Christ's College, Cambridge













































































Christ's College

Cambridge

Christ's College First Court, Cambridge, UK - Diliff.jpg

First Court, Christ's College


Christs shield.png

Arms of Christ's College, being the arms of the foundress Lady Margaret Beaufort: Royal arms of England a bordure componée azure and argent















Location
St Andrew's Street (map)
Motto
Souvent me Souvient (Old French)
Motto in English
I often remember
Founders
William Byngham (1437);
nominally, King Henry VI (1448)
Established
1437; refounded 1505
Named for
Jesus Christ
Previous names
God's House (1437–1505)
Sister colleges
Wadham College, Oxford
Branford College, Yale
Adams House, Harvard[1]
Master
Jane Stapleton
Undergraduates
450[2]
Postgraduates
170[2]
Endowment
£95.5m (as of 30 June 2017)[3]
Website
www.christs.cam.ac.uk
JCR
www.thejcr.co.uk
MCR
www.christsmcr.co.uk
Boat club
www.christs.cam.ac.uk/boatclub/

Christ's College is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge. The college includes the Master, the Fellows of the College, and about 450 undergraduate and 170 graduate students.[2] The college was founded by William Byngham in 1437 as God's House. In 1505, the college was granted a new royal charter, was given a substantial endowment by Lady Margaret Beaufort, and changed its name to Christ's College, becoming the twelfth of the Cambridge colleges to be founded in its current form. The college is renowned for educating some of Cambridge's most famous alumni, including Charles Darwin and John Milton.


Within Cambridge, Christ's has a reputation for highest academic standards and strong tutorial support. It has averaged 1st place on the Tompkins Table from 1980–2006 and third place from 2006 to 2013, returning to first place in 2018.




Contents






  • 1 History


  • 2 Buildings


    • 2.1 Swimming Pool


    • 2.2 Gallery


    • 2.3 Plan of College




  • 3 Academic profile


  • 4 Student life


    • 4.1 May Ball




  • 5 Grace


  • 6 Notable people


    • 6.1 Proctors of God's House


    • 6.2 Masters of Christ's


    • 6.3 Notable alumni




  • 7 References


    • 7.1 Footnotes


    • 7.2 Bibliography




  • 8 External links





History





Lady Margaret Beaufort, Christ's College Library


Christ's College was founded by William Byngham in 1437 as God's House, on land which was soon after sold to enable the enlargement of King's College.[4] Byngham obtained the first royal licence for God's House in July 1439.[5] The college was founded to provide for the lack of grammar-school masters in England at the time,[6] and the college has been described as "the first secondary-school training college on record".[7] The original site of Godshouse was surrendered in 1443 to King's College, and currently about three quarters of King's College Chapel stands on the original site of God's House.[8]


After the original royal licence of 1439, three more licences, two in 1442 and one in 1446, were granted before in 1448 God's House received the charter upon which the college was in fact founded.[9] In this charter, King Henry VI was named as the founder, and in the same year the college moved to its current site.[10]


In 1505, the college was endowed by Lady Margaret Beaufort, mother of King Henry VII, and was given the name Christ's College, perhaps at the suggestion of her confessor, the Bishop John Fisher.[11] The expansion in the population of the college in the seventeenth century led to the building, in the 1640s, of the Fellow's Building in what is now Second Court.[11]




Buildings




The chapel, with a viewing window from the Master's Lodge




The Great Gate on St Andrew's Street.


The original 15th/16th century college buildings now form part of First Court, including the chapel, Master's Lodge and Great Gate tower. The gate itself is disproportionate: the bottom has been cut off to accommodate a rise in street level, which can also be seen in the steps leading down to the foot of L staircase in the gate tower. The college hall, originally built at the very start of the 16th century, was restored in 1875–1879 by George Gilbert Scott the younger. The lawn of First Court is famously round, and a wisteria sprawls up the front of the Master's lodge.


Second Court is fully built up on only three sides, one of which is formed by the 1640s Fellows' Building. The fourth side backs onto the Master's garden.


The Stevenson Building in Third Court was designed by J. J. Stevenson in the 1880s and was extended in 1905 as part of the College's Quadcentenary. In 1947 Professor Albert Richardson designed a new cupola for the Stevenson building, and a second building, the neo-Georgian Chancellor's Building (W staircase, now known as The Blyth Building), completed in 1950. Third Court's Memorial Building (Y staircase), a twin of the Chancellor's building, also by Richardson, was completed in 1953 at a cost of £80,000.[12] Third Court is also noted for its display of irises in May and June, a gift to the college in 1946.[13]


The controversial tiered concrete New Court (often dubbed "the Typewriter") was designed in the Modernist style by Sir Denys Lasdun in 1966–70, and was described as "superb" in Lasdun's obituary in the Guardian.[14] Design critic Hugh Pearman comments "Lasdun had big trouble relating to the street at the overhanging rear".[15] It appears very distinctively in aerial photographs, forming part of the northern boundary of the college.


An assortment of neighbouring buildings have been absorbed into the college, of which the most notable is The Todd Building, previously Cambridge's County Hall.


Through an arch in the Fellows' Building is the Fellows' Garden. It includes two mulberry trees, of which the older was planted in 1608, the same year as Milton's birth. Both trees have toppled sideways, the younger tree in the Great Storm of 1987, and are now earthed up round the trunks, but continue to fruit every year.[16]



Swimming Pool


Christ's College is one of only 5 colleges in Oxford or Cambridge to have its own swimming pool. It is fed by water from Hobson's Conduit. Recently refurbished, it is now known as the 'Malcolm Bowie Bathing Pool', and is thought to be the oldest outdoor swimming pool in the UK, dating from the mid 17th century.[17] The other four swimming pools within colleges belong to Girton College (indoor pool), Corpus Christi College (outdoor pool), Emmanuel College (outdoor pool) and Clare Hall (indoor pool).



Gallery




Plan of College






ChristsCollege Overhead.jpg
1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

Christ's College, Cambridge, from above




























1
Great Gate
2
First Court
3
Chapel
4
Master's Lodge
5
Hall
6
Library

























7
Second Court
8
Fellows' Building
9
Third Court
10
Memorial Building
11
Stevenson Building
12
Blyth Building

















13
Todd Building
14
Four Staircase
15
New Court (Yusuf Hamied Centre)
16
Fellows' Garden



Academic profile


With a deserved reputation even within Cambridge for the highest academic standards, Christ's came first in the Tompkins Table's twentieth anniversary aggregate table,[18] and between 2001 and 2007, it had a mean position of third.[19] Academic excellence continues at Christ's, with 91% of students in 2013 gaining a first class degree or an upper second (II.i). This is significantly higher than the University average of 70%.[20][21]


Christ's is noted for educating two of Cambridge's most famous alumni, the poet John Milton and the naturalist Charles Darwin, who, during the celebrations for the 800th anniversary of the University, were both placed at the foreground as two of the four most iconic individuals in the University's history.[22][23][24] The college has also educated Nobel Laureates including Martin Evans, James Meade, Alexander R. Todd, Baron Todd and Duncan Haldane.[25][26] It is the University's 6th largest producer of Nobel Prize winners.[citation needed]


Some of the college's other famous alumni include comedians Sacha Baron Cohen, John Oliver and Andy Parsons, Lord Louis Mountbatten of Burma, South African Prime Minister Jan Smuts, historian Simon Schama, theologian William Paley and the former Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams. Professor in Pediatric Oncology Michael Whitehead, husband of Canadian author Louise Penny, completed both a Bachelor’s and a Master’s degree at Christ’s College.[27] Her fictional character French native speaker Chief Inspector Armand Gamache of the Sûreté du Québec is said in her first book Still Life to have learned English while an undergraduate at Christ’s College[28], where according to A Great Reckoning he read for a degree in History.



Student life




Christ's College Boat Club's boathouse on the River Cam


The Junior Combination Room (JCR), represents the undergraduate students. It organises social and welfare events, and negotiates on the students' behalf on important issues. The JCR has a standing committee and a common room for all the students. The JCR's counterpart, the Middle Combination Room (MCR) represents the graduate students of the College, and has its own bar. The MCR organises regular Graduate Halls. A Garden Party is held by both the JCR and the MCR every June in the Fellows' Garden. The Senior Combination Room (SCR) is composed solely of fellows of the College and holds two feasts each year.


Other societies in Christ's include:



  • The Marguerites Club, one of the oldest surviving College societies, reformed in 1899 by Gilbert Jessop the then captain of CUCC. It is believed to have originally formed some ten years earlier, but was soon disbanded. Originally the society was confined to captains and secretaries or those with colours in three sports. Nowadays it is also known as a drinking society, as well as a club recognising sporting excellence. The name originated from the club's original blazer, which was navy blue in colour with the Foundress's 'rebus' or badge, signifying her name, embroidered on the pocket.


  • Christ's College Boat Club, the oldest college sports club still active, having been founded in 1830. Like many other Cambridge Colleges, Christ's has its own boathouse on the banks of the Cam.

  • Christ's College Rugby Football Club, founded in 1875 by Alfred Cort Haddon,[29] who is considered the father of modern anthropology. In the 1960 Varsity Match, eight of the starting Cambridge team were students at Christ's and all of the side's points were scored by Christ's players.[30] The CCRFC is nicknamed "The Brown Rings" after the brown and white hoops featured on the match kit.

  • Christ's College Association Football Club, which prides itself on having won the inter-collegiate Cuppers competition more times than any other.

  • Christ's Films, which uses the theatre to screen new films weekly

  • Christ's Amateur Dramatic Society

  • Christ's College Medical Society

  • Christ's Politics Society

  • Christ's College Music Society, founded 1710.

  • Christ's College Chapel Choir



May Ball


Christ's, like most other Cambridge Colleges, also hosts a biennial May Ball in the time after undergraduate examinations which is by students commonly known as May Week. A separate society called "Christ's College May Ball Committee" is set up every two years to organise and direct this event. In 2010, Two Door Cinema Club headlined the entertainment. The May Ball in June 2012 featured a Rio de Janeiro carnival theme. The previous May Ball, named "L'Esprit Nouveau", was held on 15 June 2010 and featured a 1920s Parisian theme.


The May Ball on Tuesday 17 June 2014 was hailed as one of the best May Balls of the year, coming close to perfection.[31] It was themed "The Emerald City".



Grace


The College Grace is normally said before any dinner held in the Formal Hall of the College. Though the student body rises for the recitation of the Grace, Christ's is one of the only Colleges in Cambridge where the students do not rise when the Fellows enter and leave the Dining Hall. This is said to be the result of a historical conflict between the Students and Fellows at Christ's, who were on opposite sides during the English Civil War. The words of the Grace are as follows:











Latin English

Exhiliarator omnium Christe

Sine quo nihil suave, nihil jucundum est:
Benedic, quaesumus,
cibo et potui servorum tuorum,
Quae jam ad alimoniam corporis apparavisti;
et concede ut istis muneribus tuis ad laudem tuam utamur
gratisque animis fruamur;
utque quemadmodum corpus nostrum
cibis corporalibus fovetur,
ita mens nostra spirituali verbi tui
nutrimento pascatur


Per te Dominum nostrum,


Amen.


Christ, the gladdener of all,

Without whom nothing is sweet, nothing pleasant:

Bless, we beseech you,

the food and drink of your servants,

Which you have now provided for the nourishment of the body;

And grant that we may use these gifts of yours for your praise,

And enjoy them with grateful minds;

And that, just as our body

is nourished by bodily foods,

So our mind may feed

on the spiritual nourishment of your Word.


Through you, our Lord,


Amen.




Notable people



Proctors of God's House



  • 1439–1451 William Byngham

  • 1451–1458 John Hurt

  • 1458–1464 William Fallan

  • 1464–1477 William Basset

  • 1477–1490 Ralph Barton

  • 1490–1505 John Sickling



Masters of Christ's






Frank Kelly, Master of Christ's 2006–2016




  • 1505–1507 John Sickling

  • 1507–1510 Richard Wyot

  • 1510–1517 Thomas Thompson

  • 1517–1530 John Watson

  • 1530–1548 Henry Lockwood

  • 1548–1553 Richard Wilkes

  • 1553–1556 Cuthbert Scott

  • 1556–1559 William Taylor

  • 1559–1582 Edward Hawford

  • 1582–1609 Edmund Barwell

  • 1609–1622 Valentine Carey

  • 1622–1646 Thomas Bainbridge

  • 1646–1654 Samuel Bolton

  • 1654–1688 Ralph Cudworth

  • 1688–1722 John Covel

  • 1723–1745 William Towers

  • 1745–1754 George Henry Rooke

  • 1754–1780 Hugh Thomas

  • 1780–1808 John Barker

  • 1808–1814 Thomas Browne

  • 1814–1830 John Kaye

  • 1830–1848 John Graham

  • 1849–1849 Joseph Shaw

  • 1849–1881 James Cartmell

  • 1881–1887 Charles Anthony Swainson

  • 1887–1910 John Peile

  • 1910–1927 Sir Arthur Shipley

  • 1927–1936 Norman McLean

  • 1936–1939 Charles Galton Darwin

  • 1939–1950 Charles Raven

  • 1950–1963 Brian Downs

  • 1963–1978 Alexander R. Todd, Baron Todd

  • 1978–1982 Sir John Plumb

  • 1982–1995 Sir Hans Kornberg

  • 1995–2002 Alan Munro

  • 2002–2006 Malcolm Bowie

  • 2006–2016 Frank Kelly

  • 2016–         Jane Stapleton



[32]



Notable alumni































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Name
Birth
Death
Career

HRH Prince Ra'ad bin Zeid Al-Hussein
1936

Iraqi Prince

HRH Prince Zeid Ra'ad Zeid Al-Hussein
1964


UN High Commissioner for Human Rights

William Ames
1576
1633
Reformed Theologian

Thomas Baines
1622
1680
Physician, original Fellow of Royal Society

Richard Bancroft
1544
1610
Archbishop of Canterbury, Organiser of James I Bible

Jasmine Birtles
1962

British financial and business commentator, television presenter, author and journalist

Jagdish Chandra Bose
1858
1937
Indian physicist

C. Delisle Burns
1879
1942
Atheist and secularist writer and lecturer

Brian Cantor
1948

Vice-Chancellor of the University of Bradford and previously Vice-Chancellor of the University of York

Sir Anthony Caro
1924
2013
Sculptor

Sacha Baron Cohen
1971

Comedian

John Cook
1918
1984
Prolific Anglo-American composer and organist

Miles Corbet
1594/5
1662
Regicide

Frederick Cornwallis
1713
1783

Archbishop of Canterbury

John Cornwell
1940

British author and journalist

John James Cowperthwaite
1916
2006
Credited with policies allowing Hong Kong's economic boom in the 1960s

John Cridland
1961

Director-General of the Confederation of British Industry

Charles Darwin
1809
1882
British naturalist

Patrick Arthur Devlin, Baron Devlin
1905
1992
Jurist, Lord of Appeal in Ordinary

Colin Dexter
1930
2017
Novelist

Jill Duff
1972


Bishop-designate of Lancaster

George Dwyer
1908
1987
Archbishop of Birmingham; Council Father of the Second Vatican Council

James Chuter Ede
1882
1965

Home Secretary and Leader of the House of Commons

Sir Martin Evans
1941


Biochemist, Nobel laureate in medicine

Dee Ferris
1973

British Painter

John Finch
1626
1682
Ambassador, original Fellow of Royal Society

Noel Gay
1898
1954
Composer

Nina Gold
1964

BAFTA-winning casting director

Edmund Grindal
1519
1583

Archbishop of Canterbury

Alfred Cort Haddon
1855
1940
Father of modern anthropology

Duncan Haldane
1951

Physicist, Nobel laureate in physics

Yusuf Hamied
1936

Chemist and industrialist

Natalie Haynes
1974

Writer and broadcaster and a former comedian.

John Healey
1960

British politician

Derry Irvine, Baron Irvine of Lairg
1940

Lord Chancellor

Phillip King
1934

Sculptor

David Knowles
1896
1974
Historian

David Konstant
1930


Roman Catholic Bishop of Leeds

John Kotelawala
1897
1980

Prime Minister of Ceylon (Sri Lanka)

John Leland
c 1506
1552
Father of English history

Tony Lewis
1938

England and Glamorgan cricket captain; writer and broadcaster

Richard Luce
1936

Lord Chamberlain

Michael Lynch
1965

Founder of Autonomy Systems

Allama Mashriqi
1883
1963
Founder of the Khaksar Tehreek

Peter Mathieson
1959


Vice-Chancellor of University of Hong Kong

David Mellor
1949

British politician

Sir Walter Mildmay

1589
Founder of Emmanuel College, Cambridge

Miles Millar
c 1967

Hollywood screenwriter and producer

John Milton
1608
1674
English poet

Helen Mort
1985

Poet

Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma
1900
1979
British Admiral of the Fleet and statesman

Thomas Nelson, Jr.
1738
1789
Governor of Virginia; signer of the American Declaration of Independence

Davidson Nicol
1924
1994
Sierra Leonean academic, diplomat, physician, and writer

John Oliver
1977

British political comedian

J. Robert Oppenheimer
1904
1967
American theoretical physicist and 'father of the atomic bomb'

Andy Parsons
1967

English comedian and writer

William Paley
1743
1805
English theologian and philosopher

Steve Palmer
1968

Professional football player

John Peile
1838
1910
Philologist

William Perkins
1558
1602
Leading Puritan Theologian of the Elizabethan Era

Sir John Plumb
1911
2001
British historian

Thomas Plume
1630
1704
English clergyman, founder of the University's Plumian Chair of Astronomy and Experimental Philosophy

Roy Porter
1946
2002
British historian

Beilby Porteus
1731
1809

Bishop of Chester and Bishop of London, leading reformer and abolitionist

Peter Rawlinson, Baron Rawlinson of Ewell
1919
2006

Attorney General for England and Wales

Forrest Reid
1875
1948
Cambridge apostle, novelist, literary critic

Austin Robinson
1897
1993
British Economist and economic historian

Thomas Robinson, 2nd Baron Grantham
1738
1786
British Foreign Secretary

David Say
1939
2006
Bishop of Rochester

Simon Schama
1945

British historian, author, and television presenter

Sir Nicholas Serota
1946

Director of the Tate Gallery

Walter William Skeat
1835
1912
Philologist

Jan Smuts
1870
1950

Prime Minister of South Africa, Field Marshal, and Commonwealth statesman

C. P. Snow, Baron Snow
1905
1980
British novelist and philosopher

F. Gordon A. Stone
1925
2011
British chemist

Szeming Sze
1908
1998
Chinese Diplomat, WHO co-founder

Nicholas Tarling
1931
2017
Historian

Sir Jeffrey Tate
1943

Conductor

Henry Teonge
1620
1690
Naval chaplain and diarist

Andrew Turnbull, Baron Turnbull
1945


Cabinet Secretary and Head of the Civil Service

Richard Whiteley
1943
2005
British television presenter

Rowan Williams
1950

British theologian, Anglican Archbishop of Canterbury, Master of Magdalene College, Cambridge

Sir Christopher Zeeman
1925
2016
British mathematician


References



Footnotes





  1. ^ "Fellows' Guide to Christ's College". Christ's College. Retrieved 8 October 2015..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}
    [permanent dead link]



  2. ^ abc "Undergraduate Admissions: Christ's College". University of Cambridge website. Retrieved 2 August 2009.


  3. ^ "Annual report of the Trustees and Accounts prepared under the Recommended Cambridge College Accounts (RCCA) format for the year ended 30 June 2017" (PDF). Christ’s College, Cambridge. Retrieved 3 August 2018.


  4. ^ Lloyd, A.H. The Early History of Christ's College. p. 13.


  5. ^ Lloyd, A.H. The Early History of Christ's College. p. 24.


  6. ^ Lloyd, A.H. The Early History of Christ's College. p. 37.


  7. ^ Leach. The Schools of Medieval England. p. 257.


  8. ^ Lloyd, A.H. The Early History of Christ's College. pp. 44–45.


  9. ^ Lloyd, A.H. The Early History of Christ's College. p. 86.


  10. ^ Lloyd, A.H. The Early History of Christ's College. p. 73.


  11. ^ ab "College History". Christ's College, Cambridge. Retrieved 6 October 2015.


  12. ^ Christ's College Magazine, Michaelmas 1953


  13. ^ Christ's College Magazine no. 228, p 53, 2003


  14. ^ "Architects pay tribute to Denys Lasdun". the Guardian. Retrieved 13 September 2014.


  15. ^ "The Legacy of Lasdun". Archived from the original on 5 March 2012.


  16. ^ Christ's College Magazine no. 228, p 56, 2003


  17. ^ "Malcolm Bowie Bathing Pool". Christ's College, Cambridge. Archived from the original on 25 May 2014. Retrieved 13 September 2014.


  18. ^ "Christ's top of 20-year table of Cambridge colleges". The Independent. Retrieved 13 September 2014.


  19. ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20090801230649/http://www.mattmayer.com/fun/tompkins/. Archived from the original on 1 August 2009. Retrieved 8 October 2015. Missing or empty |title= (help)


  20. ^ "Supporting Applicants" (PDF). University of Cambridge. Retrieved 2014-09-13.


  21. ^ "Christ's College Annual Magazine 2013". Christ's College, Cambridge. Retrieved 13 September 2014.


  22. ^ "Quentin Blake unveils Cambridge 800 panorama | University of Cambridge". Cam.ac.uk. 2009-09-28. Retrieved 2014-07-10.


  23. ^ University education (2009-01-18). "Cambridge University's 800th birthday celebrated with spectacular light show". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 2014-07-10.


  24. ^ "University's history writ large on screen | Cambridge City News, Cambridge Local News Stories & Latest Headlines". Cambridge News. Archived from the original on 24 December 2013. Retrieved 10 July 2014.


  25. ^ "University of Cambridge Nobel Laureates". Retrieved 8 October 2015.


  26. ^ "Christ's College Distinguished Members". Christ's College. Retrieved 8 October 2015.


  27. ^ "In Memoriam: V. Michael Whitehead (1934-2016)". McGill Med e-news. Retrieved 18 June 2018.


  28. ^ "A murder by any other name". Beyond Words - Canada's Official Languages Newsletter, May 2012. Retrieved 18 June 2017.


  29. ^ "Official Christ's College Website; Distinguished Alumni". Christ's College, Cambridge. Archived from the original on 18 January 2013. Retrieved 13 September 2014.


  30. ^ "Rugby Varsity Match 1960: First Half Highlights". YouTube. Retrieved 13 September 2014.


  31. ^ "Christ's May Ball 2014: Close to Perfection".


  32. ^ Christ's College by John Peile (1900)




Bibliography




  • Lloyd, A. H. (2010), The Early History of Christ's College, Cambridge: Derived from Contemporary Documents, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 1108008976 (account of the history of God's House, originally published in 1934)


  • Peile, John (2014), Biographical Register of Christ's College, 1505-1905: And of the Earlier Foundation, God's House, 1448-1505 (reprint ed.), Cambridge University Press, ISBN 1107426049



External links







  • Official Christ's College website

  • Christ's JCR website

  • Christ's MCR website

  • Christ's biennial May Ball

  • Exhibition celebrating 400 years since the birth of John Milton

  • Cambridge 2000 — Christ's College photographs


Coordinates: 52°12′19″N 0°07′20″E / 52.205398°N 0.122223°E / 52.205398; 0.122223










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