Oriel College, Oxford University

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Education Doreen Wallace
DW went up to Somerville College on a bursary and an exhibition (each a form of scholarship). The university was much changed by the absence of men at the war, and Somerville's buildings had been...
Family and Intimate relationships Harriett Mozley
HM married the brilliant, impetuous,
Tillotson, Kathleen et al. “Harriett Mozley”. Mid-Victorian Studies, Athlone Press, 1965, pp. 38-48.
47
but scatter-brained Thomas Mozley , who this year became rector of Cholderton in Wiltshire (the worst living in the gift of Oriel College, Oxford ).
Mozley, Dorothea, editor. Newman Family Letters. Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 1962.
59, 60
Tillotson, Kathleen et al. “Harriett Mozley”. Mid-Victorian Studies, Athlone Press, 1965, pp. 38-48.
47
Family and Intimate relationships Harriet Downing
Another clergyman, the Rev. Charles Toogood of Sherborne in Dorset, married Frances's sister Susanna and thus became an uncle by marriage to HD .
He was probably the Charles Toogood who matriculated at Oriel College, Oxford
Occupation Arthur Hugh Clough
After taking his degree in 1842, he remained at Oxford and was elected to a Fellowship at Oriel College . Religious doubts led him to resign his fellowship before he was required to take orders...
Performance of text Caryl Churchill
CC 's first work to be performed, a one-act play entitled Downstairs, ran at Oriel College at Oxford and then at a national student drama festival in London.
Churchill, Caryl. Plays: One. Methuen, 1985.
ix, xi
Contemporary Theatre, Film, and Television. Gale Research.
19: 89
Performance of text Michelene Wandor
Since the early 1990s, MW has turned her attention to music. Her libretti and radio plays include works based on poems by John Cornford , John Milton , and Ariosto : Spain, first performed...

Timeline

26 March 1902: Cecil Rhodes died, leaving a trust producing...

Building item

26 March 1902

Cecil Rhodes died, leaving a trust producing nearly £52,000 per annum to fund fifty-two (at first) graduate scholarships each year to Oxford . They were not, under the terms of his will, open to women...

October 1974: The first women students were admitted to...

Building item

October 1974

The first women students were admitted to formerly all-male colleges of Oxford University: Brasenose , Hertford , St Catherine's , Jesus , and Wadham .
Hitch, Susan. “Women”. The Oxford Myth, edited by Rachel Johnson, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1988.
87-8
Howarth, Janet. “Women”. The History of the University of Oxford: The Twentieth Century, edited by Brian Harrison, Clarendon, 1994, pp. 345-76.
374
Thomas, Keith. “College Life, 1945-1970”. The History of the University of Oxford: The Twentieth Century, edited by Brian Harrison, Vol.
viii
, Clarendon Press, 1994, pp. 189-15.
210

Texts

No bibliographical results available.