and most important collections of medieval manuscripts in the world. Its most famous possession is the Canterbury Gospels, probably brought to England in 597 AD by St. Augustine, when he was sent by Pope Gregory I to convert the people of Britain. However, it also contains the principal manuscript of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, works by Matthew Paris and Chaucer's Troilus and Criseyde, to name only a few.

Christopher Marlowe was perhaps the college's most-celebrated son, having matriculated to Corpus in 1580. Although little is known about his time there, it is often believed that it was during his study for his MA that he began his work as a spy, a claim based on only a single cryptic statement by the Privy Council. In 1953 during renovation of the Master's Lodge a portrait of a man "in the 21st year of his age" was discovered. As the painting is dated 1585, the year Marlowe was 21, it is inevitable that it has been claimed as a portrait of the playwright himself.

In recent years, the College has spearheaded the Northern Ireland Initiative which was set up to encourage students from Northern Ireland to apply to Oxbridge, but particularly Cambridge. They hold "Cambridge Taster Days" across the province and Dr. Melanie Taylor spends much of her year travelling around Northern Ireland talking to prospective students and allaying their fears over the interviews and other myths that have appeared over the years.

Buildings

Old Court, built in the 1350s, is one of Cambridge's oldest buildings and retains many of its original features, including sills and jambs to hold oil-soaked linen in the days prior to the arrival of glass. The court was possibly built from the core of an even older building and is the oldest courtyard in Oxford or Cambridge (a claim disputed by Merton College, Oxford who say the same of their Mob Quad) as well as, some say, the oldest continually inhabited courtyard in the country. A new library complex is in the process of being built.

St Bene't's church next door is itself the oldest building in the city, and served as the college's chapel until one was built in around 1500.

New Court (completed 1827) was designed by William Wilkins, who is buried in the college chapel. New Court is also the site of the Parker Library, which was begun in 1376 and much improved by a bequest from Matthew Parker, the college's Master between 1544 and 1553, who as Archbishop of Canterbury formed a fine collection of manuscripts from the libraries of dissolved monasteries. This court also houses Butler Library, which is the college's main library used by students.

There are also several outlying college properties. This includes Benet Street Hostel and Robert Beldam Building, which is just above the famous The Eagle pub, Newnham House which is located near to Newnham College and 2 houses (Nos 6 & 8) in Trumpington Street which is almost directly opposite to Cambridge University Engineering Department. There is also a graduate campus of Leckhampton, which is situated at the west, just outside the city centre. Here there are playing fields, 9½ acres (38,000 m²) of gardens, a swimming pool and some of the best graduate housing in the University.

Oddities, traditions, and legends

As with all old institutions, Corpus has many legends, traditions and general oddities. Here is a sampling:

Famous alumni

Name Birth Death Career
Matthew Parker 1504 1575 Archbishop of Canterbury
Nicholas Bacon 1509 1579 Politician
Thomas Cavendish 1555 1592
John Greenwood 1593 Puritan and Separatist
Christopher Marlowe 1564 1593 Dramatist, poet, translator
Richard Boyle, 1st Earl of Cork 1566 1643
John Fletcher 1579 1625 Playwright
Thomas Tenison 1636 1715 Archbishop of Canterbury
Stephen Hales 1677 1761 Physiologist, chemist and inventor
William Stukeley 1687 1765 Antiquary
Richard Rigby Paymaster of the Forces
Richard Gough 1735 1809 Antiquarian
John James Stewart Perowne 1823 1904 Thelogian
John Cowper Powys 1872 1963 Writer, lecturer, philosopher
Llewelyn Powys 1884 1939 Writer
B.H. Liddell Hart 1895 1970 Military historian
Edward Upward 1903 Novelist
Christopher Isherwood 1904 1986 Novelist
Campbell Adamson 1922 2000 Director General of the CBI
E.P. Thompson 1924 1993 Historian, socialist, peace campaigner
Alan Wilson 1939 Scientist
Francis Maude 1953 Chairman of the Conservative Party
Bernard Jenkin 1959 Shadow Minister for Trade and Industry and Deputy Chairman of the Conservative Party
Simon Heffer 1960 Journalist and writer

See also

External links

Colleges of the University of Cambridge

Christ's | Churchill | Clare | Clare Hall | Corpus Christi | Darwin | Downing | Emmanuel | Fitzwilliam | Girton | Gonville and Caius | Homerton | Hughes Hall | Jesus | King's | Lucy Cavendish | Magdalene | New Hall | Newnham | Pembroke | Peterhouse | Queens' | Robinson | St Catharine's | St Edmund's | St John's | Selwyn | Sidney Sussex | Trinity | Trinity Hall | Wolfson

 


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