Showing posts with label Oxford. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Oxford. Show all posts

Monday, October 14, 2013

Day 27 - A Broken Bed, A Carpenter and Re-visiting Oxford

So, today was another cleaning day since we had to prepare for the owner to visit with a carpenter to assess our broken bed.  None of us expected him to be able to fix the broken center rail on the spot, but he managed to do it and only charged 50 GBP.  Success, to a certain extent.  We did have a nice visit with Jacqueline Frasier and her partner.  Both were charming and gave us several recommendations as to some good restaurants to try.

Hertford Bridge (Bridge of Sighs)
In any case, I thought I'd give a little more information about our Cotswolds trip.  In Oxford, one of the pictures we took was of the Hertford Bridge, popularly known as the Bridge of Sighs.  The skyway joins two parts of Hertford College over New College Lane, and its distinctive design makes it a city landmark.

The picture above is taken from Catte Street.  However, if the picture had been taken looking toward Catte Street, the viewer would see another landmark, The Sheldonian Theatre.

The Sheldonian Theatre
Designed by Christopher Wren, the Sheldonian Theatre was commissioned by Gilbert Sheldon, Archbishop of Canterbury and the project's main financial backer.  It is used for music concerts, lectures and for various ceremonies held by the University (such as graduation and matriculation). Handel conducted the first performance of his third oratorio Athalia here in 1733. However, unlike its name, it is not a theatre for drama.

Summer performances are provided by the Oxford Theatre Guild in the Trinity College Gardens.

The back lawns of Trinity College
Another building of note in Oxford is the Radcliffe Camera.  Designed by James Gibbs, and built in the English Palladian style between the years 1737–1749, the building was intended to house the Radcliffe Science Library. The Library's construction and maintenance was funded from the estate of John Radcliffe, a notable doctor, who left £40,000 upon his death in 1714. According to the terms of Radcliffe's will, construction began in 1737.  However, the exterior wasn't completed until 1747, and the interior was finished in 1748, although the Library's opening was delayed until 13 April 1749.

Radcliffe Camera
The Oxford Natural History Museum is noted for its 1860 debate on evolution.  The debate took place on 30 June 1860, seven months after the publication of Charles Darwin's "On the Origin of Species." Several prominent British scientists and philosophers participated, including Thomas Henry Huxley, Bishop Samuel Wilberforce, Benjamin Brodie, Joseph Dalton Hooker and Robert FitzRoy. The debate is best remembered today for a heated exchange in which Wilberforce supposedly asked Huxley whether it was through his grandfather or his grandmother that he claimed his descent from a monkey.  A bit cheeky of him, I think.

Oxford Natural History Museum
The last set of buildings I'll mention today is the Bodleian Library in Oxford.  The Bodleian Library, which is the main research library of the university, is one of the oldest libraries in Europe, and in Britain is second in size only to the British Library with over 11 million items.  It is not one building, however, nor is the collection all stored above ground.  Included in the library system are the Radcliffe Camera and the Clarendon Building.

Entrance to the Bodelian Library
Between 1909 and 1912, an underground bookstack was constructed beneath the Radcliffe Camera and Radcliffe Square. In 1914, the total number of books in the library’s collections breached the 1 million mark. By the 1920s, the Library needed further expansion space, and in 1937 building work began on the New Bodleian building, opposite the Clarendon Building on the north-east corner of Broad Street.

Clarendon Building
The New Bodleian was designed by architect Sir Giles Gilbert Scott. Construction was completed in 1940. The building was of an innovative ziggurat design, with 60% of the bookstack below ground level. A tunnel under Broad Street connects the Old and New Bodleian buildings, and contains a pedestrian walkway, a mechanical book conveyor and a pneumatic Lamson tube system, which was used for book orders until an electronic automated stack request system was introduced in 2002.

That's it for tonight.  Tomorrow we intend to go shopping on Oxford Street.  So, I'll see you all tomorrow.

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Day 26 - Oxford, Shakespeare and the Cotswolds


The rain did put a bit of a damper on our progress through Oxford and the Cotswolds, but the sun started to peak out when we were leaving Stratford-upon-Avon.

Harris Manchester College
Our guide, Paul, is a student at the Harris Manchester College in Oxford University.  He gave us a tour of the city and spoke a little about what it was like to be a student at Oxford.  To be a member of the university, all students, and most academic staff, must also be a member of a college or hall. There are 38 colleges in the University of Oxford and six Permanent Private Halls, each controlling its membership and with its own internal structure and activities. Not all colleges offer all courses, but they generally cover a broad range of subjects.

Harris Manchester is one of very few mixed-sex higher education colleges whose undergraduate places are exclusively for mature students (aged 21 or over, Paul is 25). It is also the smallest of the constituent full colleges of the University of Oxford.

There can be an intense rivalry between the various colleges of the university, and therefore pranks between them are both common and expected.

All Souls College
One of the constituent colleges, All Souls, is unique in that all of its members automatically become Fellows, i.e., full members of the College's governing body. It has no undergraduate members, but each year recent graduates of Oxford and other universities compete in "the hardest exam in the world" for Examination Fellowships.  Despite the prestige of All Souls, the Fellows of the college do have a sense of humor.  Paul reported that they'd take an applicant, who believed he or she was still being examined, out to dinner and request the individual eat a banana with a knife and fork.

Even the Presidents of the colleges are not above pulling pranks, from what we were told. For many years, there has been a traditional and fierce rivalry shown between the students of Trinity and those of its immediate neighbor to the west, Balliol College.

In college folklore, the rivalry goes back to the late 17th century, when Ralph Bathurst, President of Trinity, was supposedly observed throwing stones at Balliol's windows.  However, Oxford's history has a darker side to it as well.  One of the most famous violent confrontations between town and gown was the Battle of St. Scholastica Day, an altercation that occurred on February 10, 1355 in the Swindlestock Tavern (where a bank now stands) between two students of the University of Oxford, Walter Spryngeheuse and Roger de Chesterfield, and the taverner, John Croidon. The students complained about the cloudiness of the ale they were served, which led to an exchange of rude words that ended with the students throwing their drinks in the taverner's face and assaulting him.

St. Scholastica Day Clash
Retaliation for this incident led to armed clashes between locals and students, which escalated until two thousand students pitted themselves against two thousand town people in a protracted two-day battle in which local citizens armed with bows attacked the academic village, killing and maiming 63 scholars, with 30 locals dead as well.

The rioters were severely punished, and thenceforth, the Mayor and Bailiffs had to attend a Mass for the souls of the dead every St. Scholastica's Day thereafter and to swear an annual oath to observe the university's privileges. The dispute was eventually settled in favour of the University, when a special charter was created. Annually thereafter, on 10 February the saint's day of St Scholastica, the Mayor and councillors had to march bareheaded through the streets and pay to the university a fine of one penny for every scholar killed.  For nearly 500 years, Oxford observed a day of mourning for the tragedy until 1825 when the mayor refused to take part.

Another dark moment in Oxford's history concerns three Anglican bishops who were tried for heresy in 1555 and burnt at the stake in for their religious beliefs and teachings under the reign of Queen Mary, daughter of Henry VIII and Katherine of Aragon, who is also known in history as "Bloody Mary."

Thomas Cranmer at the stake
 The three martyrs were the Anglican bishops Hugh Latimer, Nicholas Ridley and Thomas Cranmer, the Archbishop of Canterbury.  The three pious men were tried at University Church of St Mary the Virgin, the official church of Oxford University on the High Street and imprisoned at the former Bocardo Prison in Cornmarket Street. The door of their cell is on display in the tower of the church.

The bishops were executed just outside the city walls to the north, where Broad Street is now located. Latimer and Ridley were burnt on 16 October 1555. Cranmer was burnt five months later on 21 March 1556.

Martyrs' Memorial

A small area cobbled with stones forming a cross in the center of the road outside the front of Balliol College marks the site. The Victorian spire-like Martyrs' Memorial, at the south end of St Giles' nearby, commemorates the events. It is claimed that the scorch marks from the flames can still be seen on the doors of Balliol College.

We'll be staying in tomorrow because of the broken bed, so I'll post more about our trip and add some photographs then.  Until then, goodnight.