Pembroke College, Oxford: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 12:14, 22 March 2007
Pembroke College is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England, located in Pembroke Square.
History
The College was founded in 1624 using money given by Thomas Tesdale and Richard Wightwick. It was named after William Herbert, 3rd Earl of Pembroke, the patron of William Shakespeare, who was Chancellor of the University at the time. The official founder was King James I, and it is in his name that Pembroke students are permitted to wear silver tassels in their caps (mortarboards). Part of the College is situated in buildings formerly used by the mediæval Hall Broadgates.
The main buildings of the College date mainly from the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries, and are built of Cotswold limestone. The Geoffrey Arthur Building (GAB), a modern annex built nearby on the banks of the River Thames at Grandpont, provides accommodation for almost a hundred undergraduates, usually those in their final year.
Pembroke was described by John Betjeman, in Summoned by Bells:
- How empty, creeper-grown and odd
- Seems lonely Pembroke's second quad
- Still, when I see it, do I wonder why
- That college so polite and shy
- Should have more character than Queen's
- Or Univ, splendid in the High.
Courses
Pembroke offers a broad range of courses, covering almost all the subject areas offered by the university. In particular, the college has had a strong involvement with Management Studies, being the first traditional Oxford College to appoint a Fellow in the field. [1] The college has maintained a close relationship with the Saïd Business School. With an intake of eight students per year, Pembroke has more Economics & Management undergraduates than any other college, and has built a reputation as one of the strongest Colleges to study what is now the most competitive course for applicants to university.
The JCR and MCR
Pembroke is home to a JCR (undergraduate community) notable for its artistic wealth and sporting prowess and an MCR (graduate community) notable for its international composition and hedonistic flair. The JCR is the wealthiest in Oxford due to the purchase and sale of a Francis Bacon painting in the early twentieth century (see below), and has used those funds to support a socially progressive student support scheme and an impressive artistic acquisition programme. The MCR is housed in a suite of historic rooms and is remarkable for its connections with a wide range of nations. Its current patron is Lord (John) Kerr, former head of the Foreign and Commonwealth Office and Ambassador to the United States.
The college is also home to the Emery gallery and the JCR art fund, founded by the sale of a Francis Bacon painting for £400,000, which is empowered to make significant contemporary purchases for the college.
Sport
The college has a strong sporting reputation across the university. Recent years have seen the JCR achieve particular success at rugby, and cricket, football, hockey and darts. The MCR has been particularly strong at women's boxing, polo and cricket.
Pembroke College Boat Club is one of Oxford's strongest boat clubs, with the men's and women's boats currently sitting 2nd and 3rd on the river in Summer Eights respectively. In 2003, Pembroke became the first college to win the "Double Headship Trophy" for having both men's and women's Eights head the river.
Notable former students
Samuel Johnson was one of the College's more famous old members, though he did not complete his degree (he was later awarded an honorary degree by the University); lack of funds forced him to leave Oxford after about a year and a half. Two of his desks and various other possessions (his teapot, mug, and the like) are on display in the library and elsewhere in the College.
James Smithson, whose bequest founded the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., despite his never having visited the United States, was an undergraduate at Pembroke, under the name "James Lewis Macie" — he changed his name to that of his natural father after the death of his mother.
Senator J. William Fulbright, who established the Fulbright Fellowships, was a Rhodes Scholar at Pembroke in the 1920s.
- King Abdullah II of Jordan
- Francis Beaumont
- William Blackstone
- Edmund Bonner
- Thomas Browne
- William Camden
- Mary Creagh
- Julian Critchley
- Denzil Davies
- Maria Eagle
- J. William Fulbright
- Charles Hawtrey (19th century actor)
- George Procter Hawtrey
- Michael Heseltine
- Walter Isaacson
- John Kerr, Baron Kerr of Kinlochard
- Philip Lader
- Richard G. Lugar
- Viktor Orbán
- John Pym
- Radek Sikorski
- James Smithson
- John Snagge
- The Rt Revd Thomas Shaun Stange, DD
- Honeysuckle Weeks (actress)
- George Whitefield
Academics, fellows, and teachers
Although he had been an undergraduate at Exeter College, J.R.R. Tolkien was a Fellow of Pembroke from 1925 to 1945, and wrote The Hobbit and the first two books of The Lord of the Rings during his time there.
Among the College's more recent Masters was Roger Bannister, the first man to run the mile in under four minutes.
(The names of current members are followed by links to their College pages)
- R. G. Collingwood
- John Eekelaar (F.B.A.) *
- Malcolm R. Godden *
- Alexander Kacelnik *
- Peter J. King *
- Martha Klein *
- Sir John Krebs (F.R.S.)
- Theo Maarten van Lint *
- Piers Mackesy, military historian, F.B.A.
- I. James McMullen (F.B.A.) *
- Ken Mayhew [1]
- Naci Mehmet *
- Christopher Melchert *
- Guy Talbot Newbury
- J. R. R. Tolkien
- Bishop Kallistos (Timothy Ware) of Diokleia