Oxford’s university buildings are world-famous. Over eight centuries, starting in the twelfth century, the University – the third oldest in Europe – gradually occupied a substantial portion of the city, creating in the process a unique townscape containing the Bodleian Library, the Sheldonian Theatre and the Radcliffe Camera.
This book tells the story of the growth of the forum universitatis – as the architect Nicholas Hawksmoor called it – and relates it to the broader history of the University and the city. Based on up-to-date scholarship, and drawing upon the author’s own research into Oxford’s architectural history and the work of Christopher Wren, Nicholas Hawksmoor, James Gibbs and Giles Gilbert Scott, each of the eight chapters focuses on the gestation, creation and subsequent history of a single building, or pair of buildings, relating them to developments in the University’s intellectual and institutional life, and to broader themes in architectural and urban history.
Accessible and well-illustrated with plans, archival prints and specially commissioned photography, this book will appeal to anyone who wishes to understand and enjoy Oxford’s matchless architectural heritage.
Historic Heart of Oxford University, The
Description
Table of Contents
Contents
1. THE UNIVERSITY CHURCH and the CONGREGATION HOUSE
2. THE DIVINITY SCHOOL and DUKE HUMFREY’S LIBRARY
3. THE SCHOOLS QUADRANGLE
4. THE SHELDONIAN THEATRE
5. THE OLD ASHMOLEAN MUSEUM
6. THE CLARENDON BUILDING
7. THE RADCLIFFE CAMERA AND RADCLIFFE SQUARE
8. THE NEW BODLEIAN AND THE WESTON LIBRARY
Notes
Further Reading
Picture Credits
Index
Author Description
Geoffrey Tyack is a member of the History Faculty of the University of Oxford and an emeritus Fellow of Kellogg College.