Colleges of the University of Oxford

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The University of Oxford comprises 39 Colleges and 7 religious Permanent Private Halls (PPHs), which are autonomous self-governing corporations within the university. All teaching staff and students studying for a degree of the university must belong to one of the colleges or PPHs. These colleges are not only houses of residence, but have substantial responsibility for the teaching of undergraduates. Generally tutorials (the main method of teaching in Oxford) and classes are the responsibility of colleges, while lectures, examinations, laboratories and the central library are run by the university.

A typical college consists of a great hall for dining, a chapel, a library, a college bar, senior, middle (postgraduate) and junior common rooms, rooms for 200-400 undergraduates as well as lodgings for the head of the college and other dons. College buildings range from the medieval to very modern buildings, but most are made up of interlinked quadrangles (courtyards), with one or more large wooden gates controlling entry from the outside.

Brasenose College in the 1670s
Brasenose College in the 1670s

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[edit] History

The University of Oxford's collegiate system springs from the fact that the university came into existence through the gradual agglomeration of independent institutions in the city of Oxford.

The first academic houses were monastic halls. Of the dozens that settled in the university during the 12th to 15th centuries, none survived the Reformation. The modern permanent private hall of Blackfriars (1921) is a descendant of the original (1221), and is therefore sometimes described as heir to the oldest tradition of teaching in Oxford.

As the University took shape, friction between the hundreds of students living where and how they pleased led to a decree that all undergraduates would have to reside in approved halls. Of the hundreds of Aularian houses that sprang up across the city, only St Edmund Hall (c 1225) remains. What put an end to the halls was the emergence of colleges. Generously endowed and with permanent teaching staff, the colleges were originally the preserve of graduate students. However, once they began accepting fee-paying undergraduates in the 14th century, the halls' days were numbered.

The oldest of Oxford's colleges are University College, Balliol, and Merton, established between 1249 and 1264, although there is some dispute over the exact order and precisely when each began teaching. The fourth oldest college is Exeter, which was founded in 1314 and the fifth is Oriel, which was founded in 1326. The most recent is Kellogg College, founded in 1990.

Women entered the university for the first time in 1878, becoming members of the University (and thus eligible to receive degrees) in 1920. Women's colleges before integration included Somerville College, St. Hugh's, and Lady Margaret Hall. Almost all colleges are now co-educational, the only remaining women-only college being St Hilda's which has decided to accept male members at all levels from 2009. Some colleges accept only graduate students.

[edit] List of colleges

For the college scarf colours see Oxbridge scarf colours.
Name Foundation Website Sister college at Cambridge
All Souls College 1438 Website Trinity Hall
Balliol College 1263 Website St John's College
Brasenose College 1509 Website Gonville and Caius College
Christ Church 1546 Website Trinity College
Corpus Christi College 1517 Website Corpus Christi College
Exeter College 1314 Website Emmanuel College
Green College 1979 Website St Edmund's College
Harris Manchester College 1786, College status 1996 Website
Hertford College 1282, College status 1740 Website
Jesus College 1571 Website Jesus College
Keble College 1870 Website Selwyn College
Kellogg College 1990, College status 1994 Website
Lady Margaret Hall 1878 Website Newnham College
Linacre College 1962 Website Wolfson College
Lincoln College 1427 Website Downing College
Magdalen College 1458 Website Magdalene College
Mansfield College 1886, College status 1995 Website
Merton College 1264 Website Peterhouse
New College 1379 Website King's College
Nuffield College 1937 Website
Oriel College 1326 Website Clare College
Pembroke College 1624 Website Queens' College
The Queen's College 1341 Website Pembroke College
St Anne's College 1878 Website New Hall
St Antony's College 1950, College status 1963 Website
St Catherine's College 1963 Website Robinson College
St Cross College 1965 Website Clare Hall
St Edmund Hall 1226, College status 1957 Website Fitzwilliam College
St Hilda's College 1893 Website
St Hugh's College 1886 Website Clare College
St John's College 1555 Website Sidney Sussex College
St Peter's College 1929 Website
Somerville College 1879 Website Girton College
Templeton College 1965, College status 1995 Website
Trinity College 1554 Website Churchill College
University College 1249 Website Trinity Hall
Wadham College 1610 Website Christ's College
Wolfson College 1966, College status 1981 Website Darwin College
Worcester College 1714 Website St Catharine's College

[edit] List of Permanent Private Halls

Name Foundation Website
Blackfriars 1221, refounded 1921 Website
Campion Hall 1896 Website
Greyfriars 1224, refounded 1910 Website
Regent's Park College 1752, moved to Oxford 1927 Website
St Benet's Hall 1897 Website
St Stephen's House 1876, PPH status granted in 2003 Website
Wycliffe Hall 1877 Website

[edit] Heads of Houses

The senior member of each college is an officer known generically as the Head of House. His or her specific title varies from college to college as indicated in the list below. While the Head of House will usually be an academic, it is not uncommon for a person to be appointed who has had a distinguished career outside academic circles, especially in the Civil Service.

Note: Until 2004 the President of Templeton was both Head of House and Chairman of the Governing Body. In 2004 the college statutes were amended so that these roles were separated. The Dean is now Head of House. The Dean of Christ Church is head of both the college and the cathedral.

[edit] Academic rankings

For some years an unofficial ranking of undergraduate colleges by performance in Final Honour Schools examinations has been published annually, known as the "Norrington Table" - [1]. As the table only takes into account the examination results for the year it is published in, college rankings may fluctuate considerably. Nonetheless, there is a clear correlation between the wealth of a college and its position in the tables. The university and colleges have at times attempted to suppress the Norrington Table, largely unsuccessfully.

Beginning in 2005, the university started publishing a list of colleges classified by a "Norrington Score", effectively replicating the Norrington Table[2]. The university claim to have published the results "in the interests of openness". Although the university says that the college listings are "not very significant", the 2005 table is the first Norrington Table with official data, and also likely to be the first to be truly correct. Dame Fiona Caldicott, the Chairman of the Conference of Colleges, has said that in previous years some students have used the Data Protection Act to ensure their results were not published, rendering the unofficial tables inaccurate.[3]

[edit] Rivalry between Colleges

A tradition of the University is a friendly rivalry between colleges. Often, two neighbouring colleges will be rivals, and each college will pride itself in its athletic victories over the other one. Examples include:

As well as historic rivalries based on geographical proximity, colleges often develop foes in the sporting arena that can become full-scale rivalries, although these are usually much more short-term. A current example of this came as a result of the 2006 rugby Cuppers final between Pembroke and St. Peters that culminated in a fight between the Pink Pembroke Panther and the St. Peter's Squirrel, the respective mascots of each team.

[edit] Fictional Colleges of Oxford

For a list of fictional colleges of Oxford University see List of fictional Oxford colleges.

[edit] See also


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