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Trinity College was founded by Sir Thomas Pope. Born in 1507 he was educated at Banbury Grammar School and Eton.
In 1553 he bought the site and the derelict remains of Durham College from the Benedictines and in the following year, on May Day, he issued his statutes, dedicating the college "to the honour of the Holy and undivided Trinity " The statutes are signed by his second wife, Lady Elizabeth Blount (whom he established as foundress), as well as by himself. He died in 1559 and was buried with his first wife, but the foundress had his body brought to the college chapel where she erected the beautiful tomb in which together he and she lie.
Some of the old monastic buildings still remain and form part of the little Durham Quad beyond the chapel.
The chapel, 1690, designed by Dean Aldrich of Christ Church, possibly with the help of Wren, is a perfect example of English Renaissance work and of the Baroque as far as this can be found in England. The wood- carving is attributed to Grinling Gibbons.
The present hall was built on the site of the monk's refectory which collapsed when an attempt was made to construct cellars under it. This was in the year 1618 and associated with one of the eccentricities of President Kettell, perhaps the greatest of the college's presidents. Elected as such in 1599 he reigned over the college in that capacity for forty four years.
In 1594 Sir George Calvert entered the college as a commoner. Under Sir Robert Cecil, in 1619, he was Secretary of State. In 1625 he retired from public life, having been raised to the Irish peerage as Lord Baltimore and took a leading part in the founding of Maryland, the principal object being to establish a country where Catholics could enjoy liberty of conscience.
One of the great men of this period was Gilbert Sheldon, immortalised in the Sheldonian Theatre, opposite the college, on the other side of the Broad.
In that period of general academic stagnation, the eighteenth century, Trinity produced William Pitt. The nineteenth century marked the turn of the academic tide. In the year 1817 Newman was a freshman at Trinity, the college making him an honorary fellow in 1878. His portrait in the hall is a copy of the one by Ouless hanging in Oriel, and was painted by the sixteen year old daughter of the president, John Percival, on the occasion of Newman's farewell visit in 1880.
Further dates : Library 1417, Garden Quad 1665-82.
Large (A3) for £15
Small (A4) for £10
Delivery is an additional £3.50 to anywhere in the world (this covers multiple items).
Charles Broadhurst was born in Birmingham on 22nd August 1903 but moved with his family to Oxford when he was very young. He did not realise his talent until a footballing injury gave him time to experiment with pencil and paper.
Now 90 years on, and just short of 100 images later, his sons are making his artistry available to the world at large. Not all images will be made available but the expectation is that the list available for purchase will eventually number close to 60.
In both A3 (297 x 420 mm, 11.69 x 16.54 inches, £15) and A4 (210 x 297 mm 8.27 x 11.69 inches, £10) sizes the prints available for sale are taken directly from the original pen and ink drawings, using the latest reprographic techniques.
Delivery is an additional £3.50 to anywhere in the world.