Westminster College, Cambridge

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Westminster College sits on one of the busier intersections of Cambridge's ring road
Westminster College sits on one of the busier intersections of Cambridge's ring road

Westminster College in Cambridge is a theological college of the Presbyterian Church in England, now the United Reformed Church. Its principle purpose is the training of clergy for ordination.

The college was founded in London in 1844 with a temporary home in the Exeter Hall before moving to permanent premises in Queen Square, London. It then moved to Cambridge in 1899 following the gift of a prime site of land near the centre of the city by two Scottish sisters, Agnes Lewis and Margaret Gibson, both noted biblical scholars. Following an appeal for funds from the wider Presbyterian congregation the college commissioned a new building designed by Henry Hare and built between 18971899.

In 1967 the college began to amalgamate with Cheshunt College, Cambridge presaging the union of the Congregational and Presbyterian churches to form the United Reformed Church in 1972.

[edit] Library

Agnes Lewis and Margaret Gibson were noted for their study of the Codex Climaci Rescriptus, a 6th century palimpsest written in Syriac which contains portions of the New Testament[1]. The sisters found the manuscript in St. Catherine’s monastery and brought it back to the library in Westminster College.

In 1896 Lewis and Gibson also found and purchased some fragments of parchment of the Cairo Geniza whilst travelling in the Middle East. They enlisted the support Solomon Schechter who together made several more trips to the Middle East, locating the majority of the Genizah at the Ben Ezra Synagogue in Cairo. Schechter identified the fragments as forming part of the Hebrew text of Ben Sira (Ecclesiasticus) [2].

The library also housed the library of Eberhard Nestle, but this was sold to the Van Kampen Collection in Florida in 1996 [3].

The college is not part of the University of Cambridge, but is united with six other religious colleges in Cambridge to form the Cambridge Theological Federation which is affiliated with the university. In concentrating on religious studies for training clergy, the college is in some ways closer to the original conception of the main university colleges when they were founded. However, with the general decline of the church, the demand for new clergy is low at present and there are very few students enrolled at the college.

The college also accommodates several conferences a year.

[edit] External links