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Merton College, Oxford

 
Merton College, Oxford

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Merton College, Oxford



 
 
See also Wardens of Merton College, Oxford
Wardens of Merton College, Oxford

Wardens of Merton College, Oxford have been the following*Peter of Abingdon, 1264?86*Richard Werplysdon, 1286?95*John de la More, 1295?9*John de Wantynge, 1299?1328...
. Merton College is also the name of a college in the London Borough of Merton
London Borough of Merton

The London Borough of Merton is a London borough in south west London.The borough was formed in 1965 by the merger of the former area of the Municipal Borough of Mitcham, the Municipal Borough of Wimbledon and the Merton and Morden Urban District, all formerly within Surrey....
.


Merton College is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford
University of Oxford

The University of Oxford , located in the city of Oxford, Oxfordshire, England, is the List of oldest universities in continuous operation in the English-speaking world....
 in England
England

native_name =|conventional_long_name = England|common_name = England|image_flag = Flag of England.svg|image_coat = England COA.svg|symbol_type = Royal Coat of Arms...
. Its foundation can be traced back to the 1260s when Walter de Merton
Walter de Merton

Walter de Merton was Bishop of Rochester and founder of Merton College, Oxford....
, chancellor to Henry III
Henry III of England

Henry III was the son and successor of John of England as King of England, reigning for fifty-six years from 1216 to his death. His contemporaries knew him as Henry of Winchester....
 and later to Edward I
Edward I of England

Edward I , popularly known as Longshanks, the English Justinian, and the Hammer of the Scots , was a House of Plantagenet King of England who achieved historical fame by conquering large parts of Wales and almost succeeding in doing the same to Scotland....
, first drew up statutes for an independent academic community and established endowments to support it. The important feature of Walter's foundation was that this "college" was to be self-governing and that the endowments were directly vested in the Warden and Fellows.

By 1274 when Walter retired from royal service and made his final revisions to the college statutes, the community was consolidated at its present site in the south east corner of the city of Oxford, and a rapid programme of building commenced.






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See also Wardens of Merton College, Oxford
Wardens of Merton College, Oxford

Wardens of Merton College, Oxford have been the following*Peter of Abingdon, 1264?86*Richard Werplysdon, 1286?95*John de la More, 1295?9*John de Wantynge, 1299?1328...
. Merton College is also the name of a college in the London Borough of Merton
London Borough of Merton

The London Borough of Merton is a London borough in south west London.The borough was formed in 1965 by the merger of the former area of the Municipal Borough of Mitcham, the Municipal Borough of Wimbledon and the Merton and Morden Urban District, all formerly within Surrey....
.


Merton College is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford
University of Oxford

The University of Oxford , located in the city of Oxford, Oxfordshire, England, is the List of oldest universities in continuous operation in the English-speaking world....
 in England
England

native_name =|conventional_long_name = England|common_name = England|image_flag = Flag of England.svg|image_coat = England COA.svg|symbol_type = Royal Coat of Arms...
. Its foundation can be traced back to the 1260s when Walter de Merton
Walter de Merton

Walter de Merton was Bishop of Rochester and founder of Merton College, Oxford....
, chancellor to Henry III
Henry III of England

Henry III was the son and successor of John of England as King of England, reigning for fifty-six years from 1216 to his death. His contemporaries knew him as Henry of Winchester....
 and later to Edward I
Edward I of England

Edward I , popularly known as Longshanks, the English Justinian, and the Hammer of the Scots , was a House of Plantagenet King of England who achieved historical fame by conquering large parts of Wales and almost succeeding in doing the same to Scotland....
, first drew up statutes for an independent academic community and established endowments to support it. The important feature of Walter's foundation was that this "college" was to be self-governing and that the endowments were directly vested in the Warden and Fellows.

By 1274 when Walter retired from royal service and made his final revisions to the college statutes, the community was consolidated at its present site in the south east corner of the city of Oxford, and a rapid programme of building commenced. The hall and the chapel and the rest of the front quad were complete before the end of the 13th century, but apart from the chapel they have all been much altered since. To most visitors, the college and its buildings are synonymous, but the history of the college can be more deeply understood if one distinguishes the history of the academic community from that of the site and buildings that they have occupied for nearly 750 years. As of 2006, Merton had an estimated financial endowment
Financial endowment

A financial endowment is a transfer of money or property donated to an institution, usually with the stipulation that it be invested, and the :wikt:principal remain intact in perpetuity or for a defined time period....
 of £142 million.

The buildings

The "House of Scholars of Merton" originally had properties in Surrey (in present day Old Malden
Old Malden

Old Malden is a Ward of the Royal Borough of Kingston upon Thames south west of Charing Cross. At the United Kingdom Census 2001 its population was 9,012, out of a total of 147,273 for the whole borough....
) as well as in Oxford, but it was not until the mid-1260s that Walter de Merton acquired the core of the present site in Oxford, along the south side of what was then St John's Street (now Merton Street
Merton Street

Merton Street is a historic and picturesque cobbled lane in central Oxford, England. It joins the High Street, Oxford at its north-eastern end, between the Ruskin School of Drawing & Fine Art and the Eastgate Hotel at the historic east gate of the city....
). The college was consolidated on this site by 1274, when Walter made his final revisions to the college statutes.

The initial acquisition included the parish church of St John (which was superseded by the chapel) and three houses to the east of the church which now form the north range of Front Quad. Walter also obtained permission from the king to extend from these properties south to the old city wall to form an approximately square site. The college continued to acquire other properties as they became available on both sides of Merton Street. At one time the college owned all the land from the site of what is now Christ Church
Christ Church, Oxford

Christ Church , is one of the largest Colleges of the University of Oxford of the University of Oxford in England. As well as being a college, Christ Church is also the cathedral church of the diocese of Oxford, namely Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford....
 to the south eastern corner of the city. The land to the east eventually became the present day garden, while the western end was leased by Warden Rawlins in 1515 for the foundation of Corpus Christi
Corpus Christi College, Oxford

Corpus Christi College is one of the Colleges of the University of Oxford of the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom. Founded in 1517, it is the twelfth oldest college in Oxford, with an estimated financial endowment of ?58m as of 2006....
 (at an annual rent of just over £4).

The chapel

Merton College2
By the late 1280s the old church of St John the Baptist had fallen into "a ruinous condition", and the college accounts show that work on a new church began in about 1290. The present choir
Quire (architecture)

Architecturally, the choir is the area of a church or cathedral, usually in the western part of the chancel between the nave and the sanctuary ....
 with its enormous east window was complete by 1294. The window is an important example (because it is so well dated) of how the strict geometrical conventions of the Early English Period of architecture were beginning to be relaxed at the end of the 13th century. The south transept
Transept

Full descriptions of the elements of a Gothic floorplan are found at the entry Cathedral diagram.'For the periodical go to The Transept....
 was built in the 14th century, the north transept in the early years of the 15th. The great tower was complete by 1450. The chapel replaced the parish church of St. John and continued to serve as the parish church as well as the chapel until 1891. It is for this reason that it is generally referred to as Merton Church in older documents, and that there is a north door into the street as well as doors into the college. This dual role also probably explains the enormous scale of the chapel, which in its original design was to have a nave
Nave

In Romanesque architecture and Gothic architecture Christian abbey, cathedral basilica and Church architecture, the nave is the central approach to the high altar....
 and two aisles extending to the west.

A new choral foundation was established in 2007, providing for a choir of sixteen undergraduate and graduate choral scholars singing from October 2008. The choir will be directed by Peter Phillips, currently director of the Tallis Scholars
Tallis Scholars

The Tallis Scholars are a United Kingdom vocal ensemble normally consisting of two singers per part, with a core group of ten singers.Formed in 1973 by their director Peter Phillips , they specialise in performing a cappella Religious music written during the Renaissance by composers from all over Europe....
.

Front quad and the hall

The hall is the oldest surviving college building, but apart from the door with its magnificent medieval ironwork almost no trace of the ancient structure has survived the successive reconstruction efforts, first by James Wyatt
James Wyatt

James Wyatt Royal Academy , was an England architect, a rival of Robert Adam in the Neoclassicism style, who far outdid Adam in his work in the Gothic revival....
 in the 1790s and then again by Gilbert Scott
George Gilbert Scott

Sir George Gilbert Scott was an England architect of the Victorian Age, chiefly associated with the design, building and renovation of Church , cathedrals and workhouses....
 in 1874. The hall is still used daily for meals and houses a number of important portraits. It is not usually open to visitors.

Front quad itself is probably the earliest collegiate quadrangle, but its informal, almost haphazard, pattern cannot be said to have influenced designers elsewhere. A reminder of its original domestic nature can be seen in the north east corner where one of the flagstones is marked "Well". The quad is formed of what would have been the back gardens of the three original houses that Walter acquired in the 1260s.

Mob quad

See main article Mob Quad
Mob Quad

Mob Quad is a four-sided group of buildings in Merton College, Oxford surrounding a small lawn. It is often claimed to be the oldest quadrangle in Oxford, but Merton's own Front Quad was certainly enclosed earlier and the same form was probably developed independently elsewhere....


Visitors to Merton are often told Mob Quad
Mob Quad

Mob Quad is a four-sided group of buildings in Merton College, Oxford surrounding a small lawn. It is often claimed to be the oldest quadrangle in Oxford, but Merton's own Front Quad was certainly enclosed earlier and the same form was probably developed independently elsewhere....
, built in the 14th century, is the oldest quadrangle of any Oxford or Cambridge college and set the pattern for future collegiate architecture, but Front Quad was certainly enclosed earlier (albeit with a less unified design) and other colleges, for example Corpus Christi College, Cambridge
Corpus Christi College, Cambridge

Corpus Christi College is a College of the University of Cambridge. It is notable for being the only college to have been founded by Cambridge townspeople, having been founded in 1352 by the Guilds of Corpus Christi and the Blessed Virgin Mary....
, can point to their own older examples.

The old library
Merton College Library

Merton College Library is one of the earliest library in England that is still in continuous daily use. The library is housed in several parts of the college, and houses a priceless collection of early printed books and more than 300 Middle Ages manuscripts....
 occupies the upper floor of the south and west ranges of Mob Quad, and the original archive room is still in the north east corner; it houses one of the most complete sets of college records in Europe.

Fellows' quad

The grandest quadrangle in Merton is the Fellows' Quadrangle, immediately south of the hall. The quad was the culmination of the work undertaken by Sir Henry Savile at the beginning of the 17th century. The foundation stone was laid shortly after breakfast on 13 September 1608 (as recorded in the college Register), and work was complete by September 1610 (although the battlements were added later). The southern gateway is surmounted by a tower of the four Orders
Classical order

A classical order is one of the ancient styles of building design in the Classical antiquity, distinguished by their proportions and their characteristic profiles and details, but most quickly recognizable by the type of column and capital employed....
, probably inspired by Italian examples that Warden Savile would have seen on his European travels. The main contractors were from Yorkshire
Yorkshire

Yorkshire is a Historic counties of England of northern England and the largest in Great Britain. Because of its great size, over time functions were increasingly undertaken by its subdivisions, which have been subject to History of local government in Yorkshire....
 (as was Savile), John Ackroyd and John Bentley of Halifax did the stonework and Thomas Holt the timber. This group were also later employed to work on the Bodleian Library
Bodleian Library

The Bodleian Library , the main research library of the University of Oxford, is one of the oldest library in Europe, and in England is second in size only to the British Library....
 and Wadham College
Wadham College, Oxford

Wadham College is one of the Colleges of the University of Oxford of the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom, located at the southern end of Parks Road in central Oxford....
.

Other buildings

Most of the other buildings are Victorian
Victorian era

The Victorian Era of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland was the period of Victoria of the United Kingdom reign from June 1837 to January 1901....
 or later and include: St. Alban's Quad (or "Stubbins"), designed by Basil Champneys
Basil Champneys

Basil Champneys was an architect and author whose more notable buildings include Newnham College, Cambridge, Manchester's John Rylands Library, Mansfield College, Oxford and Oriel College, Oxford Rhodes Building....
, built on the site of the medieval St. Alban's Hall (elements of the older façade are incorporated into the part that faces onto Merton Street); the Grove building, built in 1864 by William Butterfield
William Butterfield

William Butterfield , born in London, architect of the Gothic revival, and associated with the Oxford Movement .William Butterfield was born in London in 1814....
 but "chastened" in the 1930s; the buildings beyond the Fellows' Garden called "Rose Lane"; several buildings north of Merton Street, including a tennis court
Merton Street tennis court

Merton Street Tennis Court is the home of the Oxford University Real Tennis Club. It stands on the north side of Merton Street in central Oxford, England, and forms part of Merton College, Oxford....
, and the Old Warden's Lodgings (designed by Champneys in 1903); and a new quadrangle in Holywell Street, some distance away from the college.

The gardens

The garden fills the southeastern corner of the old walled city of Oxford. The walls may be seen from Christ Church Meadows
Christ Church Meadow, Oxford

Christ Church Meadow is a famous flood-meadow, and popular walking and picnic spot in Oxford, England.Approximately triangular in shape it is bounded by the River Thames , the River Cherwell, and Christ Church, Oxford....
. Among other things, the gardens contain a mulberry tree planted in the early 17th century, an armillary sundial
Sundial

A sundial is a device that measures time by the position of the Sun. In common designs such as the horizontal sundial, the sun casts a shadow from its style onto a flat surface marked with lines indicating the hours of the day....
, a beautiful lawn, and the old Fellows' summer house (now a music room).

The academic community


Foundation and origins

Merton College Crest
Merton College was founded in 1264 by Walter de Merton
Walter de Merton

Walter de Merton was Bishop of Rochester and founder of Merton College, Oxford....
, Lord Chancellor and Bishop of Rochester. It has a claim to be the oldest college in Oxford, although this claim is disputed between Merton College, Balliol College
Balliol College, Oxford

Balliol College , founded in 1263, is one of the Colleges of the University of Oxford of the University of Oxford in England.Balliol is Oxford's most popular college, measured in terms of the number of applications for entry from prospective students....
 and University College
University College, Oxford

University College , is one of the Colleges of the University of Oxford of the University of Oxford in England. It is a contender for being the oldest of the colleges of the university, and is amongst the largest in terms of population....
. The substance of Merton's claim to the title of oldest College is that Merton was the first college to be provided with "statutes", a constitution governing the College set out at its founding. Merton's statutes date back to 1274, whereas neither Balliol nor University College had statutes until the 1280s. Merton was also the first to be conceived as a community of scholars working to achieve academic ends, rather than just a place for the scholars to live in.

Parliamentarian sympathies in the Civil War

During the English Civil War
English Civil War

The English Civil War was a series of armed conflicts and political machinations between Roundhead and Cavalier. The First English Civil War and Second English Civil War civil wars pitted the supporters of Charles I of England against the supporters of the Long Parliament, while the Third English Civil War saw fighting between supporters...
, Merton was the only Oxford College to side with Parliament. The reason for this was Merton's annoyance with the interference of their Visitor, the Archbishop of Canterbury. Due to this, the college was moved to London at the start of the Civil War and its buildings were commandeered by the Royalists and used to house many of Charles the First's court when Oxford was used as the Royalists' capital. This included the King's French wife, Queen Henrietta Maria, who was housed in or near what is now the Queen's Room, the room above the arch between Front and Fellows' Quads.

Differences were quickly settled after the war, however, and a portrait of Charles the First hangs in Merton's library (OWL) as a reminder of the role it played in his court.

The modern academic community

In recent years, the College has achieved high rankings in the Norrington Table
Norrington Table

The Norrington Table is an annual ranking that lists the Colleges of the University of Oxfords of the University of Oxford that have undergraduate students in order of the performance of their undergraduate students on that year's final examinations....
 and in the last seven years, Merton has been top of the Norrington table six times (St. John's came top in the 2004–05 academic year). It is, thus, the most academically successful College in the last twenty years, with more First Class degrees being awarded to its students than Upper Seconds.

Merton has been Head of the River
Head of the River

A Head of the River race is a rowing race, held as a procession race against the clock, with the winning crew receiving the title of "Head of the River"....
 in Summer Eights
Eights Week

Summer Eights is a bumps race that constitutes University of Oxford's main intercollegiate Sport rowing event of the year. The regatta takes place in May every year, from the Wednesday to the Saturday of the fifth week of Trinity term....
 once; its men's 1st VIII held the headship in 1951. Merton's women have done better in recent years, gaining the headship in Torpids
Torpids

Torpids is one of two bumps race held at Oxford University yearly, the other being Eights Week. Over 130 men's and women's crews race for their colleges in six men's divisions and five women's; almost 1200 participants in total....
 in 2003 and rowing
Sport rowing

Rowing is a sport in which athletes racing against each other on rivers, lakes or on the ocean, depending upon the type of race and the discipline....
 over to defend the title in 2004.

Merton's peaceful precincts are disturbed once a year by the (in)famous Time Ceremony, when students, dressed in formal sub-fusc, walk backwards around Fellows' Quad drinking port
Port wine

Port wine is a Portuguese wine sherry from the Douro in the Norte, Portugal of Portugal. It is typically a sweet red wine, but also comes in dry, semi-dry and white varieties....
. Traditionally participants also hold candles but in recent years this practice has been dropped, and many students have now adopted the habit of linking arms and twirling around at each corner of the quad. The purpose is ostensibly to maintain the integrity of the space-time continuum during the transition from British Summer Time to Greenwich Mean Time which occurs in the early hours of the last Sunday in October. There are two toasts
Toast (honor)

A toast is someone or something in honor of which people usually have a drink, the drink or honor itself, or the act of indicating that honor....
 associated with the ceremony, the first is "to good old times!", or "to a good old time!", whilst the second is "long live the counter-revolution!". The ceremony was invented by two undergraduates in 1971, partly as a spoof on other Oxford ceremonies, and partly to celebrate the end of the experimental period of British Standard Time
British Summer Time

Western European Summer Time is a summer daylight saving time scheme, 1 hour ahead of Coordinated Universal Time. It is used in the following places:...
 from 1968 to 1971 when the UK stayed one hour ahead of GMT all year round. It is also seen by many as a protest against the abandonment of sub fusc in recent years.

Merton college admitted its first female students in 1980 (largely due to pressure from the JCR) along with other traditionalist colleges such as Christ Church, leaving Oriel as the only remaining all-male college (although Oriel has since joined Merton to admit female students). Since this time however men have predominated at Merton and it consistently has one of the highest male to female ratios of an Oxford college (around 3:2). However Merton was the second traditionally male college to elect a female Warden in 1994. Merton has traditionally had single sex accommodation for freshers, with female students going into the Rose Lane buildings and most male students going into 3 houses on Merton Street. However, this was changed in 2007, with all fresher accommodation being mixed. Merton has had a reputation for having the best food in Oxford since an old Mertonian left money specifically for the improvement of the kitchens, and this budget was further augmented during the two years when Crown Prince Naruhito of Japan studied there (1983-85).

In 2003, Merton JCR passed a motion expressing general support for student tuition fees, making it the only pro-tuition-fee student body in the UK. Merton JCR politics tends towards the apathetic, but fiercely independent of any organisation that might presume to speak for the JCR. The apathy is, in general, even greater towards OUSU (Oxford University Student Union
Oxford University Student Union

The Oxford University Student Union is the official students' union of the University of Oxford, representing the interests of its members to the university and the outside world....
). However, in November 2005, former Merton JCR president Alan Strickland was elected OUSU President for 2006–2007.

Merton has a long-standing sporting relationship with Mansfield College
Mansfield College, Oxford

Mansfield College is one of the 38 Colleges of the University of Oxford of the University of Oxford in England. Out of the 30 colleges that accept both undergraduates and graduates, Mansfield College is one of the smaller colleges and comprises approximately 210 undergraduates, 80 graduates, 35 visiting students and 50 academic staff....
, with the colleges fielding amalgamated sports teams for nearly all major sports except rowing.

Notable former Mertonians

This list of Merton Fellows and alumni is grouped into centuries; where the person's life spans more than one century, the (approximate) date of matriculation
Matriculation

Matriculation, in the broadest sense, means to be registered or added to a list, from the Latin matricula - little list. In Scottish heraldry, for instance, a matriculation is a registration of armorial bearings....
 is used, and given in brackets when known. The names are alphabetical by surname within each group.

See also Former students, Fellows and current Honorary Fellows of Merton College.


Medieval

  • Walter de Merton
    Walter de Merton

    Walter de Merton was Bishop of Rochester and founder of Merton College, Oxford....
    , Lord Chancellor, Bishop of Rochester (Founder)
  • Archbishop Thomas Bradwardine
    Thomas Bradwardine

    Thomas Bradwardine , often called "the Profound Doctor", was an English scholar and courtier and, very briefly, Archbishop of Canterbury....
    , theologian and astronomer (1321)
  • John Wycliffe
    John Wycliffe

    John Wycliffe was an English theologian, lay preacher, translator and reformist. Wycliffe was an early dissident in the Roman Catholic Church during the 14th century....
    , theologian (1356)


Two additional outstanding academic figures from the early 14th century, John Duns Scotus
Duns Scotus

The Beatification John Duns Scotus, Order of Friars Minor was one of the most important theology and philosopher of the High Middle Ages. He was nicknamed Doctor Subtilis for his penetrating and subtle manner of thought....
 and William of Ockham
William of Ockham

William of Ockham was an England Franciscan friar and Scholasticism philosopher, from Ockham, Surrey, a small village in Surrey, near East Horsley....
 have long been claimed as Merton fellows, but there is no contemporary evidence to support this claim and as Franciscan
Franciscan

The term Franciscan is commonly used to refer to members of Catholic religious orders that follow a body of regulations known as "The rule of St....
s, they would have been ineligible for fellowships at Merton.

16th century

  • Bishop John Jewel
    John Jewel

    John Jewel , was an English bishop of Salisbury....
    , theologian and Anglican divine (1535)
  • Sir Thomas Bodley
    Thomas Bodley

    Sir Thomas Bodley , was an England diplomat and scholar, founder of the Bodleian Library, Oxford....
    , diplomat, scholar, and librarian (1563)
  • Sir Henry Savile
    Sir Henry Savile

    Sir Henry Savile , was an English scholar, Warden of Merton College, Oxford, and Provost of Eton....
    , scholar and statesman (1565)
  • Richard Smyth, Regius Professor of Divinity
    Regius Professor of Divinity

    The Regius Professorship of Divinity is one of the oldest and most prestigious of the professorships at the University of Oxford and at the List of Professorships at the University of Cambridge....


17th century

  • John Bainbridge, astronomer (c1610)
  • Admiral Robert Blake
    Robert Blake (admiral)

    Robert Blake was one of the most important military commanders of the Commonwealth of England, and one of the most famous English admirals of the 17th century....
    , military commander and Member of Parliament
    Member of Parliament

    A Member of Parliament, or MP, is a representative of the voters to a parliament. In many countries the term applies specifically to members of the lower house, as upper houses often have a unique title, such as senate, and thus also have unique titles for its members, such as senators....
     for Bridgwater (1615)
  • William Harvey
    William Harvey

    William Harvey was an English physician who was the first in the Western world to describe correctly and in exact detail the systemic circulation and properties of blood being pumped around the body by the heart....
    , physician (1645)
  • Richard Steele
    Richard Steele

    Sir Richard Steele was an Ireland writer and politician, remembered as co-founder, with his friend Joseph Addison, of the magazine The Spectator ....
    , politician and writer (1691)
  • Anthony Wood
    Anthony Wood

    Anthony Wood or Anthony ? Wood was an England Antiquarian....
    , antiquary


18th century

  • David Hartley
    David Hartley (the Younger)

    David Hartley, the younger , statesman, scientific inventor, and the son of the philosopher David Hartley . He was Member of Parliament for Kingston upon Hull , and also held the position of His Britannic Majesty's Minister Plenipotentiary, appointed by King George III to treat with the United States of America....
     – Member of Parliament
    Member of Parliament

    A Member of Parliament, or MP, is a representative of the voters to a parliament. In many countries the term applies specifically to members of the lower house, as upper houses often have a unique title, such as senate, and thus also have unique titles for its members, such as senators....
      and signatory to the Treaty of Paris
    Treaty of Paris (1783)

    The Treaty of Paris, signed on September 3, 1783, ratified by the Congress of the Confederation on January 14, 1784 and by the King of Great Britain on April 9, 1784 , formally ended the American Revolutionary War between the Kingdom of Great Britain and United States, which had rebelled against British rule starting in 1775....
  • John Graves Simcoe
    John Graves Simcoe

    Lieutenant-General John Graves Simcoe was the first lieutenant governor of Upper Canada from 1791-1796. He founded York, Upper Canada and was instrumental in introducing institutions such as the courts, trial by jury, English common law, fee simple land tenure, and for abolishing Slavery in Canada in Upper Canada long before it was abolish...
     – Military Officer and First lieutenant governor of Upper Canada
    Upper Canada

    The Province of Upper Canada was a British colony located in what is now the southern portion of the Province of Ontario in Canada. Upper Canada officially existed from 26 December 1791 to 10 February 1841 and generally comprised present-day Southern Ontario and, until 1797, the Upper Peninsula of what is now part of the U.S....


19th century

  • Sir Max Beerbohm
    Max Beerbohm

    Sir Henry Maximilian Beerbohm was an English Parody and Caricature....
    , author and caricaturist (1890)
  • Edmund Clerihew Bentley
    Edmund Clerihew Bentley

    E. C. Bentley , was a popular England novelist and humorist of the early twentieth century, and the inventor of the clerihew, an irregular form of humorous verse on biographical topics....
    , inventor of the Clerihew
    Clerihew

    A clerihew is a whimsical, four-line biographical poem invented by Edmund Clerihew Bentley. The lines are comically irregular in length, and the rhymes, often contrived, are structured AABB....
     (1894)
  • F. H. Bradley
    F. H. Bradley

    Francis Herbert Bradley was a British idealist philosopher....
    , philosopher
  • Mandell Creighton
    Mandell Creighton

    Mandell Creighton was an England historian, Church of England priest, and Bishop of London....
    , historian and Bishop of London (1862)
  • Lord Randolph Churchill
    Lord Randolph Churchill

    Lord Randolph Henry Spencer Churchill was a United Kingdom statesman.Lord Randolph was the third son of the John Winston Spencer-Churchill, 7th Duke of Marlborough and his wife Frances Anne Emily Vane-Tempest , daughter of the Charles William Vane, 3rd Marquess of Londonderry....
    , British statesman (1867)
  • Lord Halsbury
    Hardinge Giffard, 1st Earl of Halsbury

    Hardinge Stanley Giffard, 1st Earl of Halsbury was a leading barrister, politician and government Political minister, serving as Solicitor General for England and Wales and Lord Chancellor of Great Britain....
    , Lord Chancellor, and compiler of the Laws of England
    Halsbury's Laws of England

    Halsbury's Laws of England is a definitive Encyclopedia treatise on the English Law published by LexisNexis Butterworths. It includes restatements of the common law with remarks to the relevant judgement and the statutory law which has in many cases codification, modified or supplemented common law....
     (1842)
  • George Howson
    George Howson

    George William Saul Howson Master of Arts was an English people educationalist and writer, reforming headmaster of Gresham's School from 1900 to 1919....
    , reforming headmaster (1879)
  • F. E. Smith, British statesman (1896, at Merton as a graduate)
  • Frederick Soddy
    Frederick Soddy

    Frederick Soddy was an England radiochemistry.He received the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1921, and has a Soddy named for him on the far side of the Moon....
    , radiochemist
    Radiochemistry

    Radiochemistry is the chemistry of radioactive materials, where radioactive isotopes of elements are used to study the properties and chemical reactions of non-radioactive isotopes ....
     and Nobel Laureate for chemistry (1895)


20th century (matriculated before 1960)

  • Theodor Adorno, philosopher, sociologist, musicologist, and art critic (1934)
  • Sir Leonard Allinson
    Leonard Allinson

    Sir Leonard Allinson was a British civil servant and diplomat.He was born on May 1 1926, the only son of Walter Allinson and Alice Frances Cassidy of Tottenham, and educated at Friern Barnet Grammar School and Merton College, University of Oxford, matriculation in 1944....
    , former High Commissioner in Kenya and Ambassador to UN Environment Programme (1944)
  • Sir Lennox Berkeley
    Lennox Berkeley

    Sir Lennox Randal Francis Berkeley was an England composer....
    , composer (1922)
  • Sir Roger Bannister
    Roger Bannister

    Sir Roger Gilbert Bannister, Order of the British Empire is an England former athlete best known as the first man in history to run the mile in Four-minute mile....
    , middle-distance runner and neurologist (1950)
  • Sir Basil Blackwell
    Basil Blackwell

    Sir Basil Blackwell was born Henry Blackwell in Oxford, England. He was the son of the founder of Blackwell's bookshop in Oxford, which went on to become the Blackwell's family publishing and bookshop empire, located on Broad Street, Oxford in central Oxford....
    , bookseller and publisher (1907)
  • Sir Geoffrey Vickers
    Charles Geoffrey Vickers

    Sir Charles Geoffrey Vickers VC was an England lawyer, administrator, writer and pioneering systems scientist. He had varied interests with roles at different times with the London Passenger Transport Board, Law Society, Medical Research Council and Mental Health Research Fund....
  • Edmund Blunden
    Edmund Blunden

    Edmund Charles Blunden, Military Cross was an English poet, author and critic. Like his friend Siegfried Sassoon, he wrote of his experiences in World War I in both verse and prose....
    , Professor of Poetry (1931)
  • Frank Bough
    Frank Bough

    Frank Bough is a United Kingdom television presenter who specialised in sports programmes....
    , broadcaster
  • Robert Byron
    Robert Byron

    Robert Byron was a United Kingdom travel writing, best known for his Travel literature The Road to Oxiana. He was also a noted writer, art critic and historian....
    , travel writer
  • John Carey
    John Carey (critic)

    John Carey is a British literary critic, and emeritus Merton Professors at the University of Oxford. He was born in Barnes, London, London, and brought up in East Sheen and in Nottingham as an Evacuations of civilians in Britain during World War II....
    , Merton Professor of English
  • Leonard Cheshire
    Leonard Cheshire

    Group Captain Geoffrey Leonard Cheshire, Baron Cheshire, Victoria Cross, Order of Merit, Distinguished Service Order, Distinguished Flying Cross was a highly decorated United Kingdom Royal Air Force aviator during the Second World War....
    , RAF pilot and philanthropist (1936)
  • T. S. Eliot
    T. S. Eliot

    'Thomas Stearns Eliot', Order of Merit , was a poet, dramatist, and literary critic. He received the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1948. Among his most famous writings are the poems The Love Song of J....
    , poet and Nobel Laureate for literature (1914)
  • Northrop Frye
    Northrop Frye

    Herman Northrop Frye, Order of Canada, Royal Society of Canada , a Canada, was one of the most distinguished literary critics and literary theorists of the twentieth century....
    , literary critic
  • Erich S. Gruen
    Erich S. Gruen

    Erich Stephen Gruen is a notable United States classics and ancient history. He is the Gladys Rehard Wood Professor of History and Classics at the University of California, Berkeley, where he has taught since 1966....
    , classical scholar (Rhodes Scholar, 1957–1960, Visiting Fellow 1974)
  • Stuart Hall
    Stuart Hall (cultural theorist)

    Stuart Hall is a culture theory and sociologist who has lived and worked in the United Kingdom since 1951. Hall, along with Richard Hoggart and Raymond Williams, was an early and influential contributor to the school of thought that is now known as Cultural_Studies#Approaches or The Birmingham School of Cultural Studies....
    , cultural theorist
  • Sir Tony Hoare
    C. A. R. Hoare

    Sir Charles Antony Richard Hoare , commonly known as Tony Hoare or C.A.R. Hoare, is a United Kingdom computer science, probably best known for the development in 1960 of Quicksort , one of the world's most widely used sorting algorithms....
    , computer scientist (1952)
  • Andrew Irvine
    Andrew Irvine (mountaineer)

    Andrew "Sandy" Comyn Irvine was an England Mountaineering who took part in the third British Expedition to the world's highest mountain, Mount Everest, in 1924....
    , mountaineer (1921)
  • Sir Jeremy Isaacs
    Jeremy Isaacs

    Sir Jeremy Isaacs is a United Kingdom television producer and executive, winner of many BAFTA awards and international Emmy Awards. He was also General Director of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden ....
    , broadcaster and impresario
  • Kris Kristofferson
    Kris Kristofferson

    Kristoffer Kristian Kristofferson is an United States writer, singer-songwriter, actor, and musician. He is best known for hits such as "Me and Bobby McGee", "Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down", and "Help Me Make It Through the Night"....
    , actor and musician
  • Professor Anthony Leggett
    Anthony James Leggett

    Sir Anthony James Leggett, Order of the British Empire, Royal Society, , is John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Chair and Center for Advanced Study Professor of Physics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign....
    , physicist, Nobel Laureate in physics (1959)
  • John Lucas
    John Lucas (philosopher)

    John Randolph Lucas British Academy is a British philosopher....
    , philosopher (JRF 1953, Fellow 1960)
  • Louis MacNeice
    Louis MacNeice

    Frederick Louis MacNeice was a United Kingdom poet and playwright. He was part of the generation of "thirties poets" which included W. H. Auden, Stephen Spender and C....
    , poet (1926)
  • Reginald Maudling
    Reginald Maudling

    Reginald Maudling was a United Kingdom politician known for his intellectual brilliance, political pragmatism, and easygoing nature but slightly dogged by a reputation for laziness....
    , politician
  • Airey Neave
    Airey Neave

    Airey Middleton Sheffield Neave, Distinguished Service Order, Order of the British Empire, Military Cross, was a British soldier, barrister and politician....
    , politician
  • Terence O'Brien
    Terence John O'Brien

    Terence John O'Brien Military Cross Order of St Michael and St George...
    , British ambassador to Nepal
    Nepal

    Nepal , officially the Federal Democratic Republic of Nepal, is a landlocked country in South Asia and is the world's youngest republic. It is bordered to the north by the People's Republic of China, and to the south, east, and west by India....
    , Burma and Indonesia
    Indonesia

    The Republic of Indonesia , is a transcontinental country in Southeast Asia and Oceania. Comprising Islands of Indonesia, it is the world's largest Archipelago state....
  • Reynolds Price
    Reynolds Price

    Reynolds Price is an United States novelist, poet, dramatist, essayist and James B. Duke Professor of English at Duke University. Apart from English literature, Price has had a lifelong interest in ancient languages and Biblical scholarship....
    , author and professor at Duke University
    Duke University

    Duke University is a private university research university located in Durham, North Carolina, North Carolina, United States. Founded by Methodism and Religious Society of Friends in the present-day town of Trinity, North Carolina in 1838, the school moved to Durham in 1892....
  • Sir George Radda
    George Radda

    Professor Sir George Charles Radda was born in 1936 in Hungary. In 1956, he attended Merton College, Oxford to study chemistry. His early work was concerned with the development and use of fluorescent probes for the study of structure and function of membranes and enzymes....
    , scientist
  • Howard K. Smith
    Howard K. Smith

    Howard Kingsbury Smith was an American journalist, radio reporter, television anchorman, political commentator, and film star. He was one of the original Murrow's Boys....
    , journalist and broadcaster
  • Professor Niko Tinbergen, ethologist (1949)
  • J. R. R. Tolkien
    J. R. R. Tolkien

    John Ronald Reuel Tolkien, Order of the British Empire was an English people English literature, poetry, Philology, and university professor, best known as the author of the classic high fantasy works The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings and The Silmarillion....
    , author and Merton Professor of English (1945)
  • Angus Wilson
    Angus Wilson

    Sir Angus Frank Johnstone Wilson was an England novelist and short story writer. He was awarded the 1958 James Tait Black Memorial Prize for The Middle Age of Mrs Eliot and later received a knighthood for his services to literature....
    , author


Contemporary (matriculated since 1960)

  • Colin Bundy
    Colin Bundy

    Professor Colin James Bundy is Principal of Green Templeton College, Oxford.He is a well-known Marxist historian....
    , academic (1968 Rhodes Scholar)
  • Andy Cato
    Andy Cato

    Andy Cato is one half of the electronic dance band, Groove Armada. He is also involved with Rachel Foster in Weekend Players, which is also an electronic dance group....
    , DJ, one half of Groove Armada (1994)
  • James Clark
    James Clark (XML expert)

    James Clark, is the author of Groff and Expat and has done much work with open-source software and XML. Born in London, and educated at Charterhouse School and Merton College, Oxford, Clark has lived in Bangkok, Thailand since 1995, and is now a permanent resident....
    , author of groff
    Groff

    Groff is an anglicized form of the surname Graf or Graff and of predominantly Swiss and sometimes German origin.Groff may also refer to:...
     and open source
    Open source

    Open source is an approach to design, development, and distribution offering practical accessibility to a product's source . Some consider open source as one of various possible design approaches, while others consider it a critical Strategy element of their business operations....
     software developer (1982)
  • John A. Claughton, Chief Master of King Edward's School, Birmingham
    King Edward's School, Birmingham

    King Edward's School is an independent school secondary school in Birmingham, England, founded by Edward VI of England in 1552. It is part of the Foundation of the Schools of King Edward VI, and is widely regarded as one of the most academically successful schools in the country, according to various league tables....
     and the Foundation of the Schools of King Edward VI
    Foundation of the Schools of King Edward VI

    The Foundation of the Schools of King Edward VI in Birmingham is a charitable institution that operates two independent schools and five voluntary aided school selective state schools in Birmingham, England....
  • Howard Davies
    Howard Davies

    Howard Davies is the name of:* Howard Davies , Director of the London School of Economics, former British financial regulator* Howard Davies , English theatre director...
    , Director, London School of Economics
    London School of Economics

    The London School of Economics and Political Science, more commonly referred to as The London School of Economics or LSE, is a specialist college of the University of London in London, England....
  • Pat Fish
    Pat Fish

    Pat Fish is an English musician best known for his work as a member of the band The Jazz Butcher. ...
     (Patrick Huntrods), musician and songwriter
  • David Freud, investment banker
  • Mark Haddon
    Mark Haddon

    Mark Haddon is a United Kingdom novelist and poet, best known for his 2003 novel The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time. He was educated at Uppingham School and Merton College, Oxford, where he studied English language....
    , author (1981)
  • Dr Adam Hart Davis, broadcaster
  • Tim Jackson, auctioneer (1983)
  • Alec Jeffreys
    Alec Jeffreys

    Sir Alec John Jeffreys, Fellow of the Royal Society is a United Kingdom geneticist, who developed techniques for DNA fingerprinting and DNA profiling which are now used all over the world in forensic science to assist police detective work, and also to resolve paternity and immigration disputes....
    , geneticist
  • Alister McGrath
    Alister McGrath

    Alister Edgar McGrath is a Christian theology, with a DPhil in molecular biophysics, as well as an earned Doctor of Divinity degree from Oxford, noted for his work on historical, systematic and scientific theology....
    , scientist and theologian (1976 Domus Senior Scholar)
  • John Mitchinson
    John Mitchinson

    For the English tenor, see John Mitchinson .'For the Bishop, see John Mitchinson .John Mitchinson is the head of research for the United Kingdom television panel game QI, and co-author of The Book of General Ignorance with QI's creator John Lloyd....
    , writer and publisher (1982)
  • Tim Mitchison
    Tim Mitchison

    Professor Timothy John "Tim" Mitchison, PhD, Fellow of the Royal Society is a United Kingdom systems biology. He is Hasib Sabbagh Professor of Systems Biology at Harvard University in the United States....
    , cell biologist
  • HIH Naruhito, Crown Prince of Japan
    Naruhito, Crown Prince of Japan

    is the eldest son of Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko, which makes him the heir apparent to the Chrysanthemum Throne of Japan....
     (1982)
  • Michael Ridpath
    Michael Ridpath

    Michael Ridpath is the author of various Thriller s based around the world of high finance. He was born in Devon in 1961 and grew up in Yorkshire....
    , author (1980)
  • Dana Scott
    Dana Scott

    Dana Stewart Scott is the emeritus Hillman University Professor of computer science, Philosophy, and mathematical logic at Carnegie Mellon University; he is now retired and lives in Berkeley, California....
    , logician
  • Sir Howard Stringer
    Howard Stringer

    Sir Howard Stringer was born February 19, 1942 in Cardiff, Wales to Harry and Marjorie Mary Stringer. On July 29, 1978 Howard Stringer married Jennifer A....
    , Chief Executive Officer of Sony
    Sony

    is a multinational corporation list of conglomerates corporation headquartered in Minato, Tokyo, Japan, and one of the world's largest media conglomerates with revenue exceeding US$99.1 billion ....
    , (1961, Hon. Fellow)
  • Mark Thompson
    Mark Thompson

    Mark John Thompson is Director-General of the BBC of the BBC, a post he has held since 2004, and a former Chief executive officer of Channel 4....
    , broadcaster, director general of the BBC
  • Rick Trainor
    Rick Trainor

    Richard Hughes "Rick" Trainor Fellow of King's College London is the current Principal of King's College London.Trainor holds degrees from Brown University , Princeton University , and the University of Oxford , where he wrote his 1981 D.Phil....
    , Principal
    Principal (university)

    The Principal is the chief executive and the Provost of a university or college in certain parts of the Commonwealth of Nations....
     of King's College London
    King's College London

    King's College London is a United Kingdom higher education institution and co-founding constituent college of the University of London. Founded by George IV of the United Kingdom and the Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington in 1829, its royal charter is predated, in England, only by those of the Universities of University of Oxford and Un...
  • Ed Vaizey, MP for Wantage
    Wantage (UK Parliament constituency)

    Wantage is a county constituency represented in the British House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It elects one Member of Parliament by the first past the post system of election....
  • Professor Sir Andrew Wiles
    Andrew Wiles

    Sir Andrew John Wiles Order of the British Empire Fellow of the Royal Society is a United Kingdom mathematician and a professor at Princeton University, specialising in number theory....
    , mathematician (1971)
  • Alexander Williams
    Alexander Williams

    Alexander Williams, also Alex Williams is an England film animator and cartoonist. He is the son of animator Richard Williams .He was educated at Westminster School, Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts, and Merton College, Oxford, where he took a first in Modern History....
    , animator (1986)

Grace

The college preprandial grace is always recited before formal dinners in Hall and usually by the senior postmaster
Postmaster (disambiguation)

A postmaster is the head of an individual post office.Postmaster may also refer to:*Postmaster , the administrator of an email server*Postmaster, an undergraduate scholar of Merton College, Oxford...
 present. The first two lines of the Latin text are based on verses 15 and 16 of Psalm 145.

Oculi omnium in te respiciunt, Domine. Tu das escam illis tempore opportuno.
Aperis manum tuam, et imples omne animal benedictione tua.
Benedicas nobis, Deus, omnibus donis quae de tua beneficentia accepturi simus.
Per Iesum Christum dominum nostrum, Amen.


Roughly translated it means:
The eyes of the world look up to thee, O Lord. Thou givest them food in due season.
Thou openest thy hand and fillest every creature with thy blessing.
Bless us, O God, with all the gifts which by thy good works we are about to receive.
Through Jesus Christ, Our Lord, Amen.


For the relevant verses of the Psalm, the Authorized Version has:
15. The eyes of all wait upon thee; and thou givest them their meat in due season.
16. Thou openst thine hand, and satisfiest the desire of every living thing.


According to an from the University of Cambridge
University of Cambridge

The University of Cambridge , located in Cambridge, England, is the List of oldest universities in continuous operation university in the Anglosphere....
, a slightly different version of the Latin text of these verses is painted (apparently as a decoration) around Old Hall in Queens' College, Cambridge
Queens' College, Cambridge

Queens' College is a Colleges of the University of Cambridge of the University of Cambridge. It was first founded in 1448 by Margaret of Anjou , and refounded in 1465 by Elizabeth Woodville ....
, and is "commonly in use at other Cambridge colleges".

By contrast with the rather long pre-prandial grace, the post-prandial grace is brief: Benedictus benedicat ("Let him who is blessed, give blessing"). The latter grace is spoken by the senior Fellow present at the end of dinner on High Table.

See also

  • Merton College Library
    Merton College Library

    Merton College Library is one of the earliest library in England that is still in continuous daily use. The library is housed in several parts of the college, and houses a priceless collection of early printed books and more than 300 Middle Ages manuscripts....
  • Mob Quad
    Mob Quad

    Mob Quad is a four-sided group of buildings in Merton College, Oxford surrounding a small lawn. It is often claimed to be the oldest quadrangle in Oxford, but Merton's own Front Quad was certainly enclosed earlier and the same form was probably developed independently elsewhere....
     at Merton


External links