MAGDALEN COLLEGE, OXFORD



'Magdalen College' (pronounced "maudlin" ) is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England. It is also one of the wealthiest, with, in 2003, an estimated financial endowment of £116 million.
Magdalen College was founded as Magdalen Hall in 1448 by William of Waynflete, Bishop of Winchester. It became Magdalen College in 1458. The founder's statutes included provision for a choral foundation of men and boys (a tradition that has continued to the present day) and made reference to how the name of the College should be pronounced.
Widely regarded as one of the most beautiful of the Oxford and Cambridge colleges, Magdalen is also one of the most visited. It stands next to the River Cherwell and has within its grounds a deer park and Addison's Walk. Magdalen College School also lies nearby. The large, square Magdalen Tower is a famous Oxford landmark, and it is a tradition that the college choir sings from the top of it early on May Morning. The college's current president, Professor David Clary FRS, was earlier a Fellow and Senior Tutor at Magdalene College, Cambridge.

Contents
Grounds
The Grove (Deer Park)
The Meadow (bounded by Addison's Walk)
The Fellows' Garden
Buildings
Choir
Sport
Rowing
Notable Alumni
Teachers/academics
Old members who are current Members of Parliament
External links

Grounds


The college has large grounds, close to the city centre. They stretch north and east from the college, and are most of the area bounded by Longwall Street, the High Street (where the porter's lodge is located), and St Clement's.
The deer in the Grove

The Grove (Deer Park)

This large meadow occupies most of the north west of the college's grounds, from the New Buildings and the Grove Quad up to Hollywell Ford. During the winter and spring, it is the home of a herd of deer. It is possible to view the meadow (and also the deer) from the path between New Buildings and Grove Quad, and also from the archway in New Buildings.
In the 16th century, long before the introduction of the deer, the grove consisted of gardens, orchards, and bowling greens. During the Civil War, it was used to house a regiment of soldiers. At one point in the C19th it was home to three traction engines belonging to the works department of the college.
Addison's Walk in Autumn

Addison's Walk in Spring

The Meadow (bounded by Addison's Walk)

This triangular meadow lies to the east of the college, bounded on all sides by the River Cherwell. In the spring, it is filled with the flower Fritillaria Meleagris (commonly known as Snakeshead Fritillary), which gives it an attractive green-purple colour. These flowers grow in very few places, and have been recorded growing in the meadow since around 1785. Once the flowering has finished, the deer are moved in for the Summer and Autumn. In wet winters, some or all of the meadow may flood, as the meadow is lower lying than the surrounding path. All around the edge of the meadow is a tree-lined path, Addison's Walk. It is a beautiful and tranquil walk, favoured by students, dons, and visitors alike. In high summer, however, the walk can suffer from unpleasant smells due to the putrifaction of the river. It also links the college with Hollywell Ford, and the Fellows' Garden.
The Fellows' Garden

The Fellows' Garden

Located to the north east of the Meadow, this long and (fairly) narrow garden follows the Cherwell to the edge of the University Parks. In spring, the ground is covered with flowers. In summer, there are some flowers, many different shrubs, and the varied trees provide dappled cover from the sun. It is linked to Addison's Walk by a bridge.
Buildings

The Great Tower was built between 1492 and 1509, and is an imposing landmark on the eastern approaches to the city centre. The hall and chapel were built at similar times, though both have undergone some changes in the intervening years.
The cloister and the New Building

The Cloisters

The Cloister was built in the fifteenth century, and has been altered several times since then. In 1822, the north side was in bad shape, and was knocked down while most of the fellows were away from college (only a small group of fellows were in favour of demolishing it). It was rebuilt shortly afterwards. In the early 1900s, renovations were performed, and it was returned to a more mediaeval character. Student rooms were installed in the (very large) roof space in the 1980s, and remain some of the most sought after rooms in the college. The New Building was built in 1733.
St Swithun's Quad and Grammar Hall

The college has a number of other quads. St John's Quad is the first on entering the college, and includes the Outdoor Pulpit. There is Chaplain's Quad, which runs along the side of the Chapel and Hall, to the foot of the Great Tower. St Swithun's Quad and Longwall Quad (which contains the Library) date from the late 19th and early 20th century, and make up the south west corner of the college. The Grove Buildings are the newest (built in the 1990s), and are built in a traditional style.

Choir


Magdalen is one of the three Choral Foundations in Oxford, meaning that the formation of the choir was part of the statutes of the college, the other two choral foundations being New College and Christ Church.
The choir consists of twelve Academical Clerks who are students at the College, and sixteen boys aged seven to fourteen, all of whom have scholarships at Magdalen College School. The school was originally founded for this express purpose but has long since become an independent public school.
The choristers' day begins at 7:30, with an early morning practice before school. There is further practice immediately after school, followed by Choral Evening Prayer (during the week) or Choral Evensong (weekends) six nights a week, in term; the Monday service is sung by the boys only, and the Friday service only by the Academical Clerks. On Saturdays there is an afternoon practice, while on Sundays there is a practice at 09:30 followed by Eucharist, then a further afternoon practice followed by Evensong which ends at 7pm. Most of the boys thus have a longer working day, and a busier weekend, than their parents.
The Choir has numerous College duties as well as a recording and touring schedule. Traditionally the Choir sings at College Gaudies and at other special events throughout the year, as well as performing on social occasions such as Carols by Candlelight before Christmas and the famous May Morning. On this occasion the Choir sings madrigals at 6am from the top of the college bell-tower to the assembled mass of students and townsfolk celebrating in the streets below.
In its long history the choir has had many well known organists, such as Daniel Purcell, Sir John Stainer and Bernard Rose, while past Organ Scholars include Dudley Moore, and past Academical Clerks include Sir Harry Christophers (founder and director of The Sixteen) and Robin Blaze.
The choir records regularly and In 2005 was nominated for a prestigious Grammy Award for its CD, ''With a Merrie Noyse'', of music by Orlando Gibbons. Other recent works include the BBC's Blue Planet and Paul McCartney's classical piece Ecce Cor Meum.
The current Informator Choristarum (the master and conductor of the choir) is the composer Bill Ives, possibly better known as a former King's Singer. A disc of his music, ''Listen Sweet Dove'', is amongst the choir's latest releases.
Magdalen College on May Morning, 2007.

Sport


Rowing

Magdalen has held 'Head of the River' between 2004 and 2007. This means it has won the Summer Eights competition in each of these years. Summer Eights is the most prestigious university regatta held in Oxford.

Notable Alumni



John Mark Ainsley

James Richard Atkin

Matthew D'Ancona

Kenneth Baker

Julian Barnes

Sir Eric Berthoud

John Betjeman

Al-Muhtadee Billah

Hugh Boulter

Ashley Bramall

Stephen Breyer

Peter Brook

Nicholas Browne-Wilkinson, Baron Browne-Wilkinson

Harry Christophers

Wesley Clark

Norman Davies

Gideon Defoe

Michael Denison

Alfred Denning

Lord Alfred Douglas

Ronald Dworkin

Fernanda Eberstadt

John Carew Eccles

King Edward VIII

Marc S. Ellenbogen

Gareth Evans

James Fenton

Howard Walter Florey

John Florio

Martha Lane Fox

Malcolm Fraser

J. Paul Getty

Edward Gibbon

Ben Goldacre

Anthony Grayling

William Hague

Matthew Hale

John Hemming

Giles Henderson

Ian Hislop

Alan Hollinghurst

Albert Hourani

Charles Bousfield Huleatt

Mick Imlah

Brian Inglis

Benedikt Isserlin

Michael Jay

Keith Joseph

Michael Kinsley

Nicholas D. Kristof

★ William Levett

John Lyly

Terrence Malick

Peter Medawar

Dudley Moore

Vinicius de Moraes

Desmond Morris

Henry Phillpotts

Stephen Potts

Hormuzd Rassam

John Redwood

Robert Robinson

James Edwin Thorold Rogers

Henry Sacheverell

Duncan Sandys

Sir John Scarlett

Erwin Schrödinger

Charles Scott Sherrington

John Sergeant

Sion Simon

David Souter

Jon Stallworthy

Andrew Sullivan

Louis Theroux

Gerald Thesiger

Prince Tomohito of Mikasa

William Tyndale

★ King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck of Bhutan

Thomas Webb

Oscar Wilde

Lord Frederick Windsor

Thomas Wolsey
(P. G. Wodehouse attributes a Magdalen undergraduateship to his fictional literary character Bertie Wooster; Tibby, in E. M. Forster's Howard's End, is also a Magdalen undergraduate.)
:See also .

Teachers/academics



Joseph Addison

Niall Ferguson

E.H.H. Green

Adam Fox

John Fuller (poet)

Robert Gunther

Seamus Heaney

George Horne

C. S. Lewis

K. B. McFarlane

A.J.P. Taylor

Oliver Taplin

Felipe Fernández-Armesto

Timothy Ware

Old members who are current Members of Parliament



Dominic Grieve

William Hague

John Hemming

Chris Huhne

Jeremy Hunt

John Hutton

Eddie O'Hara

George Osborne

John Redwood

Sion Simon

External links



Virtual Tour of Magdalen College

A history of the choristers of Magdalen Chapel, Oxford

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