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St Edmund's College, Cambridge

St Edmund's College is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge[4] in England. Founded in 1896, it is the second-oldest of the four Cambridge colleges oriented to mature students, which accept only students reading for postgraduate degrees or for undergraduate degrees if aged 21 years or older.

St Edmund's College
University of Cambridge
St Edmund's College Chapel
Arms of St Edmund's College
Arms: Arms of Henry Fitzalan-Howard, 15th Duke of Norfolk (quarterly of four: Howard, Brotherton, Warenne, FitzAlan) with a canton of St Edmund of Abingdon (Or, a cross fleury gules between four Cornish choughs proper[1]) all within a bordure argent
Scarf colours: blue, with two equally-spaced narrow stripes of Cambridge blue edged with white
LocationMount Pleasant, Cambridge (map)
Full nameThe Master, Fellows and Scholars of St Edmund’s College in the University of Cambridge
Latin nameCollegium Sancti Edmundi
AbbreviationED[2]
MottoPer Revelationem et Rationem (Latin)
Founders
Established1896
Named afterEdmund of Abingdon
Previous namesSt Edmund's House
Age restriction21 and older
Sister collegeGreen Templeton College, Oxford
MasterCatherine Arnold
PresidentJason Singh
Undergraduates188 (2022-23)
Postgraduates528 (2022-23)
Endowment£18.1m (2019)[3]
VisitorVincent Nichols, Archbishop of Westminster
Websitewww.st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk
CRwww.cr.st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk
Map
Location in Central Cambridge
Location in Cambridge

Named after St Edmund of Abingdon (1175–1240), who was the first known Oxford Master of Arts and Archbishop of Canterbury from 1234 to 1240, the college has traditionally Catholic roots. Its founders were Henry Fitzalan-Howard, 15th Duke of Norfolk, and Baron Anatole von Hügel (1854–1928), the first Catholic to take a Cambridge degree since the deposition of King James II in 1688.[5] The Visitor is the Archbishop of Westminster (at present Cardinal Vincent Nichols).[6]

The college is located on Mount Pleasant, northwest of the centre of Cambridge, near Lucy Cavendish College, Murray Edwards College and Fitzwilliam College. Its campus consists of a garden setting on the edge of what was Roman Cambridge, with housing for over 350 students.

Members of St Edmund's include cosmologist and Big Bang theorist Georges Lemaître, Lord St John of Fawsley, Archbishop Eamon Martin, of Armagh, Bishop John Petit of Menevia, and Olympic medalists Simon Schürch (Gold), Thorsten Streppelhoff (Silver), Marc Weber (Silver), Stuart Welch (Silver) and Simon Amor (Silver). St Edmund's was also the residential college of the university's first Catholic students in 200 years – most of whom were studying for the priesthood – after the lifting of the papal prohibition on attendance at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge in 1895 at the urging of a delegation to Pope Leo XIII led by Baron von Hügel.[7]

History edit

Foundation edit

St Edmund's House was founded in 1896 by Henry Fitzalan-Howard, the 15th Duke of Norfolk, and Baron Anatole von Hügel as an institution providing board and lodging for Roman Catholic students at the University of Cambridge. After Catholic Emancipation, in particular after the Universities Tests Act 1871, students who were Roman Catholics were finally admitted as members of the University. In its early days the college functioned predominantly as a lodging house, or hall of residence, for students who were matriculated at other colleges. Most of the students, at that time, were ordained Catholic priests who were reading various subjects offered by the University. The college was established in the buildings of Ayerst Hostel, which had been set up for non-collegiate students by the Reverend William Ayerst in 1884, and its founding master was Fr Edmund Nolan, then vice-rector of St Edmund's College, Ware.[7] In 1896 Ayerst Hostel had to close due to lack of funds, and the property was transferred to the Catholic Church.[8]

Collegiate Status edit

Attempts to have St Edmund's House become a constituent college of the University of Cambridge were undertaken at various junctures, but were met in pre-ecumenical days by continuing opposition from the predominantly Protestant membership of the University’s governing Regent House. Among motives cited were that the college was not self-governing and its assets were held in trust by an external body, namely, the Catholic Church.[9]

The chapel was officially consecrated in 1916 by Cardinal Francis Bourne, Archbishop of Westminster.[10] A new dining hall was constructed in 1939 and the membership of the college increased steadily as it became a recognised House of Residence of the university, without college status.

In response to growing postgraduate student numbers in the early 1960s, the Regent House of the University established several Colleges primarily for postgraduate students, and St Edmund's House became one of the graduate Colleges in the University (the others being Wolfson College, Lucy Cavendish College, Hughes Hall, Clare Hall and Darwin College). This spurred further progress regarding St Edmund's status within the University, and in 1965, the College was permitted to matriculate its own students and new fellows were elected. In 1975 St Edmund's acquired the status of an "Approved Foundation", and after the transfer of the College assets from the Catholic Church to the autonomous governing body comprising the Masters and Fellows of the College in 1986, the College changed its name from "St Edmund's House" to "St Edmund's College". It received university approval for full collegiate status in 1996, and this was confirmed by the grant of its royal charter in 1998.[11][12] The college now accepts students of all faiths and none.

Buildings and grounds edit

Norfolk Building edit

The Norfolk Building is the oldest building on site, dating back to 1896 as the former Ayerst Hostel; it provided accommodation for Fr Edmond Nolan, the first Master of St Edmund's, along with the first four students of the college.[13] Known for its clean Gothic revival style, the building underwent a three-phased extension scheme designed by Roderick Gradidge in 1989, and now houses 21st-century amenities including the Middle Combination Room, Dining Hall, Kitchens and a Porter's office.[14]

 
College Chapel and Norfolk Building in the Foreground with Okinaga Tower in the Background

Chapel edit

St Edmund's College Chapel is a fitting monument to the Catholic character of the origins of the College and is unique among Colleges of the Universities of Cambridge and Oxford in following the Roman Catholic tradition.

The edifice itself is a Grade II listed building designed by the architect Fr Benedict Williamson CSSP and was consecrated by Cardinal Francis Bourne, Archbishop of Westminster in 1916.[10] Notable for its prayerful simplicity and Gothic Revival architecture, the chapel is a Catholic foundation, although it is open to members of other Christian denominations.[15] In 2003, a stained glass window depicting the ministry of St Boniface of Crediton (c. 675 - 754 AD), the apostle to Germany, was donated by Stephen Frowen and blessed by Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor, Archbishop of Westminster.[15]

A bronze sculpture of the college patron, St Edmund of Abingdon, is located at the front of the chapel, his left hand holding a Bible. The statue is the work of Rodney Munday, an alumnus of St Edmund Hall, Oxford, and was commissioned by the College in 2007.[15] The Chapel Schola and Choir frequently perform in concerts in collaboration with St Edmund Hall, Oxford and St Edmund's College, Ware in commemoration of their Patron Saint.

Expansion edit

St Edmund's continues to expand and develop ints buildings. In 2000, a new residential building housing 50 students was opened, named after Richard Laws, one of the former Masters. In 2006, two new residential buildings, including rooms for 70 students as well as apartments for couples, were opened; these were named after the former Master of the College, Sir Brian Heap, and the former Vice-Master, Geoffrey Cook.

In 2016, major plans were announced for the development of two new courts and several buildings which will expand the College and provide modern, world-class facilities for the scholars and students of St Edmunds College. While contemporary, the buildings' external features and material will be in the traditional architectural vernacular that is found elsewhere in the College. Brick buildings will form the perimeter of the two new courts and a new multi-million pound student centre will frame the west side of the College. The expansion plans received planning consent from Cambridge City Council in June 2017.[16][circular reference]

Okinaga Tower edit

Created in 1993 by the bequest of the Teikyo Foundation, the Okinaga Tower is the college's tallest structure. Designed by architect Roderick Gradidge in 1989 it houses the Master's Lodge, as well as a suite with views of the city and was opened by the Right Honourable Betty Boothroyd, Speaker of the House of Commons.[14]

Courts and other buildings edit

Old Court, built in the early 2000s, is located to the west of the Norfolk Building, and surrounded by New Edwardian buildings: Brian Heap Building, Richard Laws Building, Geoffrey Cook Building and the Library Building. It was constructed to accommodate growing student numbers at this time, and most of its constituent buildings are appropriately student dormitories.

New Court, constructed in 2019, consists of student accommodation, Mount Pleasant Halls, occupying the site of a substantial office block formerly on the site and giving St Edmund College a frontage to the main thoroughfare of Huntington Road.

The College Sporting Grounds is located west of the Richard Laws Building, and offers a full-sized soccer pitch for college sports and other outdoor activities.

 
White Cottage with Mount Pleasant Halls in the background

The College Orchard is south of the Sporting Grounds, and consists of expansive lawns with 5 apple trees, outdoor seating, and a barbecue pit for students.

White Cottage is a humble 18th-century brick farmhouse which pre-dates the college buildings on the site and is now painted white, situated adjacent to Mount Pleasant Halls against which it appears an incongruous survival. White Cottage was the first home of the Von Hugel Institute, a Catholic Institute for Critical Enquiry working in the fields of Christianity and society. The Institute was founded in 1987 to preserve the Roman Catholic legacy of the College when control of the College itself was ceded to its autonomous Governing Body in 1985 in order to achieve university collegiate status.[17]

Bene't House is a detached Edwardian house, south-east of the Norfolk Old Wing. Named after St Benedict of Nursia (c.480 - 547 AD), it has since 2018 contained the facilities and offices for the Von Hugel Institute.[17]

Gallery edit

Academic profile edit

St Edmund's is one of the most international colleges of the university, with students from over 80 countries (2018-2019 academic year). The full spectrum of academic subjects is represented in the college. The fellowship of the college (academic staff) represents many academic disciplines, spread across arts, humanities, social sciences, natural sciences, medicine, and veterinary medicine.

The college has one research institute attached to it: the Von Hügel Institute founded in 1987 to carry out research on Catholic Social Teaching. Describing itself as a 'Catholic Institute for Critical Enquiry' it works in the fields of Christianity and society, and seeks to preserve the Roman Catholic legacy of St Edmund's College when control of the College itself was ceded to its autonomous Governing Body in 1985 in order to achieve university collegiate status.[17] The Von Hügel Institute is therefore a link to the Roman Catholic origins of the college.

The overall examination results of the college's comparatively few undergraduates tend to be in the middle among the Cambridge colleges, with St Edmund's ranking 21st on the Tompkins table in 2018.[18]

 
St Edmund's College Dining Hall

Student life edit

The college is younger than some of the older, more traditional colleges of the university. Despite this St Edmunds maintains many ancient Cambridge traditions including formal hall, albeit with some college modifications. Fellows at most Cambridge and Oxford colleges dine at a "high table" (separately from the students); however, St Edmund's has no such division, allowing undergraduates, postgraduates and Fellows to mix over dinner and other social activities. St Edmund's students are still strictly required to wear their academic gowns during formal halls, ceremonies, and college occasions. The St Edmund's gown is fashioned from distinctive black cloth with close detailing around the neck and sleeves. The robe may only be worn by members of St Edmund's College, Cambridge. The college has a long sporting tradition, including the St Edmund's College Boat Club. In recent years members have competed in varsity teams representing Cambridge University against Oxford University in a wide variety of sports, most notably, at The Boat Race and The Varsity Match.

On 15 September 2017, a team of four rowers from the college broke the World record for the 'Longest Continual Row' in the male 20-29 small team category by over an hour.[19] The following year, on 13 April 2018, a team of ten rowers from the college went on to set the British and World record for "One Million Meters" on the indoor rowing machine in the male 20-29 large team category.[20][21]

People associated with the college edit

Alumni edit

Fellows edit

Honorary Fellows edit

List of Masters of St Edmund's College edit

St Edmund's House

St Edmund's College

References edit

  1. ^ Shown here erroneously as French martlets gules
  2. ^ University of Cambridge (6 March 2019). "Notice by the Editor". Cambridge University Reporter. 149 (Special No 5): 1. Retrieved 20 March 2019.
  3. ^ "Accounts for the year ended 30 June 2019" (PDF). St Edmund's College, Cambridge. Retrieved 22 February 2020.
  4. ^ Walker, Timea (21 January 2022). "St Edmund's College". www.undergraduate.study.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 2 November 2022.
  5. ^ lr387@cam.ac.uk (15 January 2014). "Baron Anatole von Hügel – Von Hügel Institute". www.vhi.st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 31 March 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ "St Edmund's College - University of Cambridge". www.st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 31 March 2019.
  7. ^ a b lr387@cam.ac.uk (15 January 2014). "Baron Anatole von Hügel – Von Hügel Institute". www.vhi.st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 2 April 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ E Leedham-Green 1996 A concise history of the University of Cambridge. Cambridge University Press: 171-2.
  9. ^ Leader, Damian R. (April 1998). "A concise history of the University of Cambridge. By Elisabeth Leedham-Green. Pp. xiv+274 incl. endpapers, 45 plates and 5 figs. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996. £27.95 (cloth), £9.95 (paper). 0 521 43370 3; 0 521 43978 7". The Journal of Ecclesiastical History. 49 (2): 329–380. doi:10.1017/s0022046997435832. ISSN 0022-0469.
  10. ^ a b "St Edmund's College - University of Cambridge". www.st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 2 April 2019.
  11. ^ "Development". www.st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 1 February 2020.
  12. ^ "St Edmund's College Cambridge - Royal Charter - 1998" (PDF). www.st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 1 February 2020.
  13. ^ "St Edmund's College - Origins". www.st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 29 September 2019.
  14. ^ a b "St Edmund's College - Modern Day". www.st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 29 September 2019.
  15. ^ a b c "St Edmund's College - Chapel". www.st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 29 September 2019.
  16. ^ St Edmund's College, Cambridge
  17. ^ a b c lr387@cam.ac.uk (15 January 2014). "History – Von Hügel Institute". www.vhi.st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 29 September 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  18. ^ . Cambridge.tab.co.uk. Archived from the original on 4 June 2015. Retrieved 2 March 2015.
  19. ^ "St Edmund's College rowers break world record".
  20. ^ "St Edmund's College - University of Cambridge".
  21. ^ "World 100,000 Meters".
  22. ^ Article in St Edmunds College Website

Further reading edit

  • Lubenow, W. C. (2008). "Roman Catholicism in the University of Cambridge: St Edmund's House in 1898". Journal of Ecclesiastical History. 59 (4): 697–713. doi:10.1017/S0022046907002254.
  • McClelland, V. Alan (1997). "St. Edmund's College, Ware and St. Edmund's College, Cambridge; Historical Connections and Early Tribulations". British Catholic History. 23 (3): 470–83. doi:10.1017/S0034193200005811. S2CID 163723108.
  • Sweeney, Garret (1980). St Edmund's House, Cambridge: The First Eighty Years: A History. Cambridge: St Edmund's House. ISBN 978-0-95-071770-8.
  • Walsh, Michael (1996). St Edmund's College, Cambridge, 1896–1996: A Commemorative History. Cambridge: St Edmund's College. ISBN 978-0-95-071771-5.

External links edit

  • College website

52°12′46″N 0°06′33″E / 52.2127°N 0.1093°E / 52.2127; 0.1093

edmund, college, cambridge, edmund, college, constituent, college, university, cambridge, england, founded, 1896, second, oldest, four, cambridge, colleges, oriented, mature, students, which, accept, only, students, reading, postgraduate, degrees, undergraduat. St Edmund s College is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge 4 in England Founded in 1896 it is the second oldest of the four Cambridge colleges oriented to mature students which accept only students reading for postgraduate degrees or for undergraduate degrees if aged 21 years or older St Edmund s CollegeUniversity of CambridgeSt Edmund s College ChapelArms of St Edmund s CollegeArms Arms of Henry Fitzalan Howard 15th Duke of Norfolk quarterly of four Howard Brotherton Warenne FitzAlan with a canton of St Edmund of Abingdon Or a cross fleury gules between four Cornish choughs proper 1 all within a bordure argentScarf colours blue with two equally spaced narrow stripes of Cambridge blue edged with whiteLocationMount Pleasant Cambridge map Full nameThe Master Fellows and Scholars of St Edmund s College in the University of CambridgeLatin nameCollegium Sancti EdmundiAbbreviationED 2 MottoPer Revelationem et Rationem Latin FoundersHenry Fitzalan Howard 15th Duke of NorfolkBaron Anatole von HugelEstablished1896Named afterEdmund of AbingdonPrevious namesSt Edmund s HouseAge restriction21 and olderSister collegeGreen Templeton College OxfordMasterCatherine ArnoldPresidentJason SinghUndergraduates188 2022 23 Postgraduates528 2022 23 Endowment 18 1m 2019 3 VisitorVincent Nichols Archbishop of WestminsterWebsitewww wbr st edmunds wbr cam wbr ac wbr ukCRwww wbr cr wbr st edmunds wbr cam wbr ac wbr ukMapLocation in Central CambridgeShow map of Central CambridgeLocation in CambridgeShow map of CambridgeNamed after St Edmund of Abingdon 1175 1240 who was the first known Oxford Master of Arts and Archbishop of Canterbury from 1234 to 1240 the college has traditionally Catholic roots Its founders were Henry Fitzalan Howard 15th Duke of Norfolk and Baron Anatole von Hugel 1854 1928 the first Catholic to take a Cambridge degree since the deposition of King James II in 1688 5 The Visitor is the Archbishop of Westminster at present Cardinal Vincent Nichols 6 The college is located on Mount Pleasant northwest of the centre of Cambridge near Lucy Cavendish College Murray Edwards College and Fitzwilliam College Its campus consists of a garden setting on the edge of what was Roman Cambridge with housing for over 350 students Members of St Edmund s include cosmologist and Big Bang theorist Georges Lemaitre Lord St John of Fawsley Archbishop Eamon Martin of Armagh Bishop John Petit of Menevia and Olympic medalists Simon Schurch Gold Thorsten Streppelhoff Silver Marc Weber Silver Stuart Welch Silver and Simon Amor Silver St Edmund s was also the residential college of the university s first Catholic students in 200 years most of whom were studying for the priesthood after the lifting of the papal prohibition on attendance at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge in 1895 at the urging of a delegation to Pope Leo XIII led by Baron von Hugel 7 Contents 1 History 1 1 Foundation 1 2 Collegiate Status 2 Buildings and grounds 2 1 Norfolk Building 2 2 Chapel 2 3 Expansion 2 4 Okinaga Tower 2 5 Courts and other buildings 3 Gallery 4 Academic profile 5 Student life 6 People associated with the college 6 1 Alumni 6 2 Fellows 6 3 Honorary Fellows 6 4 List of Masters of St Edmund s College 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksHistory editFoundation edit St Edmund s House was founded in 1896 by Henry Fitzalan Howard the 15th Duke of Norfolk and Baron Anatole von Hugel as an institution providing board and lodging for Roman Catholic students at the University of Cambridge After Catholic Emancipation in particular after the Universities Tests Act 1871 students who were Roman Catholics were finally admitted as members of the University In its early days the college functioned predominantly as a lodging house or hall of residence for students who were matriculated at other colleges Most of the students at that time were ordained Catholic priests who were reading various subjects offered by the University The college was established in the buildings of Ayerst Hostel which had been set up for non collegiate students by the Reverend William Ayerst in 1884 and its founding master was Fr Edmund Nolan then vice rector of St Edmund s College Ware 7 In 1896 Ayerst Hostel had to close due to lack of funds and the property was transferred to the Catholic Church 8 Collegiate Status edit Attempts to have St Edmund s House become a constituent college of the University of Cambridge were undertaken at various junctures but were met in pre ecumenical days by continuing opposition from the predominantly Protestant membership of the University s governing Regent House Among motives cited were that the college was not self governing and its assets were held in trust by an external body namely the Catholic Church 9 The chapel was officially consecrated in 1916 by Cardinal Francis Bourne Archbishop of Westminster 10 A new dining hall was constructed in 1939 and the membership of the college increased steadily as it became a recognised House of Residence of the university without college status In response to growing postgraduate student numbers in the early 1960s the Regent House of the University established several Colleges primarily for postgraduate students and St Edmund s House became one of the graduate Colleges in the University the others being Wolfson College Lucy Cavendish College Hughes Hall Clare Hall and Darwin College This spurred further progress regarding St Edmund s status within the University and in 1965 the College was permitted to matriculate its own students and new fellows were elected In 1975 St Edmund s acquired the status of an Approved Foundation and after the transfer of the College assets from the Catholic Church to the autonomous governing body comprising the Masters and Fellows of the College in 1986 the College changed its name from St Edmund s House to St Edmund s College It received university approval for full collegiate status in 1996 and this was confirmed by the grant of its royal charter in 1998 11 12 The college now accepts students of all faiths and none Buildings and grounds editNorfolk Building edit The Norfolk Building is the oldest building on site dating back to 1896 as the former Ayerst Hostel it provided accommodation for Fr Edmond Nolan the first Master of St Edmund s along with the first four students of the college 13 Known for its clean Gothic revival style the building underwent a three phased extension scheme designed by Roderick Gradidge in 1989 and now houses 21st century amenities including the Middle Combination Room Dining Hall Kitchens and a Porter s office 14 nbsp College Chapel and Norfolk Building in the Foreground with Okinaga Tower in the BackgroundChapel edit St Edmund s College Chapel is a fitting monument to the Catholic character of the origins of the College and is unique among Colleges of the Universities of Cambridge and Oxford in following the Roman Catholic tradition The edifice itself is a Grade II listed building designed by the architect Fr Benedict Williamson CSSP and was consecrated by Cardinal Francis Bourne Archbishop of Westminster in 1916 10 Notable for its prayerful simplicity and Gothic Revival architecture the chapel is a Catholic foundation although it is open to members of other Christian denominations 15 In 2003 a stained glass window depicting the ministry of St Boniface of Crediton c 675 754 AD the apostle to Germany was donated by Stephen Frowen and blessed by Cardinal Cormac Murphy O Connor Archbishop of Westminster 15 A bronze sculpture of the college patron St Edmund of Abingdon is located at the front of the chapel his left hand holding a Bible The statue is the work of Rodney Munday an alumnus of St Edmund Hall Oxford and was commissioned by the College in 2007 15 The Chapel Schola and Choir frequently perform in concerts in collaboration with St Edmund Hall Oxford and St Edmund s College Ware in commemoration of their Patron Saint Expansion edit St Edmund s continues to expand and develop ints buildings In 2000 a new residential building housing 50 students was opened named after Richard Laws one of the former Masters In 2006 two new residential buildings including rooms for 70 students as well as apartments for couples were opened these were named after the former Master of the College Sir Brian Heap and the former Vice Master Geoffrey Cook In 2016 major plans were announced for the development of two new courts and several buildings which will expand the College and provide modern world class facilities for the scholars and students of St Edmunds College While contemporary the buildings external features and material will be in the traditional architectural vernacular that is found elsewhere in the College Brick buildings will form the perimeter of the two new courts and a new multi million pound student centre will frame the west side of the College The expansion plans received planning consent from Cambridge City Council in June 2017 16 circular reference Okinaga Tower edit Created in 1993 by the bequest of the Teikyo Foundation the Okinaga Tower is the college s tallest structure Designed by architect Roderick Gradidge in 1989 it houses the Master s Lodge as well as a suite with views of the city and was opened by the Right Honourable Betty Boothroyd Speaker of the House of Commons 14 Courts and other buildings edit Old Court built in the early 2000s is located to the west of the Norfolk Building and surrounded by New Edwardian buildings Brian Heap Building Richard Laws Building Geoffrey Cook Building and the Library Building It was constructed to accommodate growing student numbers at this time and most of its constituent buildings are appropriately student dormitories New Court constructed in 2019 consists of student accommodation Mount Pleasant Halls occupying the site of a substantial office block formerly on the site and giving St Edmund College a frontage to the main thoroughfare of Huntington Road The College Sporting Grounds is located west of the Richard Laws Building and offers a full sized soccer pitch for college sports and other outdoor activities nbsp White Cottage with Mount Pleasant Halls in the backgroundThe College Orchard is south of the Sporting Grounds and consists of expansive lawns with 5 apple trees outdoor seating and a barbecue pit for students White Cottage is a humble 18th century brick farmhouse which pre dates the college buildings on the site and is now painted white situated adjacent to Mount Pleasant Halls against which it appears an incongruous survival White Cottage was the first home of the Von Hugel Institute a Catholic Institute for Critical Enquiry working in the fields of Christianity and society The Institute was founded in 1987 to preserve the Roman Catholic legacy of the College when control of the College itself was ceded to its autonomous Governing Body in 1985 in order to achieve university collegiate status 17 Bene t House is a detached Edwardian house south east of the Norfolk Old Wing Named after St Benedict of Nursia c 480 547 AD it has since 2018 contained the facilities and offices for the Von Hugel Institute 17 Gallery edit nbsp Mount Pleasant Halls front facade nbsp New Court nbsp Main gate nbsp Sporting grounds and Brian Heap Building nbsp Richard Laws Building nbsp Geoffrey Cook Building nbsp College orchards nbsp Maisonettes for families nbsp Norfolk Extension nbsp Bene t House nbsp College ChapelAcademic profile editSt Edmund s is one of the most international colleges of the university with students from over 80 countries 2018 2019 academic year The full spectrum of academic subjects is represented in the college The fellowship of the college academic staff represents many academic disciplines spread across arts humanities social sciences natural sciences medicine and veterinary medicine The college has one research institute attached to it the Von Hugel Institute founded in 1987 to carry out research on Catholic Social Teaching Describing itself as a Catholic Institute for Critical Enquiry it works in the fields of Christianity and society and seeks to preserve the Roman Catholic legacy of St Edmund s College when control of the College itself was ceded to its autonomous Governing Body in 1985 in order to achieve university collegiate status 17 The Von Hugel Institute is therefore a link to the Roman Catholic origins of the college The overall examination results of the college s comparatively few undergraduates tend to be in the middle among the Cambridge colleges with St Edmund s ranking 21st on the Tompkins table in 2018 18 nbsp St Edmund s College Dining HallStudent life editThe college is younger than some of the older more traditional colleges of the university Despite this St Edmunds maintains many ancient Cambridge traditions including formal hall albeit with some college modifications Fellows at most Cambridge and Oxford colleges dine at a high table separately from the students however St Edmund s has no such division allowing undergraduates postgraduates and Fellows to mix over dinner and other social activities St Edmund s students are still strictly required to wear their academic gowns during formal halls ceremonies and college occasions The St Edmund s gown is fashioned from distinctive black cloth with close detailing around the neck and sleeves The robe may only be worn by members of St Edmund s College Cambridge The college has a long sporting tradition including the St Edmund s College Boat Club In recent years members have competed in varsity teams representing Cambridge University against Oxford University in a wide variety of sports most notably at The Boat Race and The Varsity Match On 15 September 2017 a team of four rowers from the college broke the World record for the Longest Continual Row in the male 20 29 small team category by over an hour 19 The following year on 13 April 2018 a team of ten rowers from the college went on to set the British and World record for One Million Meters on the indoor rowing machine in the male 20 29 large team category 20 21 People associated with the college editFurther information Category Alumni of St Edmund s College Cambridge Category Fellows of St Edmund s College Cambridge and Category Masters of St Edmund s College Cambridge nbsp Catherine Arnold OBE Master of St Edmund s College and former British Ambassador to Mongolia nbsp Chito Gascon Chair of the Human Rights Commission of the Philippines nbsp Mary McAleese former President of Ireland nbsp Eamon Martin KC HS Archbishop of Armagh and the Primate of All Ireland nbsp Martin Evans British biologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine nbsp Joaquin Almunia former European Commissioner for Economy and European Commissioner for CompetitionAlumni edit Edward Acton Vice Chancellor of the University of East Anglia historian and great grandson of Lord Acton Joaquin Almunia Spanish politician and member of the European Commission responsible for Economic and Monetary Affairs Simon Amor Current Head Coach of the England Sevens member of the England Sevens at the 2002 Manchester Games Malcolm Baker Robert G Kirby Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School former Olympic rower Johan Baverbrant Swedish diplomat Aidan Bellenger English historian and former Benedictine monk Alexander Bird British philosopher and Bertrand Russell Professor of Philosophy at the University of Cambridge William T Cavanaugh director of the Center for World Catholicism and Intercultural Theology and professor of Catholic studies at DePaul University James Chau Journalist television presenter and United Nations goodwill ambassador Christian Cormack British rowing cox Captain Sir George Sampson Elliston Conservative Member of Parliament MP for Blackburn from 1931 to 1945 Chito Gascon Chair of the Human Rights Commission of the Philippines Alex Hughes Archdeacon of Cambridge Hilary Lofting Australian novelist travel writer journalist and editor Eldest brother of Hugh Lofting author of The Story of Doctor Dolittle Louise Lombard English actress 22 Greg Loveridge Former cricketer who played one Test for New Zealand in 1996 Eamon Martin Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland Rodrigo Rosenberg Marzano Guatemalan attorney and human rights activist Alexander Masters author screenwriter and worker with the homeless Masters was portrayed by Benedict Cumberbatch in Stuart A Life Backwards Anna Mendelssohn British writer poet and political activist Robert Noel Officer of Arms Herald at the College of Arms Chris Oti English former rugby union player Richard Phelps rower rower who competed in the 1992 Summer Olympics Norman St John Stevas Baron St John of Fawsley legal scholar former master of Emmanuel College and Leader of the House of Commons under Margaret Thatcher was a resident at St Edmund s House for his undergraduate studies in late 1940s and early 1950s During his time he was the president of the Union Society Christopher Stearn English former first class cricketer Thorsten Streppelhoff Olympic Silver Medalist and German M8 Rower at the 1996 Atlanta and 1992 Barcelona Games David Wallace scholar of medieval literature Judith Rodin Professor of English at the University of Pennsylvania Patrick Walsh Irish prelate of the Roman Catholic Church and from 1991 until 2008 he was the 31st bishop of Down amp Connor Luke Walton American Olympic rower Marc Weber Olympic Silver Medalist and German M8 Rower at the 1996 Atlanta Games Stuart Welch Olympic Silver Medalist and Australian M8 Rower at the 2000 Sydney GamesFellows edit Denis Alexander Emeritus Fellow of St Edmund s College Cambridge and an Emeritus Director of the Faraday Institute for Science and Religion Cambridge Allen Brent scholar of early Christian history and literature Sir Martin Evans FRS FMedSci Laureate of the 2007 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine Andy Harter British computer scientist Sir Brian Heap CBE FRS is a biologist who was the master of the college from 1996 until 2004 He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1989 and held the post vice president and foreign secretary from 1996 to 2001 Richard Edwin Hills emeritus professor of Radio Astronomy at the University of Cambridge Kevin T Kelly British Roman Catholic priest and moral theologian Edward Kessler Founder President of The Woolf Institute and a leading thinker in interfaith relations primarily Jewish Christian Muslim Relations Ilyas Khan British technologist and businessman Nicholas Lash English Roman Catholic theologian Georges Lemaitre cosmologist and Big Bang theorist was a visiting academic at the college in 1923 24 while collaborating with Sir Arthur Eddington Helen Mason theoretical physicist Josef W Meri American historian of Interfaith Relations in the Middle East in the College of Islamic Studies Hamad Bin Khalifa University Simon Mitton astronomer and author Elected member of the Council of the Royal Astronomical Society Mark Ranby former New Zealand rugby union player Chris Rapley British scientist Somak Raychaudhury Indian astrophysicist C J Ryan Scottish priest and scholar of Italian studies Brian Stanley British historian Bob White Professor of Geophysics in the Earth Sciences department at Cambridge University since 1989 and was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society FRS in 1994Honorary Fellows edit Bruce Alberts American biochemist and the Chancellor s Leadership Chair in Biochemistry and Biophysics for Science and Education at the University of California San Francisco Anne Princess Royal second child and only daughter of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh Betty Boothroyd British politician who served as the Member of Parliament MP for West Bromwich and West Bromwich West from 1973 to 2000 Alec Broers Baron Broers British electrical engineer Colin Bundy South African historian former principal of Green Templeton College Oxford and former director of SOAS University of London Derek Burke British academic who served as Vice Chancellor of the University of East Anglia Francis Campbell former UK Ambassador to the Holy See Janet Neel Cohen Baroness Cohen of Pimlico British lawyer and crime fiction writer Edward Fitzalan Howard 18th Duke of Norfolk British peer who holds the hereditary office of Earl Marshal Alan Hopes British Roman Catholic prelate Denise Lievesley formerly Chief Executive of the English Information Centre for Health and Social Care Director of Statistics at UNESCO Mary McAleese former President of Ireland and patron of the Von Hugel Institute Bridget Ogilvie Australian and British scientist Prince Philip Duke of Edinburgh husband of Queen Elizabeth II Sir Tom Phillips diplomat who served as Commandant of the Royal College of Defence Studies from 2014 to 2018 Anthony Russell Anglican bishop Amartya Sen laureate of the 1998 Nobel Prize in Economics Peter Smith Metropolitan Archbishop of Southwark London Crispin Tickell British diplomat environmentalist and academicList of Masters of St Edmund s College edit St Edmund s House 1897 1904 William Ormond Sutcliffe 1904 1909 Edmund Nolan 1909 1918 Thomas Leighton Williams 1918 1921 Joseph Louis Whitfield 1921 1929 John Francis McNulty 1929 1934 Cuthbert Leonard Waring 1934 1946 John Edward Petit 1946 1964 Raymond Corboy 1964 1976 Garrett Daniel Sweeney 1976 1985 John Coventry 1985 1996 Richard LawsSt Edmund s College 1996 2004 Brian Heap 2004 2014 Paul Luzio 2014 2019 Matthew Bullock 2019 present Catherine ArnoldReferences edit Shown here erroneously as French martlets gules University of Cambridge 6 March 2019 Notice by the Editor Cambridge University Reporter 149 Special No 5 1 Retrieved 20 March 2019 Accounts for the year ended 30 June 2019 PDF St Edmund s College Cambridge Retrieved 22 February 2020 Walker Timea 21 January 2022 St Edmund s College www undergraduate study cam ac uk Retrieved 2 November 2022 lr387 cam ac uk 15 January 2014 Baron Anatole von Hugel Von Hugel Institute www vhi st edmunds cam ac uk Retrieved 31 March 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link St Edmund s College University of Cambridge www st edmunds cam ac uk Retrieved 31 March 2019 a b lr387 cam ac uk 15 January 2014 Baron Anatole von Hugel Von Hugel Institute www vhi st edmunds cam ac uk Retrieved 2 April 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link E Leedham Green 1996 A concise history of the University of Cambridge Cambridge University Press 171 2 Leader Damian R April 1998 A concise history of the University of Cambridge By Elisabeth Leedham Green Pp xiv 274 incl endpapers 45 plates and 5 figs Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1996 27 95 cloth 9 95 paper 0 521 43370 3 0 521 43978 7 The Journal of Ecclesiastical History 49 2 329 380 doi 10 1017 s0022046997435832 ISSN 0022 0469 a b St Edmund s College University of Cambridge www st edmunds cam ac uk Retrieved 2 April 2019 Development www st edmunds cam ac uk Retrieved 1 February 2020 St Edmund s College Cambridge Royal Charter 1998 PDF www st edmunds cam ac uk Retrieved 1 February 2020 St Edmund s College Origins www st edmunds cam ac uk Retrieved 29 September 2019 a b St Edmund s College Modern Day www st edmunds cam ac uk Retrieved 29 September 2019 a b c St Edmund s College Chapel www st edmunds cam ac uk Retrieved 29 September 2019 St Edmund s College Cambridge a b c lr387 cam ac uk 15 January 2014 History Von Hugel Institute www vhi st edmunds cam ac uk Retrieved 29 September 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Tompkins Table 2013 The Results Cambridge tab co uk Archived from the original on 4 June 2015 Retrieved 2 March 2015 St Edmund s College rowers break world record St Edmund s College University of Cambridge World 100 000 Meters Article in St Edmunds College WebsiteFurther reading editLubenow W C 2008 Roman Catholicism in the University of Cambridge St Edmund s House in 1898 Journal of Ecclesiastical History 59 4 697 713 doi 10 1017 S0022046907002254 McClelland V Alan 1997 St Edmund s College Ware and St Edmund s College Cambridge Historical Connections and Early Tribulations British Catholic History 23 3 470 83 doi 10 1017 S0034193200005811 S2CID 163723108 Sweeney Garret 1980 St Edmund s House Cambridge The First Eighty Years A History Cambridge St Edmund s House ISBN 978 0 95 071770 8 Walsh Michael 1996 St Edmund s College Cambridge 1896 1996 A Commemorative History Cambridge St Edmund s College ISBN 978 0 95 071771 5 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to St Edmund s College Cambridge College website 52 12 46 N 0 06 33 E 52 2127 N 0 1093 E 52 2127 0 1093 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Edmund 27s College Cambridge amp oldid 1186871502, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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