Christ Church Library

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Christ Church Library.
Christ Church Library.

Christ Church Library is a Georgian building which forms the south side of Peckwater Quadrangle in Christ Church, Oxford, England. It houses the college's modern lending library and early printed books on two floors.

The first library at Christ Church was established in 1562 in what had been the refectory of St Frideswide's Priory. The books, of which around 140 remain in the library, were originally chained to wooden lecterns.

A new library was designed in the eighteenth century, with the intention of attracting aristocratic students to the college by equalling the great classical library buildings of Trinity College, Cambridge and Trinity College, Dublin. The most likely candidate for the architect is Dr George Clarke of All Souls; the master mason was William Townsend or Townesend. Building work started in 1717 and was only completed in 1772.

The books were housed on the first floor to avoid damp and flooding, while the ground floor was designed as an open loggia. However, a bequest of paintings from General John Guise during the protracted construction of the library led to the enclosure of the ground floor as a picture gallery (since moved to a separate, modernist, building).

The front elevation and plan.
The front elevation and plan.

The collections incorporate substantial bequests of books from, amongst others, Robert Burton; Henry Aldrich, Dean of Christ Church; William Stratford, a canon of the cathedral; William Wake, Archbishop of Canterbury; and Charles Boyle, 4th Earl of Orrery.

Christ Church Library contains perhaps the largest collection of early printed books in Oxford outside the Bodleian Library. The library was described in 1946 as 'a heterogeneous collection of about 100,000 works'[1] and this is the figure which has generally been quoted since. For comparison, the modern collection holds around 72,000 books as of 2006.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Hiscock, W.G. A Christ Church miscellany. Oxford: printed for the author, 1946, p. 111.
The baroque interior, from Rudolph Ackermann's History of Oxford (1813).
The baroque interior, from Rudolph Ackermann's History of Oxford (1813).

[edit] External links