Did you know 1
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/1 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that after Evelyn Waugh (pictured) brought a priest to anoint lapsed Catholic Hubert Duggan on his deathbed, Duggan was reconciled to the church, an event Waugh fictionalised in Brideshead Revisited?
- ... that for helping endow a professorship of botany at Oxford, James Sherard was granted a doctorate in medicine by the university in 1731?
- ... that British journalist and Liberal politician Colin Coote was an editor of the The Daily Telegraph for 14 years?
- ... that Sir Ian Anstruther, 8th Baronet, held two separate baronetcies which on his death went to different sons?
- ... that George Hargreaves, Christian Party candidate in the 2008 Haltemprice and Howden by-election, has said that the dragon symbol on the Welsh flag is "nothing less than the sign of Satan"?
Did you know 2
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/2 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that the members of the Council of Keble College, Oxford (council member Henry Herbert, 4th Earl of Carnarvon pictured) had power to move the college away from Oxford?
- ... that British lawyer and activist of the Indian independence movement Eardley Norton was instrumental in establishing an UK-chapter of the Indian National Congress?
- ... that in 1996, the University of Glasgow renamed its Chair of Drama after former professor James Fullarton Arnott?
- ... that while Nicholas Fitzherbert was abroad, two priests were arrested in his father's house and hanged, drawn and quartered?
- ... that the equipment designed by the physicist Gwyn Jones to liquefy small amounts of helium for work at temperatures near absolute zero was made from parts of a motorcycle engine?
Did you know 3
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/3 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that before Charles Aitken installed electric lighting, the Tate Gallery (pictured) was cleared of visitors on dark and foggy days?
- ... that in 1964 J. N. L. Baker, Bursar of Jesus College, became the first member of the university to hold the post of Lord Mayor of Oxford?
- ... that although George Bernard Shaw called fellow Edwardian playwright St John Hankin's death "a public calamity," his work was largely neglected until the 1990s?
- ... that "many-sided" priest Father Patrick McLaughlin promoted links between the church and the world of literature by staging plays, and by commissioning lectures from T. S. Eliot and Dorothy L. Sayers?
- ... that in 1612 Jewish teacher Jacob Barnet was arrested and imprisoned by officials of the university for changing his mind about being baptized?
Did you know 4
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/4 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that Harrison Oxley was the youngest cathedral organist in Britain when he became organist of St Edmundsbury Cathedral (pictured) at age 24?
- ... that the Rev. George W. Bridges libelled anti-slavery activists Escoffery and Lecesne when he said they wanted to "sheath their daggers in the breasts of their white inhabitants"?
- ... that Ian Harvey, a Conservative junior minister in the United Kingdom, resigned his seat in 1958 after a sex scandal?
- ... that English musician and poet Robert Wydow is the earliest known recipient of a Bachelor of Music degree from the university?
- ... that, after being defrocked as a Church of England priest, Harold Davidson became a seaside entertainer and was killed in 1937 by a lion when he trod on its tail?
Did you know 5
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/5 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that the Australian lamington cake (pictured) is believed to have been named after Charles Cochrane-Baillie, 2nd Baron Lamington, the then-Governor of Queensland?
- ... that William Havard, who was bishop of two Welsh dioceses (St Asaph, then St David's), once represented Wales in an international rugby union match?
- ... that Robert Gentilis graduated from Oxford aged 12 and became a Fellow of All Souls College aged 17, below the minimum fellowship age of 18?
- ... that cricketer Roger Kimpton also won an Oxford University tennis tournament and a golf blue, and was awarded a Distinguished Flying Cross as a Second World War fighter pilot?
- ... that when scholar Spencer Barrett’s tax return was challenged, he showed that to understand a text of Pindar he had to know how Mount Etna had appeared to a passing sailor?
Did you know 6
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/6 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that Lord Nuffield rejected the first designs for the buildings of Nuffield College, Oxford (tower as later designed pictured) by the architect Austen Harrison, saying that they were "un-English"?
- ... that George West, the Lord Bishop of Rangoon 1935–54, became for two months the Bishop of Atlanta, Georgia, while the Japanese occupied Burma?
- ... that the financial endowment by Edmund Meyrick, a Welsh cleric and philanthropist who died in 1713, is still awarding scholarships to students at Jesus College three centuries later?
- ... that William Hayter was secretary of the UK delegation to the Potsdam Conference, later Ambassador to the Soviet Union, and then Warden of New College?
- ... that Lancelot Blackburne was thought to have spent time in the Caribbean as a buccaneer as a young man, and lived openly with his mistress whilst Archbishop of York?
Did you know 7
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/7 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that Cheshire landowner Rowland Egerton-Warburton (pictured) arranged for his house, Arley Hall, to be designed in Tudor style while the chapel was designed in Gothic style?
- ... that Herbert Armitage James, who was headmaster of Rugby School for 14 years, had one of the best stamp collections in England?
- ... that Marrack Goulding, a former Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations, was Warden of St Antony's College from 1997 to 2006?
- ... that Clive Ponting was found not guilty of violating the Official Secrets Act by a jury even after the judge, Sir Anthony McCowan, summed up strongly in favour of the prosecution?
- ... that Ion Calvocoressi won an immediate Military Cross in Libya in 1942, and was married to the sister of Ludovic Kennedy for over 60 years?
Did you know 8
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/8 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that the Oxford University Museum of Natural History (pictured) was the site of a major debate in evolutionary biology?
- ... that despite being appointed to the usually profitable post of comptroller to Prince Charles in 1616, John Vaughan, 1st Earl of Carbery later claimed that serving the Prince had cost him £20,000?
- ... that Anglican clergyman Chad Varah founded the Samaritans, the world's first crisis hotline, in 1953, at a time when he was also writing for the Eagle comic?
- ... that British barrister Sir Tony Hetherington was the first head of the Crown Prosecution Service after it was founded in 1986?
- ... that the Welshmen Edward Edwards, Griffith Griffith, Owen Owen, Richard Richards, Robert Roberts and Thomas Thomas (and his son Thomas Thomas) were all educated at Jesus College?
Did you know 9
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/9 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that the Indian Institute (pictured) in central Oxford was founded by Sir Monier Monier-Williams in 1883 to provide training for the Indian Civil Service?
- ... that sports car racer, yachtsman and rower Robert Hichens was also the most highly decorated officer of the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve during the Second World War?
- ... that Daniel Ernst Jablonski in the 1690s tried to bring about a union between Lutheran and Calvinist Protestants?
- ... that the English historian Sir Raymond Carr was knighted for services to History in the New Year Honours List, 1987?
- ... that John Percival, when headmaster of Rugby School, gained the nickname "Percival of the knees" because he was concerned about "impurity" and insisted that boys secure their football shorts below the knee with elastic?
Did you know 10
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/10 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that endocrinologist Sir Raymond Hoffenberg was forced to leave South Africa in 1968 due to his opposition to apartheid, and was later President of the Royal College of Physicians and of Wolfson College (pictured)?
- ... that Christopher Chavasse was an Officer of the Order of the British Empire, a Bishop of Rochester, and an Olympic athlete?
- ... that, in 1987, Bolaji Akinyemi proposed the development of nuclear weapons by Nigeria?
- ... that historian Henry William Carless Davis once served as a member of the British contingent to the Paris Peace Conference in 1919?
- ... that future Canadian Senator John Gilbert Higgins hung black crêpe paper on his door in mourning the day that Newfoundland joined Canada?
Did you know 11
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/11 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that Welsh politician David Lloyd George (pictured) said that he would prize no honour more highly than his Honorary Fellowship of Jesus College?
- ... that Thomas Johnes planted three million trees to make his Hafod Uchtryd estate picturesque?
- ... that the position of Dean Ireland's Professor of the Exegesis of Holy Scripture at Oxford was endowed by John Ireland, who was Dean of Westminster for more than 25 years?
- ... that deforestation in Staffordshire inspired contributions from Erasmus Darwin and Anna Seward to a book of poetry about Needwood Forest by Francis Mundy?
- ... that medieval scholar Erika Cheetham interpreted Nostradamus' writings as prophecies of Napoleon, Hitler, and the establishment of modern Israel?
Did you know 12
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/12 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that Kenelm Hubert Digby was the proposer of the notorious 1933 "King and Country" debate in the Oxford Union (debating chamber pictured)?
- ... that the Oxford University Ice Hockey Club claims to be the second oldest ice hockey team in the world?
- ... that Christopher Elrington, general editor of the Victoria County History, was a professor at the University of London even though he never taught there?
- ... that the position of Laudian Professor of Arabic was established at Oxford by William Laud, the Archbishop of Canterbury?
- ... that Gwilym Davies was the first person to broadcast in Welsh, on Saint David's Day in 1923?
Did you know 13
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/13 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that the Laura Spence Affair was a major UK political row started over comments made by Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown (pictured) accusing Oxford of elitism?
- ... that in his first murder case, real estate and divorce laws specialist Frederick Geoffrey Lawrence saved suspected serial killer Dr John Bodkin Adams from being hanged?
- ... that former Anglican clergyman and Liberal Party life peer Tim Beaumont was the only Green Party representative in the Parliament of the United Kingdom from 1999 until his death in 2008?
- ... that Kenneth Woollcombe, a former Bishop of Oxford, was a member of the Court of Ecclesiastical Causes Reserved when it granted a faculty for the controversial altar by Henry Moore?
- ... that despite being personal secretary to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Francis Charles Lawley's attempts at insider trading resulted in losses?
Did you know 14
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/14 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that the Scots American War Memorial (detail pictured) has a poetic line by Ewan Mackintosh who was killed while observing fighting at Cambrai?
- ... that William David Davies was the first Welsh non-conformist to obtain a Bachelor of Divinity degree from Oxford?
- ... that former Gloucestershire cricket captain Sir Derrick Bailey founded an airline and based the colour of its planes on the racing colours of his South African father?
- ... that English mathematician and geographer Robert Hues served his master Thomas Grey, the last Baron Grey de Wilton, while Grey was imprisoned in the Tower of London?
- ... that Rev William Cotton, vicar of Frodsham, Cheshire, introduced the skills of beekeeping to New Zealand in the 1840s?
Did you know 15
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/15 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that the statue of the Virgin and Child in the porch of the University Church of St Mary the Virgin (pictured) was cited as evidence in Archbishop Laud's execution trial, and has bullet holes made by Oliver Cromwell's troops?
- ... that the great-granddaughter of Mahatma Gandhi, Leela Gandhi, is a senior lecturer at La Trobe University in the English program?
- ... that British Conservative MP Richard Hornby unsuccessfully challenged former Prime Minister and Labour leader Clement Attlee before securing a safe seat?
- ... that cyber law author and professor Jonathan Zittrain co-founded StopBadware.org to distribute the task of collecting data about malware to Internet users at large?
- ... that the military theories of the 18th-century Welsh soldier Henry Lloyd were studied by George Washington and George S. Patton?
Did you know 16
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/16 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that the reredos (pictured) installed in 1864 in the chapel of Jesus College, Oxford has been described variously as "handsome", "somewhat tawdry" and looking like "corned beef"?
- ... that the first journal articles written by the entomologist Robert Perkins were published when he was a classics student at Oxford, with no scientific education?
- ... that Vernon Erskine-Crum was appointed General Officer Commanding of the British Army in Northern Ireland in 1971, during the Troubles, but was relieved within a month after suffering a heart attack?
- ... that Kingsley Fairbridge established the first child migration scheme for impoverished British children which over 68 years housed and educated 1,195 boys and girls at his farm school in Pinjarra, Western Australia?
- ... that David Powel compiled and published the first printed history of Wales in 1584, which popularized the legend that Prince Madoc discovered America in about 1170?
Did you know 17
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/17 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that it was the British geologist Joseph Prestwich (bust pictured) who confirmed the findings of Boucher de Perthes?
- ... that a Regius Professor of Civil Law was elected to parliament, gaoled, exiled, re-elected, kidnapped, put in the Tower, tortured, hanged, drawn and quartered, then beatified?
- ... that Mike Woodin was the Principal Speaker of the Green Party of England and Wales for six years and a city councillor for Oxford for 10 years?
- ... that A.W. Lawrence, the former Professor of Classical Archaeology at Cambridge University, was the brother of "Lawrence of Arabia"?
- ... that the winners of the university's Gaisford Prize for Greek Verse include the fictional Duke of Dorset in Max Beerbohm's 1911 novel Zuleika Dobson?
Did you know 18
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/18 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that Harry Peckham (pictured), along with Charles Bennet, 4th Earl of Tankerville, wrote the first draft of cricket's leg before wicket rule?
- ... that Arthur Lee Dixon was the last holder of a mathematical Chair at the university to have a life tenure?
- ... that MP Sir Anthony Kershaw returned leaked documents about the sinking of the General Belgrano, resulting in the prosecution of Clive Ponting?
- ... that Adam Raphael was named Journalist of the Year in the British Press Awards of 1973 for a Guardian series on labour conditions in South Africa?
- ... that English barrister Joseph Keble went to the Court of King's Bench every day from 1661 to 1710, but was never known to have a brief for a client?
Did you know 19
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/19 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that economist Barbara Ward (pictured), an early advocate of sustainable development, was the first woman ever to address a synod of Roman Catholic bishops?
- ... that Sir Albert Napier was described as the "midwife to civil legal aid"?
- ... that academic Anastasios Christodoulou was named 'Anastasios' ('Resurrection') by his parents as he was born on Easter Day?
- ... that cricket writer Gerald Howat won the Cricket Society's Golden Jubilee award for his biography of Learie Constantine?
- ... that William Wroth founded the first independent chapel in Wales in 1639, after he refused to obey King Charles' instruction to allow sports to be played on Sundays?
Did you know 20
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/20 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that Christopher Tin (pictured) is the first Fulbright scholar for film scoring?
- ... that the world's largest mathematical experiment, designed by Brian Butterworth, found women to be faster than men at subitizing?
- ... that Englishman James McFarlane was appointed a Knight Commander of the Royal Norwegian Order of Saint Olav for his eight-volume work Oxford Ibsen?
- ... that British plant physiologist Daphne Osborne showed that the gas ethylene is a natural plant hormone which regulates ageing and the shedding of leaves and fruits?
- ... that millionaire's daughter Rose Dugdale joined an IRA active service unit and took part in the first helicopter bombing raid on the British Isles in 1974?
Did you know 21
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/21 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that after Metropolitan Museum of Art curator Dietrich von Bothmer convinced his employers to buy the Euphronios Krater (pictured) for $1 million, the Italian government claimed the krater had been looted?
- ... that Alexander Valentine, Chairman of London Transport from 1959 to 1965, published a book Tramping round London?
- ... that when Richard Fort won a seat in the 1950 general election, he became the third person with the same name to represent Clitheroe in the British House of Commons?
- ... that Sir Richard Garth was a barrister, MP, Privy Counsellor and Chief Justice of Bengal as well as Lord of the Manor of Morden?
- ... that the law professor Boudewijn Sirks has written on papyrology, food distribution in ancient Rome, and Sailing in the Off-Season with Reduced Financial Risk?
Did you know 22
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/22 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that Lieutenant General Howard D. Graves (pictured as a cadet) was a Rhodes Scholar, the Superintendent of West Point, and the Chancellor of Texas A&M University?
- ... that Mahesh Rangarajan is a researcher, author and historian who analysed present-day conservation conflicts in India and found their roots in India's colonial past?
- ... that David Lewis and his son Stephen Lewis served simultaneously as the leaders of the Canadian and Ontario New Democratic Party?
- ... that Gail Trimble, captain of the team which won BBC TV's University Challenge before being disqualified, has been called the "human Google" and the "Usain Bolt of general knowledge"?
- ... that the poet William Dickey finished a poem about the death of his mentor, John Berryman, shortly before his own death in 1994?
Did you know 23
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/23 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that John Rogers, who helped to prepare a version of the Hebrew Bible, also helped to introduce the man engine (double-acting man engine pictured), an important reform in Cornish mining?
- ... that editor Hedley Donovan was responsible for redirecting TIME from a conservative magazine to one "more toward the middle"?
- ... that Guido di Tella was an Argentine businessman, academic and diplomat who served as Minister of Foreign Relations between 1991 and 1999?
- ... that the 1673 history of Cheshire by Sir Peter Leycester questioned Amicia Mainwaring's legitimacy, leading to a "paper war" of 15 pamphlets with the Mainwaring family?
- ... that New Zealand Test cricketer Martin Donnelly also played rugby union for England?
Did you know 24
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/24 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that British surgeon Theodore Dyke Acland was the son-in-law of Jack the Ripper suspect Sir William Gull (pictured)?
- ... that at the 1895 United Kingdom General Election, Tankerville Chamberlayne's election as a Member of Parliament was declared void because of electoral fraud?
- ... that Arthur William Hodge was the only white person in the history of the British West Indies to be executed for killing a black slave?
- ... that Lord Michael Fitzalan-Howard and his seven siblings all had first names beginning with the letter "M"?
- ... that it took over 50 years to complete the foundation of Jesus College, as one Principal lost the draft statutes and the next one kept the replacement copy in his study for several years?
Did you know 25
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/25 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that John Weston (pictured) became a published poet after retiring from his post as Ambassador to the United Nations?
- ... that Ivor Bulmer-Thomas, having lost his position on the Historic Churches Preservation Trust (for which he denounced the Archbishop of Canterbury as having "held a pistol to my face while the Dean of Gloucester plunged his dagger into my back"), founded his own, more intransigent, committee, the Friends of Friendless Churches?
- ... that archaeologist Francis Turville-Petre, discoverer of Neanderthal remains in Israel, was portrayed in works by authors W. H. Auden and Christopher Isherwood?
- ... that the highly influential jurist Sir Matthew Hale once said that lawyers were "a barbarous set of people unfit for anything but their own trade"?
- ... that Richard Cordray, the first Director of the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, is a five-time undefeated Jeopardy! champion and carried the Olympic Torch in 1996?
Did you know 26
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/26 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that Charles Ranken (pictured) and Lord Randolph Churchill founded the Oxford University Chess Club in April 1869, with Ranken becoming its first president?
- ... that John Verney became a Member of Parliament to gain contacts to help him in his career as a barrister?
- ... that W. G. Collingwood, John Ruskin's secretary and assistant, was a noted scholar of Norse history and art?
- ... that Rabbi Asher Lopatin supported a Chicago ban on foie gras on the grounds that the Torah prohibits cruelty to animals, noting that "chopped liver is good, but foie gras is bad"?
- ... that Alexander Wilkinson managed to play 74 more first-class cricket matches despite an injured hand that almost had to be amputated after World War I?
Did you know 27
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/27 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that Sir Douglas Dodds-Parker, a junior Foreign Office minister during the Suez Crisis in 1956, was sacked by new Prime Minister Harold Macmillan (pictured) in 1957 for his private opposition to the invasion of Egypt?
- ... that English headmistress Olive Willis founded Downe House School, where her chauffeur-architect-engineer slept in her bathroom?
- ... that Sir William Gregory was appointed Speaker of the House of Commons in 1679 after only a year in parliament?
- ... that Giles Clarke, chairman of the England and Wales Cricket Board, studied Arabic at the University of Damascus?
- ... that the Welsh Tractarian priest John David Jenkins, known as the "Rail men's Apostle", became President of the Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants?
Did you know 28
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/28 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that Seymour King, Member of Parliament for Kingston upon Hull Central for 25 years, was the first climber to reach the summits of Mont Maudit and Aiguille Blanche de Peuterey (pictured)?
- ... that Andrew N. Meltzoff's research revealed that infants of only a few weeks of age can imitate facial expressions and hand gestures?
- ... that civil engineer Robert Wynne-Edwards was the first President of the Institution of Civil Engineers to be elected while still working as a contractor?
- ... that Irish cricketer and artist Robert Gregory was the subject of four poems by W. B. Yeats?
- ... that when a rival took over an estate belonging to Sir Walter Clarges, Clarges used his position as a Member of Parliament to send the interloper to jail?
Did you know 29
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/29 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that the establishment of the Marshal Foch Professorship of French Literature at Oxford was announced a few days after Marshal Foch (pictured) signed the Armistice with Germany to end World War I?
- ... that British international rally driver Tony Ambrose was given an MG sports car by his father for winning a scholarship to Jesus College?
- ... that Bishop Graham Chadwick served as a naval intelligence officer in World War II and was expelled from South Africa for anti-apartheid activism?
- ... that Somerset cricketer Izzy Westbury made her senior international debut for the Netherlands aged 15?
- ... that it was speculated that J. K. Rowling based the Harry Potter character Albus Dumbledore on the "splendidly bearded" T. P. Wiseman, her classics professor at Exeter University?
Did you know 30
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/30 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that Clement, Bishop of Dunblane, (pictured) was the first Dominican friar to obtain a bishopric in the British Isles?
- ... that Sir William Fortescue was prompted to become a barrister by the death of his wife?
- ... that one of Bodley's Librarians at Oxford had been in the King's African Rifles, another wrote about French anarchy, another had sixteen siblings, another used boys for routine library tasks, and another later died of a "surfeit of cherries"?
- ... that Lord Nolan was the first chairman of the Committee on Standards in Public Life?
- ... that Welsh lawyer Edward Wynne was, in 1714, the first landowner to grow turnips on Anglesey?
Did you know 31
Portal:University of Oxford/Did you know/31 Articles from Wikipedia's "Did You Know" archives about the university and people associated with it:
- ... that John Prideaux Lightfoot commissioned the Adoration of the Magi tapestry (detail pictured) from Morris & Co. for the Gothic revival chapel at Exeter College, but died before it was completed?
- ... that special trains were laid on for voters returning to Oxford for the 1860 election of the Boden Professor of Sanskrit?
- ... that William Morfill was the first professor of Russian in Britain?
- ...that a scathing obituary of British author Lord Michael Pratt in The Daily Telegraph called him "an unabashed snob and social interloper on a grand scale", who habitually outstayed his welcome?
- ... that one 16th-century Registrar of the University of Oxford was dismissed after neglecting his duties for a year, then imprisoned and fined after throwing a punch when the debate had ended?