Everything about Selwyn College Cambridge totally explained
Greek
| english_motto = Quit ye like men
| founder =
| founder_pl =
| named_for =
George Augustus Selwyn
| established =
1882
| old_names =
| location =
Grange Road
| women_only =
| mature_students =
| head_label = Master
| head = Prof. Richard Bowring
| undergraduates = 350
| JCR_President =
| graduates = 200
| MCR_President =
| SCR_President =
| sister_college =
Keble College, Oxford
| sister_college_pl =
| homepage = http://www.sel.cam.ac.uk
| boat_club = http://www.selwynrowing.org.uk
}}
Selwyn College is a
College of the
University of Cambridge. It was founded in memory of the Rt Revd
George Augustus Selwyn (
1809–
1878), the first
Bishop of New Zealand (
1841–
1868) and
Bishop of Lichfield (
1868–
1878). The College was founded by subscription, with an explicitly
Christian mission. The Selwyn College
coat of arms incorporates the arms of the Selwyn family impaled with those of the
Diocese of Lichfield.
Selwyn is relatively poor for a traditional Cambridge College. In
2006, it had an estimated
financial endowment of £22 million and in
2004, fixed assets were worth £70 million. The College was ranked sixteenth out of thirty in an assessment of College wealth conducted by
Varsity in November 2006. Selwyn performs better academically, and was ranked 4th out of 29 in the 2007
Tompkin's Table.
History
Selwyn's first undergraduates joined the original Master and twelve other Fellows at the then "Public Hostel" of the university in
1882. Formally approved as a College on
March 14,
1958, Selwyn, in common with other Cambridge colleges, originally admitted only men, but was one of the first colleges to become mixed when women were admitted from
1976.
Six
acres (24,000
m²) of farm land, between Grange Road, West Road and Sidgwick Avenue, was originally acquired from
Corpus Christi College and is now home to Selwyn's three main courts, Old Court, Cripps Court, and Ann's Court, with some ancillary buildings, including houses serving as student hostels on Grange Road, West Road and Sidgwick Avenue. The site was originally considered somewhat remote from the centre of the university (indeed, an alternative site on Lensfield Road, where the Catholic church now stands, was rejected as being too small), however, with the growth of departmental buildings, libraries and new faculties, Selwyn now neighbours the
Sidgwick Site, affording Selwynites the easiest access of any Cambridge college to the many faculty buildings housed there.
Old Court, built in red brick in the
Tudor Gothic style, was largely designed by
Sir Arthur Blomfield and comprises seven staircases (A to G), together with a tower and gateway, Master's lodge, chapel and hall. Cripps Court, named after the Cripps Foundation that donated most of the funds to build it (and which also funded developments at
St John's College and
Queens' College), was built and formally opened in 1969 on land on the opposite side of Grange Road which was originally owned by
Jesus College. It comprises a further seven staircases (H to N) and is home to all of Selwyn's first-year undergraduates as well as a mix of other undergraduates and postgraduates. Ann's Court, built on the land to the north of Old Court and south of West Road, is the newest court: it's named after Ann Dobson, one of the principal donors towards the construction costs of the first block, which was completed in July 2005 and consists of 44 ensuite rooms and 15 administrative offices, forming two staircases (O and P).
The College has
planning permission to add a further four phases to Ann's Court, with the work planned to be undertaken over the next twenty years. The remaining phases of the building project will extend the college's red-brick facade along Grange Road to the corner of West Road, adding two further accommodation blocks, a new library and an auditorium.
Arms
Selwyn College began to use its
Arms long before an official grant by the
College of Arms (they are displayed above the main gateway, built in 1881, and on the Common Seal, first used in 1882). Arms were finally applied for and granted in the
1960s, and are emblazoned as follows:
» Per pale Gules and Argent a Cross potent quadrate Argent and Or between four crosses paty those to the dexter Argent those to the sinister Or For the See of Lichfield inpaling Argent on a Bend cotised Sable three Annulets Or for Selwyn all within a Bordure Sable And for Crest On a Wreath Or & Purpure In front of a Book erect bound Gules edged clasped and garnished Or a representation of the Pastoral Staff of Bishop Selwyn.
The dexter half of the arms (those of the See of Lichfield) are unusual, with
or (gold) countercharged on
argent (silver), violating the rule of
tincture, which prohibits a metal to be charged with another metal. This is thought to refer to the
Kingdom of Jerusalem, which also famously violates this rule. The Pastoral Staff of Bishop Selwyn is based on a hardwood
Māori staff which is held in the College Chapel.
The College was also granted a badge,
A Mitre Or within an Annulet Purpure.
The College
motto is a
biblical quotation from
1 Corinthians, chapter 16, verse 13, in
Greek, "ΑΝΔΡΙΖΕΣΘΕ",
(External Link
) translated in the
King James Version as "Quit ye like men"
(External Link
) (alternatively, in the
Douay Rheims version, "Do manfully"
(External Link
) or, in the
New American Bible, "Be courageous"
(External Link
)). The motto also appears as part of a longer quotation over the main College gate.
Famous alumni
See also:
Further Information
Get more info on 'Selwyn College Cambridge'.
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