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Merton College, Oxford Totally Explained
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Everything about Merton College Oxford totally explained » Merton College is also the name of a college in the London Borough of Merton.
Merton College is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom. Its foundation can be traced back to the 1260s when Walter de Merton, chancellor to Henry III and later to Edward I, first drew up statutes for an independent academic community and established endowments to support it. The important feature of Walter's foundation was that this "college" was to be self-governing and that the endowments were directly vested in the Warden and Fellows.
By 1274 when Walter retired from royal service and made his final revisions to the college statutes, the community was consolidated at its present site in the south east corner of the city of Oxford, and a rapid programme of building commenced. The hall and the chapel and the rest of the front quad were complete before the end of the 13th century, but apart from the chapel they've all been much altered since. To most visitors, the college and its buildings are synonymous, but the history of the college can be more deeply understood if one distinguishes the history of the academic community from that of the site and buildings that they've occupied for nearly 750 years. As of 2006, Merton had an estimated financial endowment of £142 million.
The buildings
The "House of Scholars of Merton" originally had properties in Surrey (in present day Old Malden) as well as in Oxford, but it wasn't until the mid-1260s that Walter de Merton acquired the core of the present site in Oxford, along the south side of what was then St John's Street (now Merton Street). The college was consolidated on this site by 1274, when Walter made his final revisions to the college statutes.
The initial acquisition included the parish church of St John (which was superseded by the chapel) and three houses to the east of the church which now form the north range of Front Quad. Walter also obtained permission from the king to extend from these properties south to the old city wall to form an approximately square site. The college continued to acquire other properties as they became available on both sides of Merton Street. At one time the college owned all the land from the site of what is now Christ Church to the south eastern corner of the city. The land to the east eventually became the present day garden, while the western end was leased by Warden Rawlins in 1515 for the foundation of Corpus Christi (at an annual rent of just over £4).
The chapel
By the late 1280s the old church of St John the Baptist had fallen into "a ruinous condition", and the college accounts show that work on a new church began in about 1290. The present choir with its enormous east window was complete by 1294. The window is an important example (because it's so well dated) of how the strict geometrical conventions of the Early English Period of architecture were beginning to be relaxed at the end of the 13th century. The south transept was built in the 14th century, the north transept in the early years of the 15th. The great tower was complete by 1450. The chapel replaced the parish church of St. John and continued to serve as the parish church as well as the chapel until 1891. It is for this reason that it's generally referred to as Merton Church in older documents, and that there's a north door into the street as well as doors into the college. This dual role also probably explains the enormous scale of the chapel, which in its original design was to have a nave and two aisles extending to the west.
A new choral foundation was established in 2007, providing for a choir of sixteen undergraduate and graduate choral scholars singing from October 2008. The choir will be directed by Peter Phillips, currently director of the Tallis Scholars.
Front quad and the hall
The hall is the oldest surviving college building, but apart from the door with its magnificent medieval ironwork almost no trace of the ancient structure has survived the successive reconstruction efforts, first by James Wyatt in the 1790s and then again by Gilbert Scott in 1874. The hall is still used daily for meals and houses a number of important portraits. It isn't usually open to visitors.
Front quad itself is probably the earliest collegiate quadrangle, but its informal, almost haphazard, pattern can't be said to have influenced designers elsewhere. A reminder of its original domestic nature can be seen in the north east corner where one of the flagstones is marked "Well". The quad is formed of what would have been the back gardens of the three original houses that Walter acquired in the 1260s.
Mob quad
» See main article Mob Quad
Visitors to Merton are often told Mob Quad, built in the 14th century, is the oldest quadrangle of any Oxford or Cambridge college and set the pattern for future collegiate architecture, but Front Quad was certainly enclosed earlier (albeit with a less unified design) and other colleges, for example Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, can point to their own older examples.
The old library occupies the south and west ranges of Mob Quad, and the original archive room is still in the north east corner; it houses one of the most complete sets of college records in Europe.
Fellows' quad
The grandest quadrangle in Merton is the Fellows' Quadrangle, immediately south of the hall. The quad was the culmination of the work undertaken by Sir Henry Savile at the beginning of the 17th century. The foundation stone was laid shortly after breakfast on 13 September 1608 (as recorded in the college Register), and work was complete by September 1610 (although the battlements were added later). The southern gateway is surmounted by a tower of the four Orders, probably inspired by Italian examples that Warden Savile would have seen on his European travels. The main contractors were from Yorkshire (as was Savile), John Ackroyd and John Bentley of Halifax did the stonework and Thomas Holt the timber. This group were also later employed to work on the Bodleian Library and Wadham College.
Other buildings
Most of the other buildings are Victorian or later and include: St. Alban's Quad (or "Stubbins"), designed by Basil Champneys, built on the site of the medieval St. Alban's Hall (elements of the older façade are incorporated into the part that faces onto Merton Street); the Grove building, built in 1864 by William Butterfield but "chastened" in the 1930s; the buildings beyond the Fellows' Garden called "Rose Lane"; several buildings north of Merton Street, including a tennis court, and the Old Warden's Lodgings (designed by Champneys in 1903);
16th century
Bishop John Jewel, theologian and Anglican divine (1535)
Sir Thomas Bodley, diplomat, scholar, and librarian (1563)
Sir Henry Savile, scholar and statesman (1565)
Richard Smyth, Regius Professor of Divinity
17th century
John Bainbridge, astronomer (c1610)
Admiral Robert Blake, military commander and Member of Parliament for Bridgwater (1615)
William Harvey, physician (1645)
Richard Steele, politician and writer (1691)
Anthony Wood, antiquary
18th century
David Hartley – Member of Parliament and signatory to the Treaty of Paris
John Graves Simcoe – Military Officer and First lieutenant governor of Upper Canada
19th century
Sir Max Beerbohm, author and caricaturist (1890)
Edmund Clerihew Bentley, inventor of the Clerihew (1894)
F. H. Bradley, philosopher
Mandell Creighton, historian and Bishop of London (1862)
Lord Randolph Churchill, British statesman (1867)
Lord Halsbury, Lord Chancellor, and compiler of the Laws of England (1842)
George Howson, reforming headmaster (1879)
F. E. Smith, British statesman (1896, at Merton as a graduate)
Frederick Soddy, radiochemist and Nobel Laureate for chemistry (1895)
20th century (matriculated before 1960)
Theodor Adorno, philosopher, sociologist, musicologist, and art critic (1934)
Sir Lennox Berkeley, composer (1922)
Sir Roger Bannister, middle-distance runner and neurologist (1950)
Sir Basil Blackwell, bookseller and publisher (1907)
Sir Geoffrey Vickers
Edmund Blunden, Professor of Poetry (1931)
Frank Bough, broadcaster
Robert Byron, travel writer
John Carey, Merton Professor of English
Leonard Cheshire, RAF pilot and philanthropist (1936)
T. S. Eliot, poet and Nobel Laureate for literature (1914)
Northrop Frye, literary critic
Erich S. Gruen, classical scholar (Rhodes Scholar, 1957–1960, Visiting Fellow 1974)
Stuart Hall, cultural theorist
Sir Tony Hoare, computer scientist (1952)
Andrew Irvine, mountaineer (1921)
Sir Jeremy Isaacs, broadcaster and impresario
Kris Kristofferson, actor and musician
Professor Anthony Leggett, physicist, Nobel Laureate in physics (1959)
John Lucas, philosopher (JRF 1953, Fellow 1960)
Louis MacNeice, poet (1926)
Reginald Maudling, politician
Airey Neave, politician
Terence O'Brien, British ambassador to Nepal, Burma and Indonesia
Reynolds Price, author and professor at Duke University
Sir George Radda, scientist
Howard K. Smith, journalist and broadcaster
Professor Niko Tinbergen, ethologist (1949)
J. R. R. Tolkien, author and Merton Professor of English (1945)
Angus Wilson, author
Contemporary (matriculated since 1960)
Colin Bundy, academic (1968 Rhodes Scholar)
Andy Cato, DJ, one half of Groove Armada (1994)
James Clark, open source software developer (1982)
John A. Claughton, Chief Master of King Edward's School, Birmingham and the Foundation of the Schools of King Edward VI
Howard Davies, Director, London School of Economics
Pat Fish (Patrick Huntrods), musician and songwriter
David Freud, investment banker
Mark Haddon, author (1981)
Dr Adam Hart Davis, broadcaster
Tim Jackson, auctioneer (1983)
Alec Jeffreys, geneticist
Alister McGrath, scientist and theologian (1976 Domus Senior Scholar)
John Mitchinson, writer and publisher (1982)
Tim Mitchison, cell biologist
HIH Naruhito, Crown Prince of Japan (1982)
Michael Ridpath, author (1980)
Dana Scott, logician
Sir Howard Stringer, Chief Executive Officer of Sony, (1961, Hon. Fellow)
Mark Thompson, broadcaster, director general of the BBC
Rick Trainor, Principal of King's College London
Ed Vaizey, MP for Wantage
Professor Sir Andrew Wiles, mathematician (1971)
Alexander Williams, animator (1986)
Grace
The college preprandial grace is always recited before formal dinners in Hall and usually by the senior Postmaster present. The first two lines of the Latin text are based on verses 15 and 16 of Psalm 145.
» Oculi omnium in te respiciunt, Domine. Tu das escam illis tempore opportuno.
Aperis manum tuam, et imples omne animal benedictione tua. » Benedicas nobis, Deus, omnibus donis quae de tua beneficentia accepturi simus.
Per Iesum Christum dominum nostrum, Amen.
Roughly translated it means: » The eyes of the world look up to thee, O Lord. Thou givest them food in due season.
Thou openest thy hand and fillest every creature with thy blessing. » Thou blessest us, O God, with all the gifts which by thy good works we're about to receive.
Through Jesus Christ, Our Lord, Amen.
For the relevant verses of the Psalm, the Authorized Version has: » 15. The eyes of all wait upon thee; and thou givest them their meat in due season.
16. Thou openst thine hand, and satisfiest the desire of every living thing.
According to an article about Graces from the University of Cambridge, a slightly different version of the Latin text of these verses is painted (apparently as a decoration) around Old Hall in Queens' College, Cambridge, and is "commonly in use at other Cambridge colleges".
By contrast with the rather long pre-prandial grace, the post-prandial grace is brief: Benedictus benedicat ("Let him who is blessed, give blessing"). The latter grace is spoken by the senior Fellow present at the end of dinner on High Table.
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