Keble College, Oxford
Keble College is one of the colleges of the University of Oxford in England. Its main buildings are on Parks Road, opposite the University Museum and the University Parks. Keble is one of the larger colleges, with 435 undergraduates and 245 graduate students. The head of the college is the Warden (currently Sir Michael Jacobs) and senior academic members are Fellows.
Keble was founded in 1870, having been built as a monument to John Keble, a leading member of the Oxford Movement. As originally constituted it was for men only and the fellows were mostly bachelors resident in the college. In the period after the second World War the trends were towards scientific courses (the major area devoted to science east of the University Museum influenced this) and eventually co-education for men and women from 1979 onwards.
It remains distinctive for its once-controversial[1] neo-gothic red-brick buildings designed by William Butterfield. During the 20th century the college has been extended several times by new buildings.
Keble College, Oxford Media
- Keble College Chapel - Oct 2006.jpg
Keble College Chapel - Oct 2006
- Coat of Arms of Keble College Oxford.svg
Coat of Arms of Keble College Oxford
John Keble, a leading member of the Oxford Movement, after whom the college is named
- Keble SCR.jpg
- KebleSCR
- Keble College Dining Hall 2, Oxford, UK - Diliff.jpg
The interior of the Dining Hall at Keble College in Oxford, England.
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Keble College library, Oxford, UK
- William Matthison, Keble College.jpg
“Keble College Gate, Oxford”, by William Matthison
- Liddon Quad Keble .jpg
Liddon Quad from near Arco looking towards Porter's Lodge.
- PuseyQuad Keble.jpg
View of Keble College across Pusey Quad
Bumps results of the boat club on a wall in Keble
References
- ↑ In 1875, a writer in The Guardian dismissed Butterfield's Chapel as "fantastically picked out with zig-zag or checkerboard ornamentation", to which Butterfield responded stoutly in print, citing his East Anglian and Cotswold precedents: Paul Thompson, William Butterfield, 1971, noted in a review by J. Mordaunt Crook in The English Historical Review 1974.