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St Benet's Hall, Oxford

St Benet's Hall (known colloquially as Benet's) was a permanent private hall (PPH) of the University of Oxford, originally a Roman Catholic religious house of studies. It closed in 2022. The principal building was located at the northern end of St Giles' on its western side, close to the junction with Woodstock Road, Oxford.

St Benet's Hall
Oxford
Arms: Per fesse dancetté or and azure, a chief per pale gules and of the second, charged on the dexter with two keys in saltire or and argent, and on the sinister with a cross flory between five martlets of the first.
Location38 St Giles', Oxford
Coordinates51°45′29″N 1°15′39″W / 51.757952°N 1.260787°W / 51.757952; -1.260787
Latin nameAula Privata Sancti Benedicti
MottoAusculta, o fili, praecepta magistri
Motto in EnglishListen, O child, to the master's precepts
Established1897; 126 years ago (1897)
Closed2022
Named afterSt Benedict of Nursia
Websitewww.st-benets.ox.ac.uk
Boat clubSt Benet's Hall Boat Club
Map
Location in Oxford city centre

History edit

Benedictine antecedents edit

 
St Benet's Hall

Benedictine monks had studied at Oxford since at least 1281, when Gloucester Abbey founded Gloucester College. The area today known as Gloucester Green was named after this college. In 1291, Durham Abbey founded Durham College, and in 1362, Christ Church Priory in Canterbury founded Canterbury College. All three Benedictine houses of study were closed between 1536 and 1545, during the dissolution of the monasteries under Henry VIII. Gloucester College was eventually re-founded as Worcester College. Durham College was re-founded as Trinity College, but the original college's name is preserved in Trinity's Durham Quadrangle. Canterbury College's property was acquired by Christ Church. Until the establishment of St Benet's Hall in 1897, the Benedictines had been absent from the university for over 350 years.[citation needed]

St Benet's Hall was not a re-foundation of any of the former Benedictine colleges of Oxford. Rather, the hall had a tenuous connection with Westminster Abbey by virtue of its establishment by Ampleforth Abbey. In the 960s or early 970s, Saint Dunstan, assisted by King Edgar, installed a community of Benedictine monks at Westminster. Although the Benedictine priories and abbeys in England were closed during the dissolution of the monasteries, one solitary Benedictine monastery was re-established in Westminster Abbey in 1553 by Mary I as part of her unsuccessful attempt to restore Catholicism in England. After her death, Elizabeth I dissolved the monastery once again. By 1607, only one of the Westminster monks was still alive, Dom Sigebert Buckley (c. 1520–1610). In 1608, Buckley "aggregated" two English exiles who had become monks of the Italian Cassinese Congregation, and thereby allegedly passed on to them the "rights and privileges" of the mediaeval English Benedictine abbeys (to be distinguished from the post-Reformation English Benedictine Congregation). In 1615, these two English monks became part of a community which took up residence in the abandoned collegiate church of Saint Laurent, in the town of Dieulouard, near Nancy in the Lorraine region of north-eastern France. The monks adopted St Lawrence as their patron saint. In 1792, Dieulouard Priory was closed and the monks were expelled from France as part of the hostility against the clergy associated with the French Revolution. They opted to return to England.[citation needed]

At that time a Benedictine monk-priest, Fr Anselm Bolton, was the chaplain to Lady Anne Fairfax at Gilling Castle, North Yorkshire. She was the only daughter of Charles Gregory Fairfax, 9th and last Viscount Fairfax of Emley. She built Ampleforth Lodge for Fr Bolton just before she died in 1792.[citation needed] In 1802, Bolton handed this house over to his brethren from Dieulouard who had been living in England without a permanent home for a decade. The lodge became their new monastery, Ampleforth Priory. In 1803, the monks established Ampleforth College, today an independent Catholic secondary school.

The priory was elevated to the status of an independent abbey in 1899 by Pope Leo XIII in the papal bull Diu quidem est. Ampleforth Abbey renamed the hall of studies as St. Benet's Hall in 1918 when it became a permanent private hall of the university.[citation needed]

Private hall of studies edit

In October 1897, the priory had established a private hall of studies at Oxford for the purpose of enabling its monks to read for secular degrees at the University of Oxford. The hall was not founded as a theological college but rather as a place where student monks could read for a degree in any secular subject.

Private halls of study at the university took their name from their Master, and so the hall was known successively as Hunter-Blair's Hall and Parker's Hall. It was initially housed at 103 Woodstock Road. This house is still in existence, opposite SS Philip and James Church, and is now a guest-house. The hall was there until 1904, when it moved to the former Grindle's Hall in Beaumont Street, from which it removed in 1922 to the present buildings of 38 and 39 St Giles. The Beaumont Street houses were demolished in 1938 to make space for the Oxford Playhouse theatre.[citation needed]

Permanent private hall of the University of Oxford edit

St Benet's became a permanent private hall of the university in 1918, after new university legislation created the status of PPH. It took as its official name Aula Privata Sancti Benedicti (in English, "St Benet's Hall"). Benet is a mediaeval English variant of the name Benedict, since hall is named after St Benedict of Nursia (c. 480–547), the founder of the Benedictine order, father of western monasticism and a patron saint of Europe and of students.

The character of the hall changed over the years, acquiring fellows in imitation of the university's constituent colleges. However, as a PPH of the university, the hall's fellows did not constitute its governing body. Rather, they shared with the master the day-to-day running of the hall, and elected one of their number to serve as a trustee of the St Benet's Trust when that charity was founded in 2012. Before then, the hall was a private possession of Ampleforth Abbey.[1] The hall matriculated students to be members of the university, so those of its student body who matriculated were full members of the university in all ways, and were able to supplicate for degrees on the successful completion of their studies. For most of its members the only noticeable difference made by the hall's legal status is that it was very much smaller than any of the Oxford constituent colleges.[citation needed]

With the decline of monastic vocations beginning in the 1960s and continuing to the present (2022), more and more Roman Catholic laymen were admitted - especially under Master James Forbes OSB,[2] including some Old Amplefordians. Under Master Philip Holdsworth OSB (1979–1989), the hall again emphasised a monastic ethos and also became more theological in character, with many monks from the English Benedictine Congregation and other Benedictine Congregations studying theology at Blackfriars.[3] Master Henry Wansbrough (1990–2004) started again to admit laymen, thus creating a mixed focus on theology, philosophy and the humanities.[citation needed]

There was never a policy that lay members of the Hall, both undergraduates and postgraduates, should be Catholics - and in recent decades most were not. However, all members were asked to be supportive of the monks' life and values.[4]

A review of the PPHs conducted by the university in 2007 concluded that St Benet's had a "good sense of its place within the collegiate University" and drew attention to the "commitment and care" of the hall's academic staff.[5] In May 2013 the Student Barometer survey results showed that St Benet's Hall had the highest overall student satisfaction score out of the 44 constituent colleges and permanent private halls of the university.[6]

Sexual abuse scandal edit

In 1996 Bernard Green OSB (1953-2013), a monk of Ampleforth Abbey, was convicted of sexually abusing a 14-year old schoolboy at the monastery's school, Ampleforth College, in the previous year. He was put on probation and prohibited from teaching. Despite this, the abbey sent him to reside and teach at St Benet's Hall in 2000 without, allegedly, informing the hall of his conviction. He was issued with a "final" letter of warning by the university in 2005, after being accused of sexually harassing a 19-year-old undergraduate member of the hall. This letter was supposedly unknown to the hall until 2006, but Green was subsequently kept in residence until 2012 when he was finally dismissed. The scandal came to the notice of the national media.[7]

Final decade edit

 
St Benet's Hall Garden

Until 2012, the Master of the hall was always a Benedictine monk from Ampleforth. On 1 September of that year, Werner Jeanrond, formerly holder of the 1640 Chair of Divinity at the University of Glasgow, became the new Master. He was the first Catholic layman ever to run the hall. Jeanrond became a full member of the Faculty of Theology and Religion at Oxford and was engaged in both teaching and research, as well as serving as head of house.[1]

Until 2016, St Benet's was the last constituent body of the University of Oxford admitting only men. It was also the last single-sex college or hall in the university after St Hilda's College, the last all-women's college in Oxford, admitted men in 2008. In November 2013, under Professor Jeanrond, the hall announced its intention to admit women graduate students within one year and women undergraduates as soon as additional housing facilities were obtained.[8] Women were admitted as graduate students in October 2014, and as undergraduates in October 2016. Thus 2016 was the year when all constituent colleges and halls of the university became fully coeducational. (The University of Cambridge retains two constituent colleges for female students only.)

To allow for the admission of undergraduate women, in 2015 St Benet's Hall acquired a hall of residence owned by the Sisters of the Sacred Heart, at 11 Norham Gardens, next to University Parks and near Lady Margaret Hall in October 2015.[9] So the hall became a co-educational academic community, latterly consisting of 84 undergraduate students and 48 graduate students of all faiths and none.[citation needed]

The degree subjects to which the last undergraduate students were admitted by St Benet's were: Theology, Philosophy and Theology, Theology and Oriental Studies, History, History and Politics, History and Economics, Philosophy, Politics and Economics (PPE), Classics, Classics with Oriental Studies, Oriental Studies (Egyptology; Egyptology and Ancient Near Eastern Studies, Islamic Studies, Hebrew Studies, and Jewish Studies), Oriental Studies with Classics, and Human Science.[10] The hall admitted graduate students from the same subjects as undergraduates as well as those who studied at the Blavatnik School of Government, the Institute of Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology, and the Saïd Business School.[citation needed]

 
Hall Library

Closure edit

In September 2021, it was announced that the John and Daria Barry Foundation, a philanthropic trust run by the venture capitalist John F. Barry III, was making a £40 million rescue offer to enable the hall to become completely independent of Ampleforth Abbey. This was on condition that the buildings would be purchased from the Ampleforth Abbey Trust for £15 million (less than their market value), that the St Benet's Trust was to be made completely separate from the abbey and that the chair was to be the prominent anti-LGBT rights campaigner Robert P. George of Princeton University.[11] Barry himself was on record as describing the venture as a Hail Mary pass, indicating limited expectations of success.[1]

However, in December of that year, the university stated that without the abbey's continued financial support, "it cannot be confident that the hall can support a new undergraduate cohort for the full duration of their studies". The major issues were that the hall's endowments were inadequate, the two buildings were owned by Ampleforth Abbey and operational deficits were being covered by subsidies from the abbey.[1]

So, the university announced that it would temporarily cease to accept undergraduate matriculations from the hall, owing to these serious financial issues.[12] May 2022 was the deadline for deciding this point as regards the academic year 2022–3.[1]

In that month it was made public that the University Council had decided not to renew the hall's PPH licence, which implied that the hall would close at the end of the 2022 academic year.[13][14] The university had decided that the new arrangements proposed by the Barry Foundation would not be financially viable and questioned the implications of the new board, and so they were rejected.[13][14]

In June 2022 it was finally announced that the buildings would be vacated by October 2022, and that the university was seeking alternative colleges to which existing students would transfer.[15] The buildings were subsequently purchased by St Hilda's College.[16] The hall was formally closed on 30 September 2022.[17] The last member of staff vacated the St Giles house on 7 October. The wine cellar of 1,100 bottles was donated to Blackfriars. Students relocated individually to other colleges and halls of the university to continue their studies. The St Benet's Hall Boat Club continues to operate.[1]

St Benet's Hall Association edit

The St Benet’s Hall Association is a not-for-profit organisation founded in 2007 by Benet’s alumni. Its purpose is to promote a close relationship amongst those who studied, lived or taught at St Benet’s Hall. Following the dissolution of the Hall, the Association became the focal point for Old Benetians worldwide, organising regular social and networking events, both independently and with other constituents of the University of Oxford.[18]

Former Buildings edit

38 and 39 St Giles edit

 
Yellow Room, St Benet's Hall

The hall occupied 38-39 St Giles from 1923 to 2022. This is a rather plain late Regency style edifice of four storeys, with a further attic storey and cellars. The cellar area ensured that the original set of wrought iron railings have survived, as has a wrought iron balcony across the façade at the second storey. The first storey has six round-headed windows in recessed frames, flanked by a pair of matching doors with fanlights. The second storey has eight tall rectangular windows, complemented by shorter ones for the second storey and square ones for the third. The third and fourth storeys are separated by a moulded string course which is the only decorative feature of the façade. The slate mansard roof has attic windows inserted.

The dining hall took up most of the ground floor, and the common room and library were above that. The chapel is a red brick garden annexe in a vaguely Gothic style.

 
Hall chapel

The original building dates from 1830, and was constructed as two separate houses (38 and 39).[19] The site was previously part of a coster's (i.e., fruit seller's) yard and stable. In the nineteenth century, the two houses served as private homes for several Anglican clergy connected to the university, and to a number of widows of independent means.[citation needed]

The northern house (38 St Giles) was, in 1841, occupied as the private dwelling of the Rev. Philip Bliss, Registrar of the University of Oxford and later principal of St Mary's Hall. Bliss lived there with his wife and four servants. A decade later, it was the home of the university's public orator and vice principal and later principal of Magdalen Hall, the Rev. Richard Michell. In 1874, Michell became first principal of the refounded Hertford College. After a two-year period as the Oxford High School (1879–1881), it became a private home once more, belonging briefly to Charlotte Cotton, widow of the Rev. Richard Lynch Cotton, provost of Worcester College (1881–1882). It then belonged to the Rev. S. J. Hulme, chaplain of Wadham College (1884–1887). In 1889, it served briefly as the Oxford Eye Hospital which is today part of the John Radcliffe Hospital. In 1891, it was acquired by Madame de Leobardy and opened as St Ursula's Convent, a boarding and day school for Roman Catholic girls.[19]

The southern house (39 St Giles) was the private home of Letitia Pett (1841–1846) and Maria Brown (1852–1861), both widows. It was then acquired by the Rev.Richard Greswell, tutor in theology at Worcester College, and his family (1861–1881). After his death in 1881, his widow Joanna Greswell lived in the house until 1894. The British military historian Sir Charles William Chadwick Oman, a fellow of All Souls College and the Chichele Professor of Modern History, acquired the house in 1898 and lived there until 1908. In 1909, it too was purchased by Madame de Leobardy and became an extension of the convent school next door. The chapel in the garden is evidence of this.[19]

St Ursula's Convent School closed in 1922. Ampleforth Abbey acquired both buildings in 1923, and combined the two into one residence. It was the sole building of St Benet's Hall until 2015.[citation needed]

11 Norham Gardens edit

A large house in Norham Gardens was acquired in 2015, as part of the policy of expansion begun in 2012.

The original Victorian Gothic villa was built in 1860 and designed by William Wilkinson, who was also responsible for the Randolph Hotel, Oxford. Norham Gardens is in an area originally known as Norham Manor and was owned by St John's College. Past occupants of 11 Norham Gardens include Henry Balfour, the first curator of the Pitt Rivers Museum, and Francis Llewellyn Griffith, the first professor of Egyptology at Oxford. Griffith's archaeological finds form the backbone of the Egyptian collections at the Ashmolean Museum.[citation needed] In 1932 the Society of the Sacred Heart, a Roman Catholic order of nuns, purchased the villa. The purpose of this acquisition was to provide accommodation for women students at Oxford registered at the Society of Oxford Home-Students which later became St Anne's College. In 1951, a new wing was added as a student hostel providing 21 rooms. These rooms also accommodated women at St Anne's, which became a constituent college of the university in 1952. The association with St Anne's lessened over time and women students (mostly undergraduates) from across the university lived in the hostel, whilst the Sisters lived in the villa. By the 1990s the student population in the hostel became entirely postgraduate, housing both men and women of any faith or none. In spring 2015, the Sacred Heart Sisters decided to sell the house and hostel complex to St Benet's Hall to enable the latter to become fully co-educational by Michaelmas Term 2016.[citation needed]

Administration edit

The governing body of the hall comprised the trustees of a charity known as the St Benet's Trust, created in 2012 with the trust's chair being ex officio the Abbot of Ampleforth Abbey. However, the assets of this Trust were wholly owned by the Ampleforth Abbey Trust. In 2016, Abbot Cuthbert Madden resigned after allegations of sexual abuse and was replaced as chair by a lay fellow.[20]

Unlike the university's colleges and other PPHs, St Benet's had a joint common room of which all at the hall were members.[4] The JCR had its own committee,[21] and was responsible for running the St Benet's bar and gym facilities.[citation needed]

Refectory edit

 
Refectory

Again unlike the university's constituent colleges, the hall did not have a high table but one common dining table shared by all members. Members of the hall were entitled to invite guests to all meals,[4] with the result that fellows, lecturers, monks, students, and their guests mixed freely. The dining hall was known as the refectory, in accordance with monastic tradition.

The following grace was said in Latin before every formal Hall meal, which at St Benet's was latterly held on Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday. It was recited by the Master or a person he designated. In addition, after grace, an undergraduate student would read a short passage from the Rule of St Benedict in English.

Gratiarum actio ante cibum
Benedic Domine,
nos et haec tua dona
quae de tua largitate sumus sumpturi,
per Christum Dominum nostrum. Amen
Grace before the meal
Bless us, O Lord,
and these thy gifts
which we are about to receive from thy bounty,
through Christ our Lord. Amen.

Grace after the meal was said in Latin after formal hall by the chaplain in the following form:

Gratiarum actio post cibum
Agimus tibi gratias,
omnipotens Deus,
pro universis beneficiis tuis,
qui vivis et regnas in saecula saeculorum. Amen.
Grace after the meal
We give thee thanks,
O almighty God,
for all thy benefits,
who livest and reignest for ever and ever. Amen.[citation needed]

Sport edit

Despite the small size of the hall, the St Benet's Hall Boat Club raced an eight boat on the River Thames for many years.[22] In recent years, it has had a good record of winning 'blades', the trophy awarded for 'bumping' (rowing past teams ranked above) every day in the Torpids and Summer Eights bumps races. The Boat Club's M1 won blades most recently in 2019.[23] Although the Hall is closed, the St. Benet's Hall Boat Club still exists. The hall also had its own netball, rugby sevens, and field hockey teams, as well as a football team joint with Regent's Park College. The Benet's rugby sevens team is the back-to-back 2018 and 2019 Oxford University rugby sevens champion.[24]

Coat of arms edit

 
Coat of arms of Ampleforth Abbey

St Benet's Hall used the same coat of arms as Ampleforth Abbey and Ampleforth College but, like the college, without the abbot's crozier and galero (ecclesiastical hat with tassels). The arms were granted to the abbey by the English College of Arms in 1922. The abbey made the application to the College of Arms to regularise its armorial position as the alleged lineal descendant of Westminster Abbey. The purpose of this move was to conform to proper authority and thus not be open to the charge of lack of consideration for post-Reformation bodies already bearing variants of the Westminster arms in their own line of heraldic descent.[citation needed]

The Pre-Reformation City of Westminster sometimes used a red shield with two keys in saltire to symbolise Saint Peter to whom its Abbey Church was dedicated. In addition, Westminster also used a blue shield with a gold “cross flory” between five gold martlets (heraldic birds). This forms the attributed arms of St Edward the Confessor (reign 1042–1066), the last Anglo-Saxon king of England, who is regarded as the principal patron and founder of Westminster Abbey. Both these arms appear in the chief (top portion) of the shield. The base (lower portion) of the shield is gold and blue divided “dancetté” (by a zigzag line). This represents the arms of the pre-Reformation Abbots of Westminster who would place their personal coat of arms in the top portion (chief) of the shield. The last Benedictine Abbot of Westminster to use this coat of arms was John Feckenham (c. 1515–1584) who was removed from office by Elizabeth I in 1560 at the final suppression of the abbey. The abbey church then became known as the Collegiate Church of St Peter, Westminster, which remains its official name to this day.[citation needed]

The shield of Ampleforth Abbey, Ampleforth College, and St Benet's Hall was thus a combination of three shields – the first representing St Peter (top left), the second representing St Edward the Confessor (top right), and the bottom representing the pre-Reformation Benedictine Abbots of Westminster.[citation needed] The heraldic blazon of the arms is as follows: Per fesse dancetté Or and Azure a chief per pale Gules and of the second charged on the dexter with two keys in saltire Or and Argent and on the sinister with a Cross Flory between five martlets of the first.[citation needed] Although not official, the motto associated with the hall is Ausculta, O fili, praecepta magistri which translates as "Listen, O [my] son, to the precepts of [thy] master." This is taken from the Latin original of the opening line of the prologue to the Rule of St. Benedict.[citation needed]

People associated with St Benet's edit

 
Professor Werner Jeanrond
 
Very Revd Dom Henry Wansbrough
 
Dr Brian Klug

Masters edit

St Benet's had twelve masters following its establishment in 1897:[25]

Fellows edit

Notable fellows of the hall include:[31]

  • Brian Klug, senior research fellow in Philosophy (2000–2022)
  • Susan Doran, fellow in history (2007–2022)
  • Harry Sidebottom, fellow and director of studies in ancient history (2008–2014)

Honorary fellows edit

Notable alumni edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f The Tablet, 3 December 2023 issue, pp.9-11
  2. ^ Stacpoole, Alberic. "Obituary of Fr James Forbes". English Benedictine Congregation. Retrieved 22 July 2020.
  3. ^ Knollys, Bonaventure. "Obituary of Fr Philip Holdsworth". English Benedictine Congregation. Retrieved 22 July 2020.
  4. ^ a b c St Benet's Hall - University of Oxford. Ox.ac.uk. Retrieved on 2010-09-29.
  5. ^ at the Wayback Machine (archived 2018-03-27)
  6. ^ Poulten, Sarah. "PPH students most satisfied". The Oxford Student. Retrieved 8 December 2013.
  7. ^ "BBC, Oxford college employed sex abuse monk for 12 years". Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  8. ^ Gurney-Read, Josie. "Oxford hall announces decision to admit women". The Telegraph. Retrieved 8 December 2013.
  9. ^ "Second Building for St Benet's Hall". St Benet's Hall. Retrieved 10 September 2015.
  10. ^ St Benet's Hall, Oxford 2010-08-22 at the Wayback Machine. St-benets.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 2010-09-29.
  11. ^ "Religious freedom does not justify discrimination against LGBTQ community: Readers". USA TODAY. Retrieved 21 June 2023.
  12. ^ Atkinson Gibson, Poppy; Foster, Alex (17 December 2021). "St Benet's Hall to temporarily halt undergrad admissions amid dire financial straits". The Oxford Student. Retrieved 20 December 2021.
  13. ^ a b "Breaking News: St Benet's Hall announces that university will not renew its official licence and addresses possibility of ceasing operations altogether". The Oxford Student. 16 May 2022. Retrieved 17 May 2022.
  14. ^ a b Woolcock, Nicola. "Oxford monks given marching orders". The Times. Retrieved 21 May 2022.
  15. ^ Biletsky, Anya (15 June 2022). "St Benet's Hall buildings to be vacated as students lament loss of "lovely community"". Cherwell. Retrieved 24 July 2022.
  16. ^ Woolcock, Nicola (30 September 2022). "Oxford college St Benet's Hall closes despite businessman's £40m lifeline". The Times. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
  17. ^ "Voting on Legislative Proposal: Statute V: Colleges, Societies, and Permanent Private Halls" (PDF). Gazette. No. 5365. University of Oxford. 10 November 2022. Retrieved 10 November 2022.
  18. ^ "St Benet's Hall Association". St Benet's Hall Association. Retrieved 24 April 2023.
  19. ^ a b c . Archived from the original on 7 September 2008. Retrieved 7 December 2008.
  20. ^ "St Benet's Trust Charity Commission report 2016". Retrieved 4 December 2022.
  21. ^ St Benet's Hall, Oxford 2009-04-20 at the Wayback Machine. St-benets.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved on 2010-09-29.
  22. ^ Home - St Benet's Hall Boat Club.
  23. ^ "Torpids 2019". eodg.atm.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 19 May 2021.
  24. ^ "St Benet's wins inter College (Cuppers) Rubgy 7s cup for second year running". www.st-benets.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 26 May 2021.
  25. ^ St Benet's Hall, Oxford 2010-08-22 at the Wayback Machine. St-benets.ox.ac.uk (1939-09-12). Retrieved on 2012-09-05.
  26. ^ Downs, James. "A Monk of Magdalen: Abbot Oswald (David) Hunter-Blair O.S.B. (1853-1939)". Dark Lane Creative. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  27. ^ Byrne, Herbert. "Obituary of Fr Anselm Parker". English Benedictine Congregation. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  28. ^ Sandeman, Barnabas. "Obituary of Fr Justin McCann". English Benedictine Congregation. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  29. ^ Barry, Patrick. "Obituary of Fr Gerard Sitwell". English Benedictine Congregation. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  30. ^ "Trustees". St Benet's Hall. Retrieved 18 February 2019.
  31. ^ St Benet's Hall, Oxford 2009-11-24 at the Wayback Machine. St-benets.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved on 2012-09-05.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • St Benet's Hall
  • St Benet's Hall Boat Club
  • St Benet's Hall Association

benet, hall, oxford, benet, hall, known, colloquially, benet, permanent, private, hall, university, oxford, originally, roman, catholic, religious, house, studies, closed, 2022, principal, building, located, northern, giles, western, side, close, junction, wit. St Benet s Hall known colloquially as Benet s was a permanent private hall PPH of the University of Oxford originally a Roman Catholic religious house of studies It closed in 2022 The principal building was located at the northern end of St Giles on its western side close to the junction with Woodstock Road Oxford St Benet s HallOxfordArms Per fesse dancette or and azure a chief per pale gules and of the second charged on the dexter with two keys in saltire or and argent and on the sinister with a cross flory between five martlets of the first Location38 St Giles OxfordCoordinates51 45 29 N 1 15 39 W 51 757952 N 1 260787 W 51 757952 1 260787Latin nameAula Privata Sancti BenedictiMottoAusculta o fili praecepta magistriMotto in EnglishListen O child to the master s preceptsEstablished1897 126 years ago 1897 Closed2022Named afterSt Benedict of NursiaWebsitewww wbr st benets wbr ox wbr ac wbr ukBoat clubSt Benet s Hall Boat ClubMapLocation in Oxford city centre Contents 1 History 1 1 Benedictine antecedents 1 2 Private hall of studies 1 3 Permanent private hall of the University of Oxford 1 4 Sexual abuse scandal 1 5 Final decade 1 6 Closure 2 St Benet s Hall Association 3 Former Buildings 3 1 38 and 39 St Giles 3 2 11 Norham Gardens 4 Administration 5 Refectory 6 Sport 7 Coat of arms 8 People associated with St Benet s 8 1 Masters 8 2 Fellows 8 3 Honorary fellows 8 4 Notable alumni 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory editBenedictine antecedents edit nbsp St Benet s HallBenedictine monks had studied at Oxford since at least 1281 when Gloucester Abbey founded Gloucester College The area today known as Gloucester Green was named after this college In 1291 Durham Abbey founded Durham College and in 1362 Christ Church Priory in Canterbury founded Canterbury College All three Benedictine houses of study were closed between 1536 and 1545 during the dissolution of the monasteries under Henry VIII Gloucester College was eventually re founded as Worcester College Durham College was re founded as Trinity College but the original college s name is preserved in Trinity s Durham Quadrangle Canterbury College s property was acquired by Christ Church Until the establishment of St Benet s Hall in 1897 the Benedictines had been absent from the university for over 350 years citation needed St Benet s Hall was not a re foundation of any of the former Benedictine colleges of Oxford Rather the hall had a tenuous connection with Westminster Abbey by virtue of its establishment by Ampleforth Abbey In the 960s or early 970s Saint Dunstan assisted by King Edgar installed a community of Benedictine monks at Westminster Although the Benedictine priories and abbeys in England were closed during the dissolution of the monasteries one solitary Benedictine monastery was re established in Westminster Abbey in 1553 by Mary I as part of her unsuccessful attempt to restore Catholicism in England After her death Elizabeth I dissolved the monastery once again By 1607 only one of the Westminster monks was still alive Dom Sigebert Buckley c 1520 1610 In 1608 Buckley aggregated two English exiles who had become monks of the Italian Cassinese Congregation and thereby allegedly passed on to them the rights and privileges of the mediaeval English Benedictine abbeys to be distinguished from the post Reformation English Benedictine Congregation In 1615 these two English monks became part of a community which took up residence in the abandoned collegiate church of Saint Laurent in the town of Dieulouard near Nancy in the Lorraine region of north eastern France The monks adopted St Lawrence as their patron saint In 1792 Dieulouard Priory was closed and the monks were expelled from France as part of the hostility against the clergy associated with the French Revolution They opted to return to England citation needed At that time a Benedictine monk priest Fr Anselm Bolton was the chaplain to Lady Anne Fairfax at Gilling Castle North Yorkshire She was the only daughter of Charles Gregory Fairfax 9th and last Viscount Fairfax of Emley She built Ampleforth Lodge for Fr Bolton just before she died in 1792 citation needed In 1802 Bolton handed this house over to his brethren from Dieulouard who had been living in England without a permanent home for a decade The lodge became their new monastery Ampleforth Priory In 1803 the monks established Ampleforth College today an independent Catholic secondary school The priory was elevated to the status of an independent abbey in 1899 by Pope Leo XIII in the papal bull Diu quidem est Ampleforth Abbey renamed the hall of studies as St Benet s Hall in 1918 when it became a permanent private hall of the university citation needed Private hall of studies edit In October 1897 the priory had established a private hall of studies at Oxford for the purpose of enabling its monks to read for secular degrees at the University of Oxford The hall was not founded as a theological college but rather as a place where student monks could read for a degree in any secular subject Private halls of study at the university took their name from their Master and so the hall was known successively as Hunter Blair s Hall and Parker s Hall It was initially housed at 103 Woodstock Road This house is still in existence opposite SS Philip and James Church and is now a guest house The hall was there until 1904 when it moved to the former Grindle s Hall in Beaumont Street from which it removed in 1922 to the present buildings of 38 and 39 St Giles The Beaumont Street houses were demolished in 1938 to make space for the Oxford Playhouse theatre citation needed Permanent private hall of the University of Oxford edit St Benet s became a permanent private hall of the university in 1918 after new university legislation created the status of PPH It took as its official name Aula Privata Sancti Benedicti in English St Benet s Hall Benet is a mediaeval English variant of the name Benedict since hall is named after St Benedict of Nursia c 480 547 the founder of the Benedictine order father of western monasticism and a patron saint of Europe and of students The character of the hall changed over the years acquiring fellows in imitation of the university s constituent colleges However as a PPH of the university the hall s fellows did not constitute its governing body Rather they shared with the master the day to day running of the hall and elected one of their number to serve as a trustee of the St Benet s Trust when that charity was founded in 2012 Before then the hall was a private possession of Ampleforth Abbey 1 The hall matriculated students to be members of the university so those of its student body who matriculated were full members of the university in all ways and were able to supplicate for degrees on the successful completion of their studies For most of its members the only noticeable difference made by the hall s legal status is that it was very much smaller than any of the Oxford constituent colleges citation needed With the decline of monastic vocations beginning in the 1960s and continuing to the present 2022 more and more Roman Catholic laymen were admitted especially under Master James Forbes OSB 2 including some Old Amplefordians Under Master Philip Holdsworth OSB 1979 1989 the hall again emphasised a monastic ethos and also became more theological in character with many monks from the English Benedictine Congregation and other Benedictine Congregations studying theology at Blackfriars 3 Master Henry Wansbrough 1990 2004 started again to admit laymen thus creating a mixed focus on theology philosophy and the humanities citation needed There was never a policy that lay members of the Hall both undergraduates and postgraduates should be Catholics and in recent decades most were not However all members were asked to be supportive of the monks life and values 4 A review of the PPHs conducted by the university in 2007 concluded that St Benet s had a good sense of its place within the collegiate University and drew attention to the commitment and care of the hall s academic staff 5 In May 2013 the Student Barometer survey results showed that St Benet s Hall had the highest overall student satisfaction score out of the 44 constituent colleges and permanent private halls of the university 6 Sexual abuse scandal edit Main article Sexual abuse scandal in the English Benedictine Congregation In 1996 Bernard Green OSB 1953 2013 a monk of Ampleforth Abbey was convicted of sexually abusing a 14 year old schoolboy at the monastery s school Ampleforth College in the previous year He was put on probation and prohibited from teaching Despite this the abbey sent him to reside and teach at St Benet s Hall in 2000 without allegedly informing the hall of his conviction He was issued with a final letter of warning by the university in 2005 after being accused of sexually harassing a 19 year old undergraduate member of the hall This letter was supposedly unknown to the hall until 2006 but Green was subsequently kept in residence until 2012 when he was finally dismissed The scandal came to the notice of the national media 7 Final decade edit nbsp St Benet s Hall GardenUntil 2012 the Master of the hall was always a Benedictine monk from Ampleforth On 1 September of that year Werner Jeanrond formerly holder of the 1640 Chair of Divinity at the University of Glasgow became the new Master He was the first Catholic layman ever to run the hall Jeanrond became a full member of the Faculty of Theology and Religion at Oxford and was engaged in both teaching and research as well as serving as head of house 1 Until 2016 St Benet s was the last constituent body of the University of Oxford admitting only men It was also the last single sex college or hall in the university after St Hilda s College the last all women s college in Oxford admitted men in 2008 In November 2013 under Professor Jeanrond the hall announced its intention to admit women graduate students within one year and women undergraduates as soon as additional housing facilities were obtained 8 Women were admitted as graduate students in October 2014 and as undergraduates in October 2016 Thus 2016 was the year when all constituent colleges and halls of the university became fully coeducational The University of Cambridge retains two constituent colleges for female students only To allow for the admission of undergraduate women in 2015 St Benet s Hall acquired a hall of residence owned by the Sisters of the Sacred Heart at 11 Norham Gardens next to University Parks and near Lady Margaret Hall in October 2015 9 So the hall became a co educational academic community latterly consisting of 84 undergraduate students and 48 graduate students of all faiths and none citation needed The degree subjects to which the last undergraduate students were admitted by St Benet s were Theology Philosophy and Theology Theology and Oriental Studies History History and Politics History and Economics Philosophy Politics and Economics PPE Classics Classics with Oriental Studies Oriental Studies Egyptology Egyptology and Ancient Near Eastern Studies Islamic Studies Hebrew Studies and Jewish Studies Oriental Studies with Classics and Human Science 10 The hall admitted graduate students from the same subjects as undergraduates as well as those who studied at the Blavatnik School of Government the Institute of Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology and the Said Business School citation needed nbsp Hall LibraryClosure edit In September 2021 it was announced that the John and Daria Barry Foundation a philanthropic trust run by the venture capitalist John F Barry III was making a 40 million rescue offer to enable the hall to become completely independent of Ampleforth Abbey This was on condition that the buildings would be purchased from the Ampleforth Abbey Trust for 15 million less than their market value that the St Benet s Trust was to be made completely separate from the abbey and that the chair was to be the prominent anti LGBT rights campaigner Robert P George of Princeton University 11 Barry himself was on record as describing the venture as a Hail Mary pass indicating limited expectations of success 1 However in December of that year the university stated that without the abbey s continued financial support it cannot be confident that the hall can support a new undergraduate cohort for the full duration of their studies The major issues were that the hall s endowments were inadequate the two buildings were owned by Ampleforth Abbey and operational deficits were being covered by subsidies from the abbey 1 So the university announced that it would temporarily cease to accept undergraduate matriculations from the hall owing to these serious financial issues 12 May 2022 was the deadline for deciding this point as regards the academic year 2022 3 1 In that month it was made public that the University Council had decided not to renew the hall s PPH licence which implied that the hall would close at the end of the 2022 academic year 13 14 The university had decided that the new arrangements proposed by the Barry Foundation would not be financially viable and questioned the implications of the new board and so they were rejected 13 14 In June 2022 it was finally announced that the buildings would be vacated by October 2022 and that the university was seeking alternative colleges to which existing students would transfer 15 The buildings were subsequently purchased by St Hilda s College 16 The hall was formally closed on 30 September 2022 17 The last member of staff vacated the St Giles house on 7 October The wine cellar of 1 100 bottles was donated to Blackfriars Students relocated individually to other colleges and halls of the university to continue their studies The St Benet s Hall Boat Club continues to operate 1 St Benet s Hall Association editThe St Benet s Hall Association is a not for profit organisation founded in 2007 by Benet s alumni Its purpose is to promote a close relationship amongst those who studied lived or taught at St Benet s Hall Following the dissolution of the Hall the Association became the focal point for Old Benetians worldwide organising regular social and networking events both independently and with other constituents of the University of Oxford 18 Former Buildings edit38 and 39 St Giles edit nbsp Yellow Room St Benet s HallThe hall occupied 38 39 St Giles from 1923 to 2022 This is a rather plain late Regency style edifice of four storeys with a further attic storey and cellars The cellar area ensured that the original set of wrought iron railings have survived as has a wrought iron balcony across the facade at the second storey The first storey has six round headed windows in recessed frames flanked by a pair of matching doors with fanlights The second storey has eight tall rectangular windows complemented by shorter ones for the second storey and square ones for the third The third and fourth storeys are separated by a moulded string course which is the only decorative feature of the facade The slate mansard roof has attic windows inserted The dining hall took up most of the ground floor and the common room and library were above that The chapel is a red brick garden annexe in a vaguely Gothic style nbsp Hall chapelThe original building dates from 1830 and was constructed as two separate houses 38 and 39 19 The site was previously part of a coster s i e fruit seller s yard and stable In the nineteenth century the two houses served as private homes for several Anglican clergy connected to the university and to a number of widows of independent means citation needed The northern house 38 St Giles was in 1841 occupied as the private dwelling of the Rev Philip Bliss Registrar of the University of Oxford and later principal of St Mary s Hall Bliss lived there with his wife and four servants A decade later it was the home of the university s public orator and vice principal and later principal of Magdalen Hall the Rev Richard Michell In 1874 Michell became first principal of the refounded Hertford College After a two year period as the Oxford High School 1879 1881 it became a private home once more belonging briefly to Charlotte Cotton widow of the Rev Richard Lynch Cotton provost of Worcester College 1881 1882 It then belonged to the Rev S J Hulme chaplain of Wadham College 1884 1887 In 1889 it served briefly as the Oxford Eye Hospital which is today part of the John Radcliffe Hospital In 1891 it was acquired by Madame de Leobardy and opened as St Ursula s Convent a boarding and day school for Roman Catholic girls 19 The southern house 39 St Giles was the private home of Letitia Pett 1841 1846 and Maria Brown 1852 1861 both widows It was then acquired by the Rev Richard Greswell tutor in theology at Worcester College and his family 1861 1881 After his death in 1881 his widow Joanna Greswell lived in the house until 1894 The British military historian Sir Charles William Chadwick Oman a fellow of All Souls College and the Chichele Professor of Modern History acquired the house in 1898 and lived there until 1908 In 1909 it too was purchased by Madame de Leobardy and became an extension of the convent school next door The chapel in the garden is evidence of this 19 St Ursula s Convent School closed in 1922 Ampleforth Abbey acquired both buildings in 1923 and combined the two into one residence It was the sole building of St Benet s Hall until 2015 citation needed 11 Norham Gardens edit A large house in Norham Gardens was acquired in 2015 as part of the policy of expansion begun in 2012 The original Victorian Gothic villa was built in 1860 and designed by William Wilkinson who was also responsible for the Randolph Hotel Oxford Norham Gardens is in an area originally known as Norham Manor and was owned by St John s College Past occupants of 11 Norham Gardens include Henry Balfour the first curator of the Pitt Rivers Museum and Francis Llewellyn Griffith the first professor of Egyptology at Oxford Griffith s archaeological finds form the backbone of the Egyptian collections at the Ashmolean Museum citation needed In 1932 the Society of the Sacred Heart a Roman Catholic order of nuns purchased the villa The purpose of this acquisition was to provide accommodation for women students at Oxford registered at the Society of Oxford Home Students which later became St Anne s College In 1951 a new wing was added as a student hostel providing 21 rooms These rooms also accommodated women at St Anne s which became a constituent college of the university in 1952 The association with St Anne s lessened over time and women students mostly undergraduates from across the university lived in the hostel whilst the Sisters lived in the villa By the 1990s the student population in the hostel became entirely postgraduate housing both men and women of any faith or none In spring 2015 the Sacred Heart Sisters decided to sell the house and hostel complex to St Benet s Hall to enable the latter to become fully co educational by Michaelmas Term 2016 citation needed Administration editThe governing body of the hall comprised the trustees of a charity known as the St Benet s Trust created in 2012 with the trust s chair being ex officio the Abbot of Ampleforth Abbey However the assets of this Trust were wholly owned by the Ampleforth Abbey Trust In 2016 Abbot Cuthbert Madden resigned after allegations of sexual abuse and was replaced as chair by a lay fellow 20 Unlike the university s colleges and other PPHs St Benet s had a joint common room of which all at the hall were members 4 The JCR had its own committee 21 and was responsible for running the St Benet s bar and gym facilities citation needed Refectory edit nbsp RefectoryAgain unlike the university s constituent colleges the hall did not have a high table but one common dining table shared by all members Members of the hall were entitled to invite guests to all meals 4 with the result that fellows lecturers monks students and their guests mixed freely The dining hall was known as the refectory in accordance with monastic tradition The following grace was said in Latin before every formal Hall meal which at St Benet s was latterly held on Tuesday Thursday and Sunday It was recited by the Master or a person he designated In addition after grace an undergraduate student would read a short passage from the Rule of St Benedict in English Gratiarum actio ante cibum Benedic Domine nos et haec tua dona quae de tua largitate sumus sumpturi per Christum Dominum nostrum Amen dd Grace before the meal Bless us O Lord and these thy gifts which we are about to receive from thy bounty through Christ our Lord Amen dd Grace after the meal was said in Latin after formal hall by the chaplain in the following form Gratiarum actio post cibum Agimus tibi gratias omnipotens Deus pro universis beneficiis tuis qui vivis et regnas in saecula saeculorum Amen dd Grace after the meal We give thee thanks O almighty God for all thy benefits who livest and reignest for ever and ever Amen citation needed dd Sport editDespite the small size of the hall the St Benet s Hall Boat Club raced an eight boat on the River Thames for many years 22 In recent years it has had a good record of winning blades the trophy awarded for bumping rowing past teams ranked above every day in the Torpids and Summer Eights bumps races The Boat Club s M1 won blades most recently in 2019 23 Although the Hall is closed the St Benet s Hall Boat Club still exists The hall also had its own netball rugby sevens and field hockey teams as well as a football team joint with Regent s Park College The Benet s rugby sevens team is the back to back 2018 and 2019 Oxford University rugby sevens champion 24 Coat of arms edit nbsp Coat of arms of Ampleforth AbbeySt Benet s Hall used the same coat of arms as Ampleforth Abbey and Ampleforth College but like the college without the abbot s crozier and galero ecclesiastical hat with tassels The arms were granted to the abbey by the English College of Arms in 1922 The abbey made the application to the College of Arms to regularise its armorial position as the alleged lineal descendant of Westminster Abbey The purpose of this move was to conform to proper authority and thus not be open to the charge of lack of consideration for post Reformation bodies already bearing variants of the Westminster arms in their own line of heraldic descent citation needed The Pre Reformation City of Westminster sometimes used a red shield with two keys in saltire to symbolise Saint Peter to whom its Abbey Church was dedicated In addition Westminster also used a blue shield with a gold cross flory between five gold martlets heraldic birds This forms the attributed arms of St Edward the Confessor reign 1042 1066 the last Anglo Saxon king of England who is regarded as the principal patron and founder of Westminster Abbey Both these arms appear in the chief top portion of the shield The base lower portion of the shield is gold and blue divided dancette by a zigzag line This represents the arms of the pre Reformation Abbots of Westminster who would place their personal coat of arms in the top portion chief of the shield The last Benedictine Abbot of Westminster to use this coat of arms was John Feckenham c 1515 1584 who was removed from office by Elizabeth I in 1560 at the final suppression of the abbey The abbey church then became known as the Collegiate Church of St Peter Westminster which remains its official name to this day citation needed The shield of Ampleforth Abbey Ampleforth College and St Benet s Hall was thus a combination of three shields the first representing St Peter top left the second representing St Edward the Confessor top right and the bottom representing the pre Reformation Benedictine Abbots of Westminster citation needed The heraldic blazon of the arms is as follows Per fesse dancette Or and Azure a chief per pale Gules and of the second charged on the dexter with two keys in saltire Or and Argent and on the sinister with a Cross Flory between five martlets of the first citation needed Although not official the motto associated with the hall is Ausculta O fili praecepta magistri which translates as Listen O my son to the precepts of thy master This is taken from the Latin original of the opening line of the prologue to the Rule of St Benedict citation needed People associated with St Benet s edit nbsp Professor Werner Jeanrond nbsp Very Revd Dom Henry Wansbrough nbsp Dr Brian KlugMasters edit St Benet s had twelve masters following its establishment in 1897 25 Oswald Hunter Blair OSB 1898 1909 26 Anselm Parker OSB 1909 1920 27 Justin McCann OSB 1920 1947 28 Gerard Sitwell OSB 1947 1964 29 James Forbes OSB 1964 1979 Philip Holdsworth OSB 1979 1989 Fabian Cowper OSB 1989 1990 Henry Wansbrough OSB 1990 2004 Editor of the New Jerusalem Bible Leo Chamberlain OSB 2004 2007 Felix Stephens OSB 2007 2012 Werner Jeanrond 2012 2018 Richard Cooper 2018 2022 30 Fellows edit Further information Category Fellows of St Benet s Hall Oxford Notable fellows of the hall include 31 Brian Klug senior research fellow in Philosophy 2000 2022 Susan Doran fellow in history 2007 2022 Harry Sidebottom fellow and director of studies in ancient history 2008 2014 Honorary fellows edit Leo Chamberlain Master of St Benet s Hall 2004 2007 Titular Cathedral Prior of Gloucester Peter Hennessy Baron Hennessy of Nympsfield FBA Attlee Professor of Contemporary British History Queen Mary University of London Werner Jeanrond Master of St Benet s Hall 2012 2018 Professor of Systematic Theology Dogmatics University of Oslo Henry Mayr Harting emeritus Regius Professor of Ecclesiastical History University of Oxford Peter Sutherland GCIH KCMG SC previously Attorney General of Ireland He also held office as non executive chairman of Goldman Sachs International chairman of the London School of Economics and Consultor of the Extraordinary Section of the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See Henry Wansbrough Master of St Benet s Hall 1990 2004 Titular Cathedral Prior of Norwich 2004 2009 Titular Cathedral Prior of DurhamNotable alumni edit Further information Category Alumni of St Benet s Hall Oxford John Balme alumnus American conductor opera manager and pianist David Blair alumnus and chief foreign correspondent for the Daily Telegraph Bishop Donald Joseph Bolen alumnus and Roman Catholic Bishop of Saskatoon Damian Collins alumnus and Member of Parliament MP for Folkestone and Hythe John Cornwell alumnus author and academic at Jesus College University of Cambridge Lumumba Stanislaus Kaw Di Aping alumnus and Sudanese diplomat Cardinal Basil Hume OM OSB 1923 1999 alumnus Abbot of Ampleforth 1963 1976 and Archbishop of Westminster 1976 1999 Professor Olegario Gonzalez de Cardedal alumnus and chair of theology Pontifical University of Salamanca Spain Martin Jennings alumnus and sculptor Sir Anthony Kenny FBA alumnus analytical philosopher and former Master of Balliol College Oxford General Jacko Page alumnus and lieutenant general 6th Infantry Division British Army Columba Stewart alumnus and American Benedictine monk scholar executive director of the Hill Museum amp Manuscript Library in Collegeville MinnesotaSee also editEnglish Benedictine CongregationReferences edit a b c d e f The Tablet 3 December 2023 issue pp 9 11 Stacpoole Alberic Obituary of Fr James Forbes English Benedictine Congregation Retrieved 22 July 2020 Knollys Bonaventure Obituary of Fr Philip Holdsworth English Benedictine Congregation Retrieved 22 July 2020 a b c St Benet s Hall University of Oxford Ox ac uk Retrieved on 2010 09 29 Review of the Permanent Private Halls associated with the University of Oxford at the Wayback Machine archived 2018 03 27 Poulten Sarah PPH students most satisfied The Oxford Student Retrieved 8 December 2013 BBC Oxford college employed sex abuse monk for 12 years Retrieved 4 December 2022 Gurney Read Josie Oxford hall announces decision to admit women The Telegraph Retrieved 8 December 2013 Second Building for St Benet s Hall St Benet s Hall Retrieved 10 September 2015 St Benet s Hall Oxford Archived 2010 08 22 at the Wayback Machine St benets ox ac uk Retrieved 2010 09 29 Religious freedom does not justify discrimination against LGBTQ community Readers USA TODAY Retrieved 21 June 2023 Atkinson Gibson Poppy Foster Alex 17 December 2021 St Benet s Hall to temporarily halt undergrad admissions amid dire financial straits The Oxford Student Retrieved 20 December 2021 a b Breaking News St Benet s Hall announces that university will not renew its official licence and addresses possibility of ceasing operations altogether The Oxford Student 16 May 2022 Retrieved 17 May 2022 a b Woolcock Nicola Oxford monks given marching orders The Times Retrieved 21 May 2022 Biletsky Anya 15 June 2022 St Benet s Hall buildings to be vacated as students lament loss of lovely community Cherwell Retrieved 24 July 2022 Woolcock Nicola 30 September 2022 Oxford college St Benet s Hall closes despite businessman s 40m lifeline The Times Retrieved 1 October 2022 Voting on Legislative Proposal Statute V Colleges Societies and Permanent Private Halls PDF Gazette No 5365 University of Oxford 10 November 2022 Retrieved 10 November 2022 St Benet s Hall Association St Benet s Hall Association Retrieved 24 April 2023 a b c Oxford History article Archived from the original on 7 September 2008 Retrieved 7 December 2008 St Benet s Trust Charity Commission report 2016 Retrieved 4 December 2022 St Benet s Hall Oxford Archived 2009 04 20 at the Wayback Machine St benets ox ac uk Retrieved on 2010 09 29 Home St Benet s Hall Boat Club Torpids 2019 eodg atm ox ac uk Retrieved 19 May 2021 St Benet s wins inter College Cuppers Rubgy 7s cup for second year running www st benets ox ac uk Retrieved 26 May 2021 St Benet s Hall Oxford Archived 2010 08 22 at the Wayback Machine St benets ox ac uk 1939 09 12 Retrieved on 2012 09 05 Downs James A Monk of Magdalen Abbot Oswald David Hunter Blair O S B 1853 1939 Dark Lane Creative Retrieved 24 July 2020 Byrne Herbert Obituary of Fr Anselm Parker English Benedictine Congregation Retrieved 24 July 2020 Sandeman Barnabas Obituary of Fr Justin McCann English Benedictine Congregation Retrieved 24 July 2020 Barry Patrick Obituary of Fr Gerard Sitwell English Benedictine Congregation Retrieved 24 July 2020 Trustees St Benet s Hall Retrieved 18 February 2019 St Benet s Hall Oxford Archived 2009 11 24 at the Wayback Machine St benets ox ac uk Retrieved on 2012 09 05 Further reading editWansbrough Henry Marett Crosby Anthony ed Benedictines in Oxford London Darton Longman and Todd 1997 ISBN 0 232 52176 X ISBN 978 0 232 52176 4 External links editSt Benet s Hall St Benet s Hall Boat Club St Benet s Hall Association Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Benet 27s Hall Oxford amp oldid 1185764442, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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