Timeline of Oxford

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a timeline of the history of the city, University and colleges of Oxford, England.

Pre-history[]

  • Activity from the Mesolithic period onwards, attested by archaeological finds across the city.[1]
  • Bronze Age henge and barrow complexes at locations including the University Parks.[1]
  • Bronze Age burials at locations including The Hamel, Radcliffe Infirmary, Banbury Road and several university buildings.[1]
  • Wide-ranging Iron Age and Roman remains, suggesting continued occupation from pre-conquest period into the Roman era.[1]

Recorded history before 12th century[]

  • By 727 – Dida of Eynsham establishes a nunnery with Frideswide, perhaps his daughter, as abbess.[2]
  • 911 – First mention of Oxford, as Oxnaforda, under the authority of Edward the Elder, King of Wessex.[3][4]
  • 979 – Vikings burn Oxford.[5]
  • 1002 – 13 November: St. Brice's Day massacre of Vikings: Monastery of St Frideswide destroyed.
City coat of arms in Town Hall
  • 1004 – First bridge over the River Cherwell east of the town centre (on the site of modern-day Magdalen Bridge) is in existence.[6]
  • 1009 – 1 August: Vikings burn Oxford.[7]
  • 1015 – Early: Sigeferth and Morcar, chief thegns of the Five Boroughs of the Danelaw, come to an assembly in Oxford where they are murdered by Eadric Streona.
  • 1018 – Cnut the Great attends a Witenagemot at Oxford at which he is recognised as king of England.[8]
  • 1022 – Witenagemot held at Oxford to translate the laws of England into Latin and apply them equally within England and the Danelaw.[9]
  • 1026 – Witenagemot held at Oxford.[9]
  • 1036 – Council of Oxford (a Witenagemot) declares Harold Harefoot regent of England for his half-brother Harthacanute.[7]
University seal
  • c. 1040–50 – Tower of St Michael at the North Gate completed.
  • 1071–73 – Oxford Castle erected as a motte-and-bailey by Norman baron Robert D'Oyly.[10]
  • 1074
    • St George's tower at the castle is built in stone (it may have Saxon origins), including a chapel for a college of secular canons.[11]
    • First stone of St Mary Magdalen's Church, built by D'Oyly, is laid.[12]
  • c. 1085 – First stone bridge over the River Thames at Grandpont (modern-day Folly Bridge) is built by D'Oyly.
  • 1088 – Curia regis held at Oxford by William II of England.[9]
  • 1096 – Academic teaching at Oxford is recorded.[13]

12th century[]

  • c. 1100 – Construction of St Lawrence, North Hinksey as a chapel begins.
  • c. 1110 – Priory of St Nicholas, Littlemore, established.
  • 1122
    • Priory of St Frideswide established.
    • Original All Saints Church established.[14]
    • Approximate date: St Martin's Church, Carfax built.
  • 1126 – Leper hospital and St Bartholomew's Chapel (Bartlemas), Cowley, established by Henry I.
  • 1129 – Osney Abbey established as a priory by Robert D'Oyly the younger. It is raised to abbey status in 1154.[11]
  • c. 1130–60 – Nave and chancel of St Peter-in-the-East built.[15]
  • 1131 – Godstow nunnery established.
  • 1133
    • Easter: King Henry I is in residence at his new Beaumont Palace.[16]
    • Robert Pullen, an English theologian, teaches in Oxford.[17][18]
St George's Tower of the Castle
  • 1136 – April: Curia regis held at Oxford by the new king Stephen, attended by Theobald of Bec.
  • 1138 – Major fire.[19]
  • 1139
    • Curia regis held at Oxford.[20]
    • Temple Cowley founded by Matilda of Boulogne for the Knights Templar.[21]
  • 1141 – 24 June: The Anarchy: Empress Matilda is forced to flee from Westminster to Oxford.[7]
  • 1142 – The Anarchy
    • 26 September: King Stephen captures Oxford and besieges Matilda inside the castle.[7]
    • December: Matilda escapes from Oxford Castle across the snow in a white cape for camouflage.[16][22]
"Friar Bacon's Study" at Folly Bridge, demolished 1779[23]
  • 1157 - Richard the Lionheart born in Beaumont Palace
  • c.1160–1180 – St Mary the Virgin, Iffley built.
  • 1166 - King John born in Beaumont Palace
  • 1167 - Increased enrolment at Oxford after English students are barred from attending the University of Paris.[7]
  • 1177
    • May: Council of Oxford on governance of Ireland.
    • Jewish cemetery.
  • 1185 – Curia regis held at Beaumont Palace by Henry II.[20]
  • c. 1187–1188 – Gerald of Wales reads his Topographia Hibernica to a large academic audience in Oxford.
  • 1190
    • First known foreign scholar commences study at Oxford, Emo of Friesland.
    • Major fire.[20]
  • By 1191 – Burgesses are using the first known corporate town seal in England.[24]
  • 1193 – The inn later to become the Golden Cross is in existence.
  • 1194 – St Mary Magdalen's Church rebuilt by Bishop Hugh of Lincoln.[12]

13th century[]

  • c. 1200–10 – First Hythe Bridge built.[11]
  • 1205
    • Council held at Oxford by King John who also spends Christmas here.[25]
    • Approximate date: First known Mayor of Oxford.
  • 1209 – Dissatisfied students from Oxford found the University of Cambridge.[7]
  • 1213 – 15 November: A council of knights is held in Oxford.[26]
  • 1214 – 20 June: Papal ordinance defines the rights of the scholars at the University of Oxford.[7] By 1216 a chancellor of the university is in office.[24]
  • 1215 – 16–23 July: A council of the barons charged with enforcing Magna Carta meets with King John at Oxford Castle.[27]
  • 1216 – Oxford Castle's first recorded use as a prison, for misbehaving students.
  • c. 1220 – Osney Abbey constructs a conduit for fresh water from North Hinksey.[25]
  • 1221 – 15 August: The Dominican Order founds Blackfriars.[7]
  • 1222 – 17 April: Stephen Langton, Archbishop of Canterbury, opens a council at Osney Abbey.
  • 1224 – c. October: Franciscans led by Agnellus of Pisa found the first Greyfriars in Oxford. By c. 1229 Robert Grosseteste is teaching theology to the order here.[7]
  • By c. 1230 – Broad Street laid out beyond the city wall as Horsemonger Street.[28]
  • 1236 – Rioters cause a fire.[19]
  • Between c. 1236 and 1272 – St Edmund Hall established, "the oldest surviving academic society to house and educate undergraduates in any university."[29]
  • 1238 – Students attack the papal legate's retinue.[25]
  • 1239 – Oxford Castle's first recorded use as a county gaol.
  • 1240
    • Robert Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln, establishes "St Frideswide's Chest" for the support of poor scholars.[30]
    • Approximate date: William de Brailes is working on illuminated manuscripts in the city, including an early book of hours, perhaps for a woman called Suzanna from North Hinksey.[31]
  • 1242 – A tavern exists on the site of the Bear Inn.
  • 1249 – Spring: Bequest of William of Durham for the support of scholars, used for establishment of University College.[26]
  • By 1252 – University Congregation meeting in the University Church of St Mary the Virgin.
  • 1253 – June: University buys property to support the establishment of University College, on the north side of The High.
  • 1258
    • 12 June: Provisions of Oxford enacted by a parliament meeting at the Dominican Friary in St. Ebbes, creating an elected Council of barons to advise King Henry III[7] (abandoned 1261).
    • 27 October–4 November: Oxford Parliament meets, with Peter de Montfort presiding.
  • 1262 – Consecration of a priory church in Oxford, probably the largest of the Dominican Order in England, in St Ebbe's.[32]
  • 1263
    • Early May: Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester, newly returned from exile, summons a meeting of rebel barons at Oxford, leading to the outbreak of the Second Barons' War. Soon afterwards, the King occupies the town and holds a council here.[25]
    • Town and gown riots.[33]
    • Presumed date: Balliol College is founded in the university by John I de Balliol on its modern-day site.[34] Its first statutes are sealed on 22 August 1282 by his widow, Dervorguilla of Galloway, who in 1284 also conveys the freehold of its site.[35]
  • 1264
    • February: Student riots.[25]
    • 12 March: Henry III suspends teaching in the university until Michaelmas as he is making the city his military headquarters at the outbreak of the Second Barons' War.[33]
    • 14 September: Walter de Merton formally completes the foundation of the House of Scholars of Merton, later Merton College in the university.[26]
  • 1265 – Christmas: Henry III is entertained at Osney Abbey.[11]
  • 1268 – Ascension Day: Riots against Jews.
  • 1274
    • January: Student riots between northerners and southerners.[36]
    • August: Merton College receives its statutes, the first English university college to do so.[7]
  • 1276 – Merton College is first recorded as having a collection of books, making its library the world's oldest in continuous daily use.[37][dubious ] During the first century of its existence the books are probably kept in a chest.
  • 1279 – Wolvercote Common villagers' rights first confirmed.
  • 1280/1 – University College receives statutes.[7]
  • 1281 – December: Rewley Abbey, established in 1280 by Edmund, Earl of Cornwall for Cistercians, is dedicated.[11]
  • 1283 – Gloucester College is founded in the university for Benedictines of Gloucester Abbey.[38]
  • Between 1283 and 10 May 1301 – Hart Hall established in the university.[39]
  • c. 1291 – Durham College is founded in the university for Benedictines from Durham.[24]
  • 1292 – Guildhall.
  • 1294 – Holywell passes to Merton College.[6]
  • 1295 – Earliest known members of parliament for Oxford.
  • 1297 – Quaking Bridge first known.[25]
  • By 1300 – The philosopher Duns Scotus is studying in Oxford.

14th century[]

Merton College's Mob Quad
  • 1310 – Mob Quad, the first purpose-built accommodation for students, completed in Merton College.
  • 1314 – 4 April: Exeter College is founded in the university by Walter de Stapledon, Bishop of Exeter[38] (statutes 26 April 1316).
  • 1317 – St Edmund Hall first recorded under this name in the university.[29]
  • 1318 – John Deydras, pretender to the English throne, claims Beaumont Palace.[40]
Adam de Brome, founder of Oriel College
  • c. 1320
    • Original University Convocation House added to University Church of St Mary the Virgin.
    • Tackley's Inn built in the university.
  • 1324 – 24 April: Oriel College is founded in the university by Adam de Brome by licence from King Edward II in honour of the Virgin Mary.
  • 1326
  • 1327
    • 1 February: First record of mayor of Oxford serving the monarch at a coronation feast.[41]
    • 27 August: Death of Thomas Cobham, Bishop of Worcester. His books are given to the university, where they are installed in a room above Convocation House in the University Church of St Mary the Virgin, forming the university's first library.
  • 1329 – Oriel College's fellows, previously accommodated in Tackley's Inn, move to La Oriole from which the college takes its name.
  • 1330 – Parliament of England meets at Osney Abbey.[11]
  • 1332 – University College first acquires property on its modern-day site.
  • 1333 – November: Following violence between northern and southern masters, a group of the former from Brasenose and Merton migrates to Stamford, Lincolnshire, and attempts to set up a university there. In August 1334, the Chancellor of Oxford obtains a royal writ to suppress it, and it is closed in summer 1335.[33]
  • 1341 – 18 January: The Queen's College is founded as the "Hall of the Queen's scholars of Oxford" in the university in the name of Philippa of Hainault by her chaplain, Robert de Eglesfield.
  • 1348 – November: Black Death reaches Oxford, continuing until June 1349.[25]
  • 1355 – 10 February: St Scholastica Day riot breaks out, leaving 63 scholars and perhaps 30 locals dead in two days.[7]
  • 1362 – Canterbury College is founded in the university by locally-born Simon Islip, Archbishop of Canterbury, for Benedictine monks of Christ Church Priory, Canterbury and secular priests of the province of Canterbury.[38]
  • c. 1370s – Franciscan Peter Phillarges, the future Antipope Alexander V, studies in the university.
  • 1373
    • Merton College Library is built.
    • Rebuilding of Hythe Bridge in stone begins.[11]
  • 1379 – 30 June: New College is founded in the university by William of Wykeham, Bishop of Winchester, as "The College of St Mary of Winchester in Oxford" (charter 26 November).
  • 1381 – John Wycliffe prohibited from teaching in the university for heresy.
  • 1386 – 14 April: First scholars enter New College, the first college in the university to provide extensively for undergraduate education[24] and also the first with an entrance tower and with a T-plan college chapel.
  • 1396 – Construction of bell tower at New College begins, the first recorded use of building stone from Headington Quarry.[28]

15th century[]

New College Dining Hall
  • 1403 – Rebuilding of Hythe Bridge in stone completed.[11]
  • 1410 – University students forbidden to lodge with townspeople.[42]
  • 1427 – 13 October: Lincoln College is founded in the university by Richard Fleming, Bishop of Lincoln, for his secular clergy.[38]
  • 1435 – St Mary's College is founded in the university for Augustinians.
  • 1437 – St Bernard's College is founded in the university for Cistercians.
  • 1438 – 10 February: All Souls' College is founded in the university by Henry Chichele, Archbishop of Canterbury, and King Henry VI as a graduate institution.[7]
  • 1458 – 15 July: Magdalen College is founded in the university by William Waynflete, Bishop of Winchester and Lord Chancellor of England.[43]
  • 1461 – 3 July: The university chancellor is authorised to ban prostitutes within 10 miles of the city.
  • 1465 – First mention of an Osney Bridge.[11]
  • By 1476 – New Inn Hall rebuilt and first known under this name.[25]
  • 1478
    • Severe outbreak of plague.[25]
    • Lincoln College is re-endowed by Thomas Rotherham, Bishop of Lincoln.
    • Chapel and cloister of Magdalen College completed by architect William Orchard.[7]
    • 17 December: First book printed in Oxford.[44]
  • 1480 – Magdalen College School established by William Waynflete.[45][46] Waynflete also establishes a Grammar Hall at his college which by the early 16th century becomes known as Magdalen Hall.[39]
  • c.1480 – St George's College founded in the University, served by Augustinians of Osney Abbey.[47]
  • 1481 – 11 October: The printer Theoderic Rood from Cologne is known to be established in Oxford.[48]
  • 1485–1487 – Outbreaks of plague or epidemics in each of these years.[25]
  • 1486 – Magdalen College provides places for commoners (fee-paying students).[42]
  • 1488 – The university's Divinity School is completed with Duke Humfrey's Library on the upper floor as decreed in 1444 by the university to accommodate the manuscripts given by Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester (died 1447) and begun in 1478.[49]
  • 1490 – Construction begins on the tower of Magdalen College.[7] John Colet receives his M.A. from the college.

16th century[]

Magdalen Tower from Magdalen Bridge
  • 1509
    • Magdalen Tower completed.
    • 19 June: Construction of Brasenose College as a hall in the university is begun by Sir Richard Sutton (lawyer) of Prestbury, Cheshire, and the Bishop of Lincoln, William Smyth, for secular clergy[38] (charter 15 January 1512).
  • 1510 – Visit of King Henry VIII.[50]
  • 1517
    • 1 March: Corpus Christi College founding charter is signed by Richard Foxe, Bishop of Winchester. On 12 March the college's first secular clergy begin their humanist studies within the university in the premises which have been under construction since 1512.[26]
    • A third epidemic of sweating sickness hits Oxford and Cambridge.
  • 1517–1518 – Littlemore Priory scandals.
  • 1523 – Visit of King Henry VIII.[50]
  • 1525
    • February: Littlemore Priory suppressed.
    • July: Cardinal Wolsey founds Cardinal College in the university on the site of the Priory of St Frideswide (suppressed April 1524) and of Canterbury College.[7] It will be the first college in which it is possible to study all subjects taught in the University. Work is suspended on his downfall in 1529.
  • 1530 – Gill's ironmongers opens; it remains in business in the city until 2010.[citation needed]
  • 1531 – Oxford Castle's formally constituted use as a county gaol.
  • 1532 – 18 July: Cardinal College, suppressed in 1531, is refounded as King Henry VIII's College, an ecclesiastical foundation.
  • 1534 – 3 November–18 December: The Reformation Parliament passes the Act of Supremacy establishing Henry VIII as supreme head of the Church of England.[26] All colleges and similar institutions are obliged to acknowledge this; the master and fellows of Balliol College do so only under protest.[35]
  • 1535 – First appointment to the chair of Regius Professor of Divinity founded by Henry VIII: Richard Smyth.
  • 1536
    • Dissolution of the Monasteries and other religious institutions: Rewley Abbey dissolved.
    • First cornmarket erected in Northgate Street.[28]
  • 1538 – Dissolution of the Monasteries: Greyfriars dissolved.[24]
  • 1539 – Dissolution of the Monasteries: Gloucester College, Osney Abbey and Godstow nunnery (17 November) dissolved.
  • 1540 – Dissolution of the Monasteries: St Mary's College dissolved.[24]
  • 1542 – Diocese of Oxford created. In September, Osney Abbey becomes the seat of the new Bishop of Oxford, the last abbot, Robert King, becoming the first bishop. This gives the town of Oxford city status. The see is transferred to King Henry VIII's College in June 1544.
  • 1546
    • 4 November: Christ Church refounded as a college by Henry VIII under this name. Christ Church Cathedral School is also founded, for the education of boy choristers.
    • Regius Professorship of Hebrew founded by Henry VIII.
Christ Church
  • 1548 – March: Florentine evangelical reformer Peter Martyr Vermigli is appointed Regius Professor of Divinity in place of Richard Smyth. He is forced to flee the city in September 1553.[51]
  • 1550 – The university's Duke Humfrey's Library stripped of "superstitious books and images".
  • 1555
    • 1 May: St John's College founded by merchant Sir Thomas White on the site of St Bernard's College to teach Catholic theology.
    • 30 May: Trinity College founded by court official and landowner Sir Thomas Pope on the site of Durham College to teach Catholic theology.
    • 16 October: Two of the Oxford Martyrs, Hugh Latimer and Nicholas Ridley, are taken from the Bocardo Prison and burned at the stake in Broad Street following trial in the University Church of St Mary the Virgin. Cranmer perhaps watches from a bastion of the city wall.
  • 1556 – 21 March: The third of the Oxford martyrs, Thomas Cranmer, deposed Archbishop of Canterbury, is burned at the stake for treason[26] having professed his faith at St Mary's.
  • 1562
    • 5 October: University of Douai inaugurated with Richard Smyth (theologian) from Oxford as chancellor. With its English College, it becomes a refuge for Catholic academics forced to leave Oxford.
    • Grazing rites of freemen of Oxford to Port Meadow and of residents of Wolvercote to Wolvercote Common are confirmed.[52]
  • 1566 – 31 August–6 September: Visit of Queen Elizabeth, staying at Christ Church. On 2 September at a performance of Richard Edwardes' play Palamon and Arcite before her the stage collapses causing three deaths, but the show goes on and "the Queen laughed heartily thereat".[53] On 6 September the first honorary degrees to be awarded at a ceremony in Oxford are conferred on Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, and eleven others, who receive the MA.[54] The Queen grants a royal crest to the city coat of arms.
  • 1571 – 27 June: Establishment of Jesus College "within the City and University of Oxford of Queen Elizabeth's foundation" on the site of White Hall by Welsh cleric and lawyer Hugh Price, the first college established as an Anglican institution at its foundation.[24]
  • 1577 – 6 July: "Black Assize" results in an outbreak of epidemic typhus killing around 300 in the city.[55] Rowland Jenkins, an Oxford stationer, is condemned to have his ears cut off for distributing Popish books.[38]
  • 1580 – 6 April: Dover Straits earthquake felt in Oxford.[7]
  • 1581
    • Undergraduates are required to subscribe to the Thirty-Nine Articles of the Anglican Church.[38]
    • 27 June: Copies of Edmund Campion's Decem Rationes, arguments against the validity of the Anglican Church, printed clandestinely at Stonor Park, are found on the benches of the University Church of St Mary the Virgin.[38]
  • 1582 – February: Meleager, a Latin play on the mythological figure of Meleager by "Gulielmus Gagerus" (William Gager), is performed by members of Christ Church.
  • 1583 – 11 June: Rivales, another Latin play by Gager, is acted by members of Christ Church; it is criticised for its "filth". The following day they present another, Dido.[56]
  • 1585 – 3 April: The Queen's College is incorporated as a full college under this name under an Act of Parliament obtained by its Provost, Henry Robinson.
  • 1586 – Oxford University Press is recognised by decree of the Star Chamber.[57]
  • 1588
    • Balliol College is granted a royal charter.[35]
    • First published map of the city, surveyed by Ralph Agas in 1578.
  • 1589
    • 5 July: Catholic priests George Nichols and Richard Yaxley, together with two helpers, are hanged in Holywell, having been arrested for celebrating mass at the Catherine Wheel inn in Magdalen Street East.[38]
    • 8 December: Oxford-born John Underhill, Rector of Lincoln College, is elected Bishop of Oxford, the see having been vacant for 21 years. He holds the post until his death on 12 May 1592 after which the see again falls vacant for 11 years.
  • 1592 – 22–28 September: Visit of Queen Elizabeth, staying at Christ Church.[58] On 26 September members of Christ Church revive William Gager's 1583 Latin play Rivales before her.
  • c. 1594 – Mound erected as a feature in New College garden.
  • 1598 – 23 February: Thomas Bodley refounds the university's Duke Humfrey's Library.[26]

17th century[]

Old Schools Quadrangle, Bodleian Library
  • 1602 – 8 November: Bodleian Library opens;[7] Thomas James is its first librarian and publishes the first catalogue in 1605.
  • 1603 – Antiquary William Camden publishes an edition of early British histories in which he inserts into Asser's Life of King Alfred a claim that Alfred the Great founded the University of Oxford in 886.[30]
  • 1604
    • 31 January: Sir Thomas Crompton becomes the first burgess summoned to sit as a member for the newly created Oxford University constituency in the Parliament of England.
    • John Bridges is elected Bishop of Oxford, the seat having been vacant for 11 years.
    • The King's Men (playing company) make their first visit to Oxford; they will come a total of 6 times by 1613.
  • 1604–1611 – Men of the University participate in the translation of the King James Version of the Holy Bible, with the First Oxford Company under John Harding (President of Magdalen) working on the Old Testament Prophets and the Second Oxford Company under Thomas Ravis on the New Testament Gospels.[59]
  • 1605
    • c. March: Catholic conspirators in the Gunpowder Plot meet at the Catherine Wheel inn in Magdalen Street East.[38]
    • 27–30 August: Visit of King James I, Queen Anne, and their son Prince Henry to the university. Gentlemen from St John's and Christ Church entertain them with a series of plays, including (at the latter) an early example of perspective scenery. The big hit of the visit is Samuel Daniel's The Queen's Arcadia; Matthew Gwinne's Latin play Vertumnus puts James to sleep.
  • 1607 – 18 September: The King's Arms exists under this name.
  • c. 1609? – Morus nigra (black mulberry) planted at Balliol College; it will still be flowering into the 21st century.
  • 1610
    • 9 November: Catholic priest George Napper is hanged at the Castle for celebrating mass.
    • 12 December: Sir Thomas Bodley makes an agreement with the Stationers' Company of London to put a copy of every book registered with them into the new Bodleian Library, the origin of legal deposit in the British Isles.[60] To accommodate this, he plans and finances an extension to the library, "Arts End" of Duke Humfrey's Library (completed 1612).
    • 20 December: Wadham College is founded in the university by Dorothy Wadham on the site of the college of Trinitarian Friars.[38]
  • 1612 – Jacob Barnet, a Jew, is imprisoned by the university for changing his mind about converting to Christianity; he is later exiled.[61]
  • 1616 – Robert Burton is appointed vicar of St Thomas the Martyr's Church, an office which he holds until his death in 1640.
  • 1617 – Carfax Conduit completed.[25]
  • 1619 – Henry Savile founds the Savilian Professorships in Astronomy and in Geometry in the university.
  • 1621 – The University of Oxford Botanic Garden, the oldest botanical garden in the British Isles, is founded as a physic garden by Henry Danvers, 1st Earl of Danby.[62]
  • 1624
    • February: The Bodleian Library takes delivery under its legal deposit privilege of a copy of the Shakespeare First Folio which it has bound by William Wildgoose. Having been sold, probably in 1664 when replaced by a new edition, it has to be bought back in 1906.[63]
    • 5 August: Pembroke College is founded in the university on the site of Broadgates Hall, originally to support scholars from Abingdon School.
    • Bodleian Library's Old Schools Quadrangle completed and fitted out.
  • 1625 – c. August: Court and Parliament temporarily move to Oxford because of bubonic plague in London.[26]
  • 1630 – The Mitre Hotel (in The High) in business.
  • 1631 – Original Iffley Lock built as a pound lock on the Thames by the Oxford-Burcot Commission.
  • 1634
    • 13 May: Construction of new university Convocation House begins.
    • Reconstruction of University College begins.
  • 1635
    • October: Canterbury Quadrangle at St John's College, the first example of Italian Renaissance architecture in Oxford (begun 26 July 1631), is completed at the expense of William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury.[64]
    • New charter issued to the city.
  • 1636
    • 3 March: A "great charter" to the university establishes Oxford University Press as the second of the privileged presses.[65]
    • Late August: Visit of King Charles and Queen Henrietta Maria.
  • 1637 – New University Convocation House completed; a new west end for the Bodleian Library on the upper floor is completed in 1640 and used from 1659 to house the oriental manuscripts and other material bequeathed by John Selden in 1654.
  • 1642 – 29 October: King Charles I enters Oxford and establishes his court at Christ Church.[7] Physician William Harvey is among them.
  • 1643
    • 3 January: The royal mint is transferred from Shrewsbury to New Inn Hall.
    • January: Royalist newspaper Mercurius Aulicus begins weekly publication in Oxford.
    • April–June: Fortlet erected in St Clement's to cover Magdalen Bridge.
    • July: Charles I's Queen Henrietta Maria arrives in Oxford to take up residence at Merton College until April 1644.
    • 7 December: Royalist commander Sir Thomas Byron is fatally attacked outside his lodgings by one of his own soldiers, Captain Hurst, in a dispute over pay.[66]
    • Parliamentary prisoners held in St George's Tower of Oxford Castle and munitions stored in the towers of University Church of St Mary the Virgin and New College.
  • 1644
    • 22 January: Charles I opens the Royalist 'Oxford Parliament'[7] at Christ Church.
    • 28 May–4 June: First Siege of Oxford by Parliamentarian troops in the English Civil War, ending with the departure of Charles I and his son. The original cornmarket is dismantled for the lead in its roof.[28]
    • 6 October: Major fire, resulting from a soldier attempting to roast a stolen pig.[67]
  • 1645
    • March: Prince Rupert leaves Oxford for Bristol.
    • 19 May–4 June: Second Siege of Oxford by Parliamentarian troops.
    • 5 November: Charles I returns to Oxford to overwinter with his troops.
    • 30 December: Charles I requests the loan of Agrippa d'Aubigné's Histoire universelle from the Bodleian Library which, in accordance with its rules, is refused.
  • 1646
    • 27 April: Charles I flees Oxford in disguise and begins his journey from Oxford to the Scottish army camp near Newark.
    • 2–17 May: Third Siege of Oxford by Parliamentarian troops. On 5 May Martin Llewellyn's drama The King Found at Southwell becomes the last stage piece performed in the city before its surrender.
    • 20 June: Surrender of the Royalist garrison at Oxford to General Thomas Fairfax's Parliamentary New Model Army signed at Christ Church. On 22 June Princes Rupert and Maurice leave the city and on 24 June the main force marches out, ending the First English Civil War.[68]
  • 1647 – Cucking stool set up by Castle Mill.[11]
  • 1649–1660 – The semi-formal Oxford Philosophical Club of natural philosophers meets; it is a predecessor of the Royal Society of London.
  • 1649 – 18 September: Two Leveller private soldiers are shot near Gloucester Green for their part in a second mutiny of the New Model Army's Oxford garrison.[69]
Brasenose in c.1674, from Loggan's Oxonia Illustrata
  • 1650
    • The Eagle and Child pub (in St Giles') in business.[70]
    • 14 December – Anne Greene is hanged at Oxford Castle for infanticide, having concealed an illegitimate stillbirth. The following day she revives in the dissection room and, being pardoned, lives until 1659.[71][72]
  • 1651
    • January: Oliver Cromwell appointed University Chancellor.[73]
    • First coffee house in England is opened near the junction of Queen's Lane and The High[7] by Jacob, a Lebanese Jew. (Oxford's next two coffee houses are opened in the same vicinity in 1654 by Cirques Jobson and 1655 by Arthur Tillyard.)
  • 1654
    • City corporation buys its first fire engine.[19]
    • First Quaker preachers in Oxford.
  • By 1656 – Baptist meeting established.
  • 1659
    • Robert Boyle with the assistance of Robert Hooke, having constructed an improved "Pneumatical Engine" or air pump at his residence in Oxford (where Boyle lives from 1655 to 1668), begins a series of experiments on the properties of air.[74][75]
    • Old Dining Hall at St Edmund Hall, built, the only new collegiate building erected in Oxford during the Interregnum.
  • 1665
    • 21 September: Consecration of new chapel at Pembroke College, Christopher Wren's first completed work of architecture.
    • 25 September–January 1666: The royal court is in residence in Oxford to avoid the Plague in London, King Charles II living at Christ Church.
    • 9 October: The Cavalier Parliament assembles in Christ Church to avoid the Plague in London.[26]
    • 7 November: The London Gazette, the oldest surviving journal, begins publication as The Oxford Gazette.
  • 1666 – Chapel of Brasenose College consecrated; the adjacent library is also completed about this time.
  • 1667 – Henry Howard donates the first of the Arundel marbles to the university.[76]
  • 1669 – 9 July: Sheldonian Theatre, designed by Christopher Wren in 1664 for university ceremonial and to accommodate the University Press, opens.[26]
  • 1674 – Oxford Almanack first published by Oxford University Press for the university.[24]
  • 1676 – New College bridge over Queen's Lane built.[77]
  • 1677
    • Elias Ashmole gifts the collection that begins the Ashmolean Museum to the university. It includes a stuffed dodo from the Musaeum Tradescantianum in London.
    • Holywell incorporated into the city.[6]
  • 1681
  • 1681–1682 – Tom Tower at Christ Church built to a design by Christopher Wren.
  • 1683 – 24 May: The Ashmolean Museum opens in Broad Street as the world's first purpose-built university museum,[78] including accommodation for the teaching of natural philosophy and a chemistry laboratory. Naturalist Dr. Robert Plot is the first keeper and first professor of chemistry.
  • 1685 – Obadiah Walker, Master of University College since 1676, openly establishes a Catholic cell there.
  • 1687 – 4 September: King James II tries to expel the Fellows of Magdalen College for refusing to Catholicise their institution[7] and on 25 October forcibly installs Samuel Parker (bishop of Oxford) as college President. Anti-Catholic riots ensue.[38]
  • 1688 – 18 August: Timothy Hall is nominated as Bishop of Oxford following the death of Samuel Parker. Although consecrated on 7 October at Lambeth, he is refused installation by the canons of Christ Church.
  • 1693 – 29 July: Anthony Wood is condemned in the vice-chancellor's court of the university for certain libels against Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon; he is fined, banished from the university until he recants, and the offending pages are burned outside the Sheldonian Theatre.
  • 1694 – 12 April: Dedication of the chapel at Trinity College, designed by Henry Aldrich with advice from Christopher Wren, the first Baroque college chapel.[24]
  • 1699 – February: Greek College is founded in the university for study of the Greek Orthodox Church, but lasts only until 1705.

18th century[]

Broad Street looking east towards (right to left) the Old Ashmolean Building, the Sheldonian Theatre and the Clarendon Building
  • 1700 – 8 March: Spire of All Saints Church in The High collapses. The body of the church is rebuilt 1706–1708.[77]
  • 1705 – Edmond Halley, Professor of Geometry, installed in his observatory in New College Lane, identifies the orbit of the comet which will be named after him.[79]
  • 1706–1711 – Peckwater Quadrangle at Christ Church is built[80] on the site of Vine Hall and Peckwater's Inn.
  • 1707–1760 – Major rebuilding of The Queen's College.
  • 1708 – 14 July: Joseph Trapp becomes first Oxford Professor of Poetry.[81]
  • 1711–1715 – Clarendon Building, designed by Nicholas Hawksmoor, built for Oxford University Press.
  • 1712 – 20 July: Jesus College inherits the extensive library of its Principal Jonathan Edwards on his death.
  • 1714
    • 29 July: Worcester College, is founded in the university under the will of Sir Thomas Cookes of Worcestershire (died 1701) on the site of Gloucester Hall.
    • 1 December: Funeral of Dr John Radcliffe in Oxford.
  • 1715 – 28–29 May: Riots in support of Jacobitism, partly directed against Dissenters.[24]
  • 1716 – Construction begins of
    • All Souls' College's North Quad and Codrington Library, designed by Nicholas Hawksmoor (21 June).[82]
    • University College's Radcliffe Quadrangle, to the design of its older buildings.
  • 1718 – 16 November: The Alfred Jewel, a work of Anglo-Saxon art, is given to the Ashmolean Museum.
  • 1720 – Spire of All Saints Church in The High rebuilt.[24]
  • 1721 – 1 November: Death of Nathaniel Crew, 3rd Baron Crew and Bishop of Durham, activates his bequests of 24 June 1720 setting up the annual Creweian Oration and Feast in the university.
  • c.1721 – First New Road Baptist chapel built.[83]
  • 1722 – Turl Street gate in city wall demolished.[28]
  • 1728 – 17 November: William Smith completes writing The Annals of University College, written to refute the legend of the college's foundation by Alfred the Great, in favour of William of Durham.[84]
  • 1729 – Charles Wesley and his brother John set up the Holy Club, origin of Methodism, with 14 fellow students, including George Whitefield.[85]
  • 1733
    • 5–12 July: George Frideric Handel performs a series of concerts in Oxford including on 10 July the première of his oratorio Athalia in the Sheldonian Theatre, where he plays the 1725 Harris organ.
    • New Buildings at Magdalen College begun.[77]
  • 1737 – 17 May: Radcliffe Library construction begins.[86]
  • 1738 – Boswells of Oxford department store begins business as a luggage manufacturer and retailer. It closes in March–April 2020.[87][88]
  • 1740 – 8 September: Hart Hall refounded by charter as the first Hertford College in the university.[39]
  • 1741 – Dial clock installed in tower of University Church of St Mary the Virgin by Thomas Paris of Warwick.
  • 1748
    • February–April: Student riots in support of Jacobitism.
    • Holywell Music Room, the first purpose-built concert hall in Europe, is opened.[89]
  • 1749 – 12 April: The circular Radcliffe Library, designed by James Gibbs, is opened under the bequest of Dr John Radcliffe (died 1714) in the newly laid out Radcliffe Square.[90]
Radcliffe Camera
  • 1751
    • Guildhall replaced by Town Hall, including a cornmarket.
    • Codrington Library at All Souls is completed.[82]
  • 1752 – 6 April: Mary Blandy is hanged at Oxford Castle for patricide, the last woman hanged in Oxford.[91]
  • 1753 – 5 May: Jackson's Oxford Journal begins publication.
  • 1755 – January: The Ashmolean Museum's decayed stuffed dodo is largely destroyed.
  • 1764 – 6 November: Earthquake of ~3.4 .[92]
  • 1765 – 12 June: The death of General John Guise activates his 1760 bequest of a large collection of Old Master paintings to his alma mater, Christ Church, where they are assembled in 1767 as the foundation of Christ Church Picture Gallery.[93]
  • 1769
    • Oxford standard text of the King James Bible, edited by Benjamin Blayney, first published.[94]
    • Alfred Masonic lodge first meets.[24]
  • 1770
    • 18 October: Radcliffe Infirmary admits its first patients.[24]
    • New Road completed.[95]
  • 1771 – 28 March: Mileways Act provides for major improvements to the city streets. East Gate, North Gate and Bocardo Prison demolished[96] and paving and lighting commissioners appointed.
  • 1772
    • February: Floods cause partial collapse of Magdalen Bridge over the Cherwell.[97]
    • The first city workhouse is opened on the site that will later become Wellington Square.
  • 1773–1783 – Canterbury Quadrangle at Christ Church is built to the design of James Wyatt at the expense of Richard Robinson, 1st Baron Rokeby and Archbishop of Armagh.[98]
  • 1773 – Summer: Radcliffe Observatory instruments delivered. Construction of the buildings, begun at the end of June 1772, is not completed (to the design of James Wyatt) until c.1797.[90]
  • 1774 – 1 November: Covered Market opened.
  • 1776 – February: Precious metal objects are stolen from the old Ashmolean Museum by a Frenchman known as Le Maitre, perhaps Jean-Paul Marat.[99]
  • 1778 – Magdalen Bridge, rebuilt by John Gwynn of Shrewsbury, reopens to traffic.[97]
  • 1779 – 7 April: "Friar Bacon's study" at Folly Bridge sold for demolition.[100]
  • 1780 – Possible foundation date of the Bullingdon Club, originally as an exclusive undergraduate sporting club.[101]
  • 1782 – Morrells take a partnership in the Lion Brewery (founded in 1743 by Richard Tawney).[102]
  • 1783
    • April: 7-year-old Jane Austen begins a brief spell being tutored by Mrs Ann Cawley in Oxford.[103]
    • 4 July: John Wesley preaches for the first time in the Methodist meeting house in New Inn Hall Street.[104]
  • 1784 – 4 October: James Sadler makes the first hot air balloon flight in England, from Oxford to Woodeaton.[24]
  • 1787 – Original Carfax Conduit replaced; moved in 1789 to Nuneham House.[25]
  • 1790
    • 1 January: The Oxford Canal is opened throughout from Coventry to a new basin in Oxford.[7]
    • End: Osney Lock and cut on the Thames, built by convict labour, is opened.[100]
    • Major expansion of the prison begins.
  • 1791 – 8 July: Joseph Haydn is awarded an honorary doctorate of music as the culmination of a 3-day visit. He probably conducts his Symphony No. 92 in the Sheldonian Theatre (where he plays the Harris organ) as part of the ceremonials.[105]
  • 1794 – Under threat of the French Revolutionary Wars, a meeting at the Star Inn leads to formation of the County Fencible Cavalry, predecessor of the Oxfordshire Yeomanry and Queen's Own Oxfordshire Hussars.[24]
  • 1795 – St Ignatius church built in St Clement's,[24] the city's first new Roman Catholic church since the Reformation.[38]

19th century[]

University Museum
  • 1800 – New University examination statute establishes rigorous written examinations in mathematics and Literae Humaniores.[4]
  • 1806 – Sir Roger Newdigate founds the university's Newdigate Prize for English Poetry. The first winner is John Wilson ("Christopher North").
  • 1810 – 29 March: Oxford, Ohio, is laid out in the United States as the home for Miami University.
  • 1811 – 25 March: The university expels the first-year undergraduate Percy Bysshe Shelley after he and Thomas Jefferson Hogg refuse to answer questions about The Necessity of Atheism, a pamphlet they published anonymously.[106] This follows earlier subversive works printed in the city: Shelley and Hogg's pseudonymous burlesque Posthumous Fragments of Margaret Nicholson of the previous November and Shelley's Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things "By A Gentleman of the University of Oxford" from January.[107]
  • 1812 – William Carter opens the ironmongers that becomes Eagle Ironworks.[108]
  • 1813 – 14 November: A continuous series of meteorological records for Oxford is begun at the Radcliffe Observatory.[109]
  • 1814 – 14 June: Banquet in Radcliffe Library for The Prince Regent, Tsar Alexander of Russia and King Frederick William III of Prussia, who on the following day are awarded honorary degrees of the University.
  • 1815
    • Summer: First Eights Week.[110]
    • Daniel Evans establishes the building contractor which will become known by the name of his son-in-law, Symm. Their first contract is for construction of a new Wesleyan Methodist chapel in New Inn Hall Street.[111] The business goes into liquidation in February 2020.[112]
  • 1816 – 4 May: The first Hertford College is declared to have been dissolved on 28 June 1805.[39]
  • 1818 – Oxford gas company established with riverside works in St. Ebbes.[113] Public gas street lighting begins in 1819.
  • 1820
    • 9 January: Much of Magdalen Hall is destroyed by fire; soon afterwards part of the old Hertford College collapses and on 3 May the foundation stone of a new Magdalen Hall is laid on the Hertford site (completed 1822).[39]
    • November: Residential development of Summertown begins;[114] first house completed 24 March 1821.
    • Five Mile Walk established.
  • 1823 – Oxford Union established by students as the Oxford United Debating Society.
  • 1825–c. June 1827 – New Folly Bridge built.
  • 1825–1830 – New Oxford University Press building in Walton Street built.
  • 1826 – July: Warneford Hospital opened as Oxford Lunatic Asylum.[24]
  • 1827
  • 1828–1837 – Beaumont Street laid out.[77]
  • 1828
    • 14 March: J. H. Newman, Fellow of Oriel, succeeds Edward Hawkins as Anglican vicar of the newly-refitted University Church of St Mary the Virgin, including pastoral care of Littlemore.[116]
    • c. Summer: New St Clement's Church completed on a new site;[77] as former curate, J. H. Newman had collected most of the funds.[116]
  • 1829
    • 10 June: The Boat Race 1829 – The newly established Oxford University Boat Club wins the first inter-university Boat Race,[117] rowed at Henley-on-Thames;[118] the crew wear dark blue.
    • Oxford University Police established.[119]
  • 1831 – 6 February: Henry Bulteel preaches a Calvinistic sermon critical of the University at the University Church of St Mary the Virgin. On 10 August, the Bishop of Oxford withdraws his licence to preach in Anglican churches.[120] His supporters – Bulteelers – build the St. Ebbes chapel in Commercial Road for him.
  • 1832 – 24 June–28 November: Cholera outbreak.[121]
  • 1833 – 14 July: John Keble preaches an Assize sermon on "National Apostasy" at the University Church of St Mary the Virgin, launching the Oxford Movement within the Church of England.[122]
  • 1834 – Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, is appointed Chancellor of the University of Oxford, which office he holds until his death in 1852.
  • 1835
    • c. April: The Elliston & Cavell partnership is formed as a drapers' stores.
    • 9 September: Municipal Corporations Act makes the city a municipal borough with effect from 1 January 1836, removing the jurisdiction of the university over tradespeople.
    • Quaking Bridge rebuilt in iron.[11]
    • Iffley Wesleyan Methodist Church on Rose Hill is founded;[24] as Rose Hill Methodist Church it will still be in use into the 21st century as the city's oldest surviving Methodist church building.
  • 1836
    • 1 January?: St Clement's brought within city boundary.[123]
    • 8 February: Commencement of Hampden Controversy: Prime Minister Lord Melbourne's appointment of Renn Dickson Hampden (a supporter of toleration for Dissenters) as Regius Professor of Divinity in the university splits the Church of England into high church and liberal factions.[124]
    • 22 September: Anglican Church of St Mary and St Nicholas, Littlemore, founded by J. H. Newman, is consecrated.[116]
    • First New Theatre in George Street opens, the city's first purpose-built theatre.[24]
  • 1837 – 26 March: J. H. Newman introduces the weekly celebration of communion at the University Church of St Mary the Virgin.[116]
  • 1839
    • July: First ever Royal Show (agricultural show) held in Oxford.
    • September: John Brande Morris, deputising for J. H. Newman at the University Church of St Mary the Virgin, preaches controversial sermons on fasting and transubstantiation.
    • Oxfordshire Architectural and Historical Society founded as the Society for Promoting the Study of Gothic Architecture.
On the river – an early view
  • 1841
    • 6 June (Sunday): Marian Hughes becomes the first woman to take religious vows in communion with the Anglican Province of Canterbury since the Reformation, making them privately to E. B. Pusey in Oxford.[125] In 1849 she founds the Convent of the Society of the Holy and Undivided Trinity.
    • 8 June: Coldest day on record in Oxford, -9.6 °C.[126]
    • June: Visit of Queen Victoria.[25]
    • Oxfordshire County Hall built.
  • 1842
    • February: J. H. Newman withdraws to Littlemore and establishes a semi-monastic community (leased 29 September 1841), "the house of the Blessed Virgin Mary at Littlemore". He preaches his last Anglican sermon on 22 September 1843 and takes his last Anglican communion 2 weeks later.[116]
    • 1 July: Copyright Act confirms the Bodleian as a legal deposit library.
    • 29 July: Henry Fox Talbot takes the earliest known photographs of Oxford.
  • 1843
    • April: Protestant Martyrs' Memorial completed.[127][128]
    • 14 May: E. B. Pusey preaches a sermon on "The Holy Eucharist, a Comfort to the Penitent" before the university at Christ Church Cathedral which causes him to be suspended from preaching university sermons for two years but sells 18,000 copies.[129]
  • By 1844 – Jewish community served by a rabbi.[130]
  • 1844 – 12 June: Great Western Railway opens its branch from Didcot to a terminus in Grandpont.[131] Residential development of New Hinksey follows.[123]
  • 1845
    • April–August: The university opens the Taylor Institution for the study of European languages and the adjacent new Ashmolean Museum building as the University Galleries.
    • 9 October: J. H. Newman is received into the Roman Catholic church at his college at Littlemore by Dominic Barberi.[4] On 23 February 1846 he spends his last night in Oxford until 1878 at the Radcliffe Observatory.[116]
  • 1846
    • County Pauper Lunatic Asylum established at Littlemore.
    • St Ebbe's bathing place opened, the city's first rate-supported public river bathing place.[11]
  • 1847–1849 – Holywell, Osney and St Sepulchre's cemeteries open.
  • 1847
    • 9 August: William Ewart Gladstone (possessor of an Oxford double first degree and at this time a Peelite Conservative) is elected as a member of parliament for the Oxford University constituency, which seat he will hold until July 1865.[24]
    • Community of St Thomas the Martyr, the second High Anglican sisterhood in England, established by Thomas Chamberlain, vicar of St Thomas the Martyr's Church.[11]
  • 1849
    • August–October: Cholera outbreak.[121]
    • c. September–October: Painter John Everett Millais visits Oxford and meets the university printer Thomas Combe, who becomes a patron of the Pre-Raphaelites.[132]
    • William Sewell, Dean of Exeter College and novelist, burns a copy of J. A. Froude's novel of religious doubt The Nemesis of Faith.[133]
  • 1850
    • June–November: Millais again visits and works in the city.
    • 18 August: First railway excursion to Oxford, from London.[134]
    • 27 September: Folly Bridge freed of tolls.[135]
    • November: Undergraduates at Exeter College arrange a "foot grind" (a cross-country steeplechase) at Binsey, the first organised university athletic event in Britain.[136]
    • The university establishes an Honour School (i.e. an undergraduate course) in Natural Science and a combined School in Law and Modern History, first examined in 1853.
  • 1851
    • 20 May: The London and North Western Railway begins services to Rewley Road station.[131]
    • Osney Town laid out.[11]
  • 1852
    • 1 October: Great Western Railway opens a new through Oxford railway station on its modern-day site.[131]
    • December: Severe flooding.[137]
  • 1853–1855 – Park Town built, the first significant planned residential development in North Oxford; the architect/developer is Samuel Lipscomb Seckham.[77]
  • 1853
    • Enclosure of Cowley Field encourages residential development in the south-east.[123]
    • Matthew Arnold's poem The Scholar Gypsy is written.
    • 'Cuthbert Bede, M.A.' (Edward Bradley)'s novel The Adventures of Mr. Verdant Green begins publication.
  • 1854
    • Whit Sunday: Thomas Chamberlain, vicar of St Thomas the Martyr's Church, controversially wears a chasuble for celebration of the Eucharist.
    • 1 June: Free public library opened.[138]
    • August: The Oxford University Act 1854 reforms the university, opening it to undergraduates outside the Church of England by abolishing the requirement to undergo a religious test or take the Oath of Supremacy.[139]
    • September: Cholera outbreak[121] combined with smallpox.
    • Corporation waterworks established at South Hinksey.[113]
  • 1855
    • University statute allows M.A.s aged over 28 to open private halls.[24]
  • 1856
    • 15 March: The Boat Race 1856, first of the annual series rowed between Cambridge and Oxford University Boat Clubs on the River Thames tideway in London; Cambridge wins.
    • St John's College begins residential development of its North Oxford estates on Walton Manor.[77]
    • "A" Wing of Oxford Prison completed on the separate system.
  • c.1857–Spring 1858 – Dante Gabriel Rossetti and Pre-Raphaelite friends paint the Oxford Union murals.
  • 1858 – Salter Bros. set up as boatbuilders and hirers at Folly Bridge.[140]
  • 1859
    • 18 October: New chapel at Exeter College, designed by George Gilbert Scott, is consecrated.
    • First Chichele Professorships established.
  • 1860
    • 30 June: Evolution debate at the new University Museum.
    • 24 December: Coldest night on record in Oxford, -17.8 °C.[126]
    • St John's College begins residential development of its Norham Manor estate in North Oxford.[77]
  • 1861
    • August: The Radcliffe Library's science books are moved to the new Museum and on 25 October the older building is taken over by the university's Bodleian Library (by agreement of 12 June 1860) to become the Radcliffe Camera.[86]
    • Hythe Bridge rebuilt in iron.[11]
  • 1862
    • 27 January: Radcliffe Camera reopens as an undergraduate reading room of the Bodleian Library.[86]
    • 4 July: Charles Dodgson ('Lewis Carroll') takes Alice Liddell and her sisters on a rowing trip on The Isis from Folly Bridge to Godstow on which he tells the story that becomes Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (published 3 years later, with the first copies printed in Oxford).[141][142]
    • Michaelmas: William Spooner becomes the first non-Wykehamist to enter New College, where he will remain for more than 60 years, serving as warden from 1903 to 1924.
    • The Oxford Times founded.
  • 1863
    • 24 March: Last public hanging at Oxford Castle.[143][144]
    • April: St Edward's School admits its first pupils, initially at Mackworth Hall in New Inn Hall Street.
  • 1864 – Summer Fields School opened as a boys' preparatory school.
  • 1865
    • Local board of health established.
    • New city workhouse opened on the Cowley Road.
    • Laying out of University Parks completed.
    • Oxford School of Art, the ancestor of Oxford Brookes University, begins to function located in the Taylor Institution.[145]
    • December: Matthew Arnold's poem Thyrsis, with its reference to the "dreaming spires" of Oxford, is written.
  • 1866
    • 15 February: Randolph Hotel opened.[146]
    • The Society of St. John the Evangelist ("Cowley Fathers") is founded by Richard Meux Benson at Cowley, the first stable Anglican religious order for men in England since the Reformation.[147]
    • The Meadow Building at Christ Church is completed.
  • 1867 – November–December: Town and gown and bread riots.[25]
  • 1868
    • 11 June: University Delegacy of Non-Collegiate Students founded to offer university education without the costs of college membership.
    • Convent of the Society of the Holy and Undivided Trinity occupies its new premises in Woodstock Road.
    • Walter Eddison and Richard Noddings from Yorkshire form the partnership that by 1874 becomes the Oxfordshire Steam Ploughing Company, based at Cowley.[148]
    • Police Act establishes a unified city police force with effect from 1 January 1869. On 4 February 1869 newly appointed police constable Joseph Gilkes drowns while fleeing a mob.
Keble College Chapel
  • 1869
    • August: John Ruskin appointed first Slade Professor of Fine Art in the university; he delivers his first visiting lecture on 8 February 1870 in the Sheldonian, announcing his intention to establish what becomes the Ruskin School of Drawing.[149]
    • 27 August: Oxford University Boat Club wins the first international boat race held on the Thames against Harvard University.[117]
    • 19 October: St Barnabas Church, Jericho, designed by Arthur Blomfield for Thomas Combe, consecrated.
    • Oxford University Rugby Football Club founded.
  • 1870
    • 6 & 23 June: Keble College, is incorporated and opens as a new foundation, the first new college in the university for more than a century. The first students enter in October.
    • Volunteer city fire brigade established,[25] based in New Inn Hall Street.
    • Oxford University Gazette first published.
    • Eustreptospondylus oxoniensis juvenile dinosaur fossil found in Summertown.[150][151]
  • 1871
    • 18 June: The Universities Tests Act removes restrictions which limited access to the ancient universities to members of the Church of England.
    • Ruskin School of Drawing established[24] in the University Galleries.
    • First issue of Oxford and Cambridge college stamps for postage by Keble College.[152]
  • 1872
    • 10 February: First of The Varsity Matches in rugby union played against Cambridge in The Parks; Oxford wins.[153]
    • Oxford University A.F.C. established.
    • University's Clarendon Laboratory completed as the oldest purpose-built physics laboratory in England.
    • Oxford Cooperative & Industrial Society established with retail premises in George Street.[24]
  • 1873–1880
    • Christian Cole becomes the first black African to study at the University.[154]
    • First city sewerage system laid, with pumping station at Littlemore.[25]
  • 1873
    • 29 March: 1873 FA Cup Final at Lillie Bridge Grounds in London: Oxford University A.F.C. loses; in the afternoon, the University Boat Club The Boat Race.
    • Oxfordshire Band of Hope & Temperance Union publish a Drink Map of Oxford showing 312 licensed premises and 7 breweries.
    • In the year following his death, Thomas Combe's widow, Martha, presents William Holman Hunt's painting The Light of the World to Keble College.
  • 1874
    • 7 August: Second Hertford College founded in the university by Act changing the status of Magdalen Hall (on the site of the former Hart Hall).[39]
    • Frank Cooper's Oxford marmalade first produced by his wife Sarah.[155]
    • John Ruskin recruits a group of "diggers" from university undergraduates to repair the road to North Hinksey, including Oscar Wilde, Alfred Milner, Hardwicke Rawnsley, W. G. Collingwood and Arnold Toynbee.[156][157]
  • 1875
    • Church of St Aloysius Gonzaga established by Jesuits in Woodstock Road, designed by Joseph Hansom.
    • 3 November: Oxford High School opened by Girls' Day School Trust.
  • 1876
    • 25 April (St Mark's Day): Keble College Chapel dedicated.
    • 7 June: Cowley Barracks opened. The 52nd (Oxfordshire) Light Infantry Regiment is among the forces first stationed here.[158]
    • 7 September: Oxford Military College established as a private boarding school at Cowley; it goes bankrupt in 1896.
    • St Stephen's House established as a Church of England theological college by supporters of the Oxford Movement.
  • 1877
    • 24 March: For the only time in history, the Boat Race with Cambridge is declared a "dead heat" (i.e. a draw).
    • 10 August: The Universities of Oxford and Cambridge Act removes most restrictions limiting fellowships in colleges of the universities to clergy of the Church of England and permits fellows to marry.
    • Wycliffe Hall founded as a Church of England theological college, beginning its teaching in January 1878.
    • First house built in New Marston.[159]
    • Dragon School founded as the Preparatory School.
    • First telephone in Oxford.[160]
  • 1878
    • 22 June: Association for the Education of Women (AEW) founded to arrange lectures for women taking the new Oxford Examinations for Women over 18.[161]
    • 26 September: First Oxford University Extension Lecture delivered, in Birmingham.
    • 18 October: Wesley Memorial Church opened in New Inn Hall Street.[162]
    • Construction of houses on Cripley Meadow begins.[11]
First two women's colleges
Lady Margaret Hall (1878)
Somerville College (1879)
  • 1879
    • 1 January: B. H. Blackwell (son of the city's first public librarian) opens the first Blackwell's bookshop.[163]
    • 13 March: Gerard Manley Hopkins, at this time a curate at the new Church of St Aloysius Gonzaga, writes the poem "Binsey Poplars", marking their felling.[164]
    • 13 October: First women students admitted to the newly opened Lady Margaret Hall, Somerville Hall and Society of Oxford Home-Students.[165]
    • New General Post Office built in St Aldate's.[166]
  • 1881
    • 18 January: Severe gale.
    • May: First cricket matches in The Parks are played.
    • 1 December: City of Oxford Tramways Company opens its first route.
    • City of Oxford High School for Boys opened.
  • 1882
    • 13 May: University Examination Schools, designed by T. G. Jackson, completed[24] (on the site of the Angel Inn). The teaching functions formerly carried out in the Old Schools Quad of the Bodleian Library are transferred here.
    • Approximate date: Oxford City F.C. established.
  • 1883 – 24 January: The Oxford Magazine first published.
  • 1884
    • 1 February: First fascicle of what will become the Oxford English Dictionary is published.[117]
    • 14 October: Indian Institute opened.[167]
    • Pitt Rivers Museum established by donation of Augustus Pitt Rivers' anthropological and archaeological collections to the university.
    • Pusey House established to promote high church learning and worship.
  • 1885
    • 29 April: Women first permitted to the take the university entrance examination.[117]
    • May: Oxford University Dramatic Society's first production, Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part 1 produced by Alec MacKinnon in the old Town Hall.[168][169]
    • 11 June: James Murray, editor of the Oxford English Dictionary, moves to a house on the Banbury Road to work full-time on the project.
    • 2 December: Osney Bridge collapses with one fatality.[170]
  • 1886
    • 13 February: Second New Theatre in George Street opens with an Oxford University Dramatic Society performance of Shakespeare's Twelfth Night.[168]
    • October: Mansfield College, a nonconformist institution, moves to Oxford from Birmingham and adopts this name, originally setting up in The High.
    • St Hugh's College founded as St Hugh's Hall in Norham Road by Elizabeth Wordsworth for women of limited means.
    • Gasworks Bridge built.[113]
  • 1887 – Balliol College absorbs New Inn Hall.[171]
  • 1888
    • 13–14 February: Greatest snow depth on record in Oxford, 61 cm.[126]
    • 31 December: Replacement iron Osney Bridge opened.[135]
  • 1889
    • 14–16 October: Mansfield College opens its new premises in Oxford.[172]
    • 9 November: Oxford becomes a county borough under the Local Government Act 1888.[139] City boundaries extended to incorporate part of Headington and New Hinksey. Management of Oxford Prison transfers from the county to Her Majesty's Prison Service.
    • Manchester College, a non-denominational institution of Presbyterian and Unitarian origins, moves to Oxford from London. Its new buildings are completed in 1893.
  • 1889–1890 – Oxford county borough acquires sites for Wolvercote Cemetery, Rose Hill cemetery and Botley Cemetery, outside the city boundary at this time; they are dedicated in 1894 under the Interments Act[173] (including on 1 April 1894 dedication of a Jewish burial ground at Wolvercote Cemetery).
  • 1890 – December: Dullest month on record in Oxford, 5 hours of sunshine.[126]
  • 1891
    • Winter: River freezes solid at Folly Bridge.
    • Jane Willis Kirkaldy and Catherine Pollard become the first women to sit final examinations in biology at the university (and achieve first class honours).[174]
  • 1892
    • 27 April: The magazine Isis is established by University students.
    • 18 June: Oxford Electric Light Company established with riverside works at Osney.[175]
    • "Battle of Wolvercote": Resistance to reduction of Wolvercote Common.
    • First Romanes Lecture (founded by George Romanes) delivered, by William Ewart Gladstone.[176]
  • 1893
    • 14 June: Opening of Shelley Memorial at University College, designed by Basil Champneys with a reclining nude marble statue of Shelley by Edward Onslow Ford.
    • 13 October: First women enter St Hilda's College (at this time a residential hall for students), founded by Dorothea Beale. Women may take Honours (i.e. undergraduate) examinations of the university and their results are classified but they are not formally awarded degrees.
    • 27 October: Oxford United F.C. formed as Headington Football Club.[177]
    • 27 December: Death of Thomas Combe's widow, Martha, who bequeaths most of their collection of Pre-Raphaelite paintings to the Ashmolean Museum.
The HighPhotochrom of c.1900
  • 1894
    • 14 August: Oliver Lodge demonstrates radio transmission (of Morse code) from the Clarendon Laboratory to the University Museum for the British Association for the Advancement of Science.[151]
    • October: William Holman Hunt's painting The Light of the World is first displayed in the side chapel constructed for it at Keble College.
    • November: Severe flooding.[137] 126.1 mm of rain falls in Oxford this month.[178]
  • 1895
    • 1 November: Thomas Hardy's novel Jude the Obscure is published in book form (dated 1896) containing an unflattering portrait of Oxford as "Christminster".
    • Winter: River freezes solid at Folly Bridge. The lowest February temperature in Oxford is −5.3 °C.[178]
    • Roman Catholics are permitted by their hierarchy to attend the ancient universities.[38]
    • Castle Mill Bridge rebuilt.[11]
    • Oxford's first public toilet opened in St Giles'.
  • 1896
    • 7 September: The first film shown in Oxfordshire is screened as part of an entertainment at the New Theatre in George Street.[179]
    • 9 September: Campion Hall established as Clarke's Hall in St Giles', a private hall for Jesuits studying in the university.
    • Francis Fortescue Urquhart becomes the first Roman Catholic teaching fellow in the university (at Balliol) since the Reformation.
    • St Martin's Church at Carfax is demolished, except for the tower.
  • 1897
    • 12 May: New Oxford Town Hall, designed by Henry Hare, officially opened. It incorporates a pipe organ by Henry Willis & Sons.
    • 1 October: John Allen takes over the Oxfordshire Steam Ploughing Company.[148]
    • October: The predecessor of St Benet's Hall is founded by Benedictines of Ampleforth for their members to study for secular degrees of the university, initially at 103 Woodstock Road.[180]
  • 1899
    • 27 February: Ruskin Hall begins to offer classes for mature working-class students.[181]
    • 26 December: Headington Quarry morris dancer and concertina player William Kimber is first heard by musicologist Cecil Sharp, an important moment in the English folk dance and music revival.[182] The Headington team had been revived for an exhibition dance on 13 March.[183]

20th century[]

1913 "Bullnose" Morris Oxford
  • 1900 – 6 July: Tirah Memorial unveiled.
  • 1901 – 18 June: New building for Radcliffe Science Library, designed by T. G. Jackson, opened adjacent to University Museum.
  • 1902
    • Rhodes Scholarship established for certain overseas students in the University with effect from 1 July 1903.
    • St Mary Hall, last survivor of the medieval academic halls in the University, is closed[24] and reincorporated into Oriel College.
  • 1903
    • June: Severe flooding.[137] 141.8 mm of rain falls in Oxford this month.[178]
    • 19 September: South African War Memorial unveiled at The Plain in St Clement's to commemorate the 33 men killed in action and 109 who died of disease serving with the 1st Battalion, Oxfordshire Light Infantry in the Second Boer War, 1899–1902.[184]
  • 1904
  • 1905 – Order of Friars Minor Capuchin establish a friary, St Anselm's.[24]
  • 1906 – 24 March: Oxford City F.C. win the FA Amateur Cup.[186]
  • 1907
    • 27 June–3 July: Historical Pageant staged in grounds of Magdalen College School by Frank Lascelles.[187]
    • 1 November: First woman city councillor elected (Sophia Merivale).
    • North Oxford Golf Club founded.
  • 1908
    • 26 April: Heavy snowfall.[188]
    • 20 May: Iffley Mill destroyed by fire.[189]
    • The first intelligence quotient test in England is administered to Oxford schoolchildren by Cyril Burt (based on the Binet system).[190]
  • 1909
    • March: Marxist students at Ruskin College, members of the Plebs' League, begin a strike in support of the dismissed Principal, Dennis Hird.[191]
    • 13 March: An Amateur International Association football match between England and Germany is played at Oxford City's White House Ground: England (with Oxford City and University players in the front row) win 9–0.[192]
    • 11 December: "Poulton's Match": In the 37th annual Varsity Match (rugby union) played in London, Oxford-born Ronnie Poulton scores a record five tries, securing the game for Oxford University RFC.
  • 1910
    • 26 November: First permanent cinema in Oxford, the Oxford Electric Theatre in Castle Street, opens.[24]
    • Women's halls formally recognised by the University.
    • Oxford Poetry founded as a literary magazine by publisher Basil Blackwell.
  • 1911
    • 24 February: First purpose-built cinema in Oxford, the Oxford Picture Palace off the Cowley Road, opens. (On 25 March, the first purpose-built cinema in central Oxford, the Electra Palace in Queen Street, opens.)
    • 14 June: A Farnham pusher biplane lands on Port Meadow, the first aeroplane to land in Oxfordshire.[158]
    • July: 1911 United Kingdom heat wave: Sunniest month on record in Oxford, 310.45 hours of sunshine.[126]
    • 15 July: Roman Catholic parish church of St Edmund & St Frideswide (Greyfriars) opens in Iffley Road.
    • 26 October: Max Beerbohm's satirical novel Zuleika Dobson is published.
Salters steamer Wargrave (1913) by Folly Bridge
  • 1912
    • Summer Olympics in Stockholm: New College Boat Club represent Great Britain in rowing, winning silver.
    • 10 September: Two Royal Flying Corps officers are killed when their Bristol Coanda monoplane crashes at Wolvercote. First aviation meeting held on Port Meadow on 24 October.
    • 27 November: An underground bookstore for the Bodleian Library beneath Radcliffe Square (begun late 1909) is completed, linked with both the old library and the Radcliffe Camera.[63] The world's largest such store at this date, it incorporates innovative mobile shelving supposedly proposed by W. E. Gladstone, designed and manufactured by W. Lucy & Co. at the Eagle Ironworks.
    • C. Violet Butler publishes Social Conditions in Oxford.[193]
  • 1913
    • February: Ruskin College opens its new premises in Walton Street.[181]
    • 28 March: William Morris's Morris Oxford 2-seater car, assembled in Cowley, goes on sale.[7]
    • c. October: Mansfield College admits its first woman student (Constance Todd). The first admitted on the same terms as men are in October 1979.
    • 5 December: William Morris and Frank Gray begin the city's first regular service of motor buses.[194]
  • 1914
    • 14 January: Hertford College's "Bridge of Sighs" opened.[195]
    • 6 June: Barnett House established for the study of contemporary social problems.
    • 14 August (probable date): City of Oxford Tramways Company runs its last horse trams, having replaced them with motor buses.
    • 16 August: 3rd Southern General Hospital, a military hospital headquartered in the Examination Schools, set up.[196] First patients arrive 13 September.
    • October: First refugees from Belgium arrive in Oxford; they are accommodated at Ruskin College and elsewhere.[197]
  • 1915
    • April: Somerville College is requisitioned for military hospital use and its members are evacuated to the former St Mary Hall in Oriel College until 1919.
    • Headington School established for girls by a group of evangelical Christians.
  • 1916
    • May: Refugees from Serbia arrive in Oxford; they are accommodated at Wycliffe Hall initially.[197]
    • Dyson Perrins Laboratory opened in the University for the study of organic chemistry.
  • 1917
    • March: The city's first woman police officer (Grace Costin) is employed, partly to counter the wartime rise in prostitution.[4]
    • The University introduces the Doctor of Philosophy (D.Phil.) degree on the American model.[4]
  • 1918 – 14 May: St Benet's Hall[180] and Campion Hall are approved as Permanent Private Halls of the University under a statute of 5 February permitting such establishments.
  • 1919
    • 1 April: Short-story writer A. E. Coppard (of Combe) leaves the clerical post he has held since 1907 at the Eagle Ironworks to become a professional author.[198]
    • Ancient Greek ceases to be an entrance requirement for the University.[4]
  • 1920
    • 18 May: Women lecturers are given equal status to their male colleagues at the University.
    • 7 October: The first one hundred women are admitted to study for full degrees at the University.
    • 14 October: The first women receive degrees at the University, these being awarded retrospectively. Dorothy L. Sayers is among them.[24]
    • October: Subscription concert series begins.[199]
    • 9 November: Student newspaper Cherwell first published as a magazine.[24]
  • 1921
    • 11 March: Queen Mary becomes the first woman to be awarded an honorary degree by the University.
    • 13 July: City war memorial unveiled in St Giles'.[200]
    • 15 August: The Dominican Order refounds Blackfriars.
  • 1922 – Plater College founded as the Catholic Workers' College.
  • 1923
    • St Benet's Hall moves to the former St Ursula's Convent school in St Giles'.
    • 23 October: Oxford Playhouse opens as The Red Barn in the former Big Game Museum in Woodstock Road under the direction of J. B. Fagan with a performance of Shaw's Heartbreak House.[201]
    • 11 November: Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry war memorial at the foot of Rose Hill, designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens, is dedicated.[202]
  • 1924 – 1 May: MG Cars established in Oxford.
  • 1925
    • 20 May: Oxford graduate C. S. Lewis is elected a Fellow of Magdalen College, where he serves as a tutor in English language and literature until 1954.[203]
    • 7 September: City Council adopts Regional and Special Area Planning Schemes, including proposals for bypass roads.[204]
    • 1 October: Oxford graduate J. R. R. Tolkien returns to the University as Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of Anglo-Saxon.
    • First council houses in Oxford built in Headington.[205]
    • Museum of the History of Science opens in the Old Ashmolean building, set up by Robert Gunther based largely on the collection given by Dr. Lewis Evans (from 2019 known as the History of Science Museum).[206]
  • 1926
    • May: Oxford University Women's Boat Club founded.[24]
    • 3–13 May: UK general strike.[207]
    • 11 May: C. S. Lewis and J. R. R. Tolkien meet for the first time in Oxford.[208]
    • Women's colleges are granted self-government by royal charter.
    • Pressed Steel Company plant at Cowley set up.
  • 1927
    • 15 March: Oxford is declared the winner of the first inter-university Women's Boat Race rowed against a Cambridge crew on The Isis.[209]
    • June: Regent's Park College, a Baptist institution originating in 1810, moves to Oxford from London.
    • 14 June: Quota introduced restricting the number of women at the University to this year's level; it is abolished from 1957.
    • 22 October: Oxford Preservation Trust holds its inaugural meeting, following preliminary moves in 1926 to secure vulnerable land around the city;[210] it is incorporated on 14 November 1927.
    • Hide and Skin Market opened in St Thomas's.[11]
  • 1928
    • 15 February: The Oxford English Dictionary is completed after 70 years.
    • October: St Peter's College is founded by evangelical Bishop Francis Chavasse as a hostel for students of limited means in the University, on the site of New Inn Hall. A year later, as St Peter's Hall, it becomes a Permanent Private Hall.[211]
    • 12 December: Oxford Mail founded as a successor to Jackson's Oxford Journal.
    • Ferry to Ferry Hinksey ceases operation.
North Oxford home, successively of Basil Blackwell and J. R. R. Tolkien (20 Northmoor Road)
  • 1929
    • 10 May: Rhodes House opened.[212] Its library is a dependant of the Bodleian.
    • 20 May: Consecration of Blackfriars chapel.[24]
    • City boundary extensions incorporate most of Cowley, Headington (including its cemetery) and New Marston together with portions of Iffley, Wolvercote and Cutteslowe.[25] On 5 March, the Wolvercote Commoners' Committee is established to manage Wolvercote Common and preserve other village amenities.[52]
    • Electric light introduced to the old Bodleian Library, the first installation of artificial light here.
    • 'Adam Broome' (Godfrey James)' detective novel The Oxford Murders, pioneering the Oxbridge crime fiction genre, is published.
  • 1930[11]
    • Castle Mill demolished.
    • General Post Office opens a new sorting office close to the railway stations.
  • 1931
    • May: Albert Einstein lectures at Rhodes House preparatory to spending the first of two summers resident at Christ Church.
    • 4 July: Oxford Zoo opened at Kidlington; it closes at the end of summer 1936 and most of the animals are transferred to Dudley Zoo.[213]
    • c. 1 August: Widow Annie Kempson is bludgeoned to death at her home in St Clement's, a crime for which Henry Seymour is tried and hanged in Oxford.
    • September: Franciscans open a new Greyfriars.[24]
    • Non-collegiate students of the University recognised as St Catherine's Society.
    • Oxpens Road and bridge open as part of an inner ring road.[11]
  • 1932
    • July: Kenneth Grahame buried in Holywell Cemetery alongside his son Alastair; his royalties are bequeathed to the Bodleian Library.
    • 19 August: Joint warmest day on record in Oxford, 35.1 °C.[126]
    • c. September: Merze Tate becomes the first African American woman to matriculate at the University of Oxford, as a member of the Society of Oxford Home-Students.
    • 14 December: South Park acquired by Oxford Preservation Trust.
    • Cattle market moved from Gloucester Green to Oxpens.[11]
  • 1933
    • 9 February: The King and Country debate: The Oxford Union passes a resolution stating, "That this House will in no circumstances fight for its King and country."[214]
    • November
      • First woman mayor of Oxford (Lily Tawney).[215]
      • Oxford becomes the first place in Britain to introduce a 30 mph speed limit in its built-up areas.[216]
    • An early school crossing patrol lady is introduced.[217]
    • The name Inklings is taken by an informal literary discussion group.
  • 1934
    • 26 February: Rebuilt New Theatre in George Street opens.[24]
    • 13–30 July: Pressed Steel Company workers take strike action.[197]
    • 3 November: New wing doubling the size of the Radcliffe Science Library in Parks Road (under management of the Bodleian Library from 9 March 1927), designed by Hubert Worthington, opens.
    • December: Cutteslowe Walls first built.
    • "Dame's Delight" opens as the Ladies' Pool, a family bathing place on the Cherwell[24] (closed 1970).
    • Florence Park estate ("Little Wales") at Cowley built.[197]
  • 1935 – Oxford Airport established by the city council.
  • 1936
    • c. January: First Oxford Farming Conference held.
    • 15 February: Exhibition Abstract and Concrete, curated by Nicolete Gray, opens at 41 St Giles', prior to touring England. It is the first showing of abstract art, and of the work of Mondrian, in the country.[218]
    • 25 May: A meeting addressed by fascist leader Sir Oswald Mosley at the Carfax Assembly Rooms (on the corner of Cornmarket) turns violent.[219]
    • June: New building for Campion Hall, designed by Edwin Lutyens for Fr. Martin D'Arcy, opened.[220]
    • 6 October: New building for St Catherine's Society in St Aldate's, designed by Lutyens' pupil Hubert Worthington, opened.[25] A new police station is built next door.[77]
    • 1 December: Site clearance in Broad Street for the New Bodleian Library building begins.[63]
    • Belsyre Court, the first large block of flats in Oxford, is built on the Woodstock Road.[221]
  • 1937 – 16 November: Nuffield College is founded in the University by The Lord Nuffield as a graduate college for the study of the social sciences.
  • 1938
    • 22 October: Oxford Playhouse opens in purpose-built premises designed by Edward Maufe in Beaumont Street with a performance of J. B. Fagan's And So To Bed.[201]
    • 27 October: Parliamentary by-election, triggered by the death in August of Robert Bourne, Member of Parliament for Oxford since 1924 and held a month after the signing of the Munich Agreement. Pro-Appeasement candidate Quintin Hogg (Fellow of All Souls) retains the seat for the Conservatives but his majority is halved by Sandie Lindsay (Master of Balliol) standing as an Independent Progressive. Student campaigners for Lindsay include Denis Healey, Edward Heath and Roy Jenkins (all from Balliol) and Iris Murdoch.[222]
    • 21 November–3 December: Picasso's Guernica (in facsimile) is exhibited with preliminary sketches at Oriel College by Denis Healey to raise awareness of the Spanish Civil War.[222]
  • 1939
    • 31 March: Oxford Stadium at Cowley is opened for organised greyhound racing. On 8 April dirt track motorcycle speedway racing is introduced here. (Speedway last runs 2008; greyhounds 2012).
    • May: Oxford Crematorium opens.[173]
    • September: C. S. Lewis first narrates stories which will form The Chronicles of Narnia to child evacuees sharing his home at The Kilns; June Flewett is a housekeeper.
    • c. September: Slade School of Fine Art evacuated from London to join the Ruskin School of Drawing at the Ashmolean Museum for the duration of the war.
  • 1940
    • Summer: New Bodleian Library building is substantially completed.[63] Books stored on the ground floor of the Radcliffe Camera since 1863 are moved in[86] and the remainder of the new building used for various wartime functions.[63]
    • 24 August: Howard Florey and a team including Ernst Chain, Arthur Duncan Gardner, Norman Heatley, M. Jennings, J. Orr-Ewing and G. Sanders at the University's Sir William Dunn School of Pathology publish their laboratory results showing the in vivo bactericidal action of penicillin. They have also purified the drug.[223][224]
    • 11 September: The Majestic Cinema (originally built as an ice rink) in Botley Road is taken over as emergency accommodation for evacuees from The Blitz in the East End of London.[225]
  • 1941
    • 12 February: Reserve Constable Albert Alexander, a patient at the Radcliffe Infirmary becomes the first person treated with penicillin intravenously, by Howard Florey's team. He reacts positively but there is insufficient supply of the drug to reverse his terminal infection. A successful treatment is achieved during May.[224]
    • 4 May: A bomber from RAF Abingdon crashes at the eastern end of Linton Road with fatalities.[226]
    • 5 May: Kingsley Amis and Philip Larkin meet while both reading English at St John's College.[227]
    • 17 May: John Fulljames shoots and kills a fellow student in the Front Quadrangle of University College.[citation needed]
    • May: Ground floor of the Radcliffe Camera is opened as an additional reading room for the Bodleian Library.[86]
Wartime aircraft scrap dump at Cowley as portrayed in Paul Nash's Totes Meer[228]
  • 1942
    • 1 January: New Churchill Hospital buildings occupied as 2nd General Hospital of the United States Army Medical Department.[229]
    • 5 October: Oxford Committee for Famine Relief is founded in the old library of the University Church.[7]
  • 1943
    • c.6–7 March: In "Exercise Spartan", a major rehearsal for next year's Allied Invasion of Normandy, Oxford is taken from the "enemy".
    • University acquires Wytham Woods.
  • 1944 – 'Edmund Crispin' (Bruce Montgomery)'s comic detective novel The Case of the Gilded Fly (written the previous Easter while he was an undergraduate), introducing his amateur sleuth Prof. Gervase Fen, is published.[230]
  • 1945
    • January: First woman given a professorship in the University, ophthalmologist Ida Mann.
    • May: Evelyn Waugh's novel Brideshead Revisited is published, opening with a portrait of the 1920s Oxford set.
    • 23 July: Dorothy Hodgkin publishes the first three-dimensional molecular structure of a steroid, cholesteryl iodide.[231][232]
  • 1946
    • 26 March: City twinned with Leiden in the Netherlands.[233]
    • September: Thomas Sharp produces a plan for postwar rebuilding of Oxford.
    • 1 October: Mensa, an international organisation for people with a high intelligence quotient, is founded by Roland Berrill, an Australian-born eccentric, and Dr Lancelot Ware, a biochemist at this time studying law at Lincoln College, in Oxford.
    • 24 October: New Bodleian Library building is officially opened by George VI. It is linked by tunnel under Broad Street to the old library.[63]
  • 1947
    • March: Severe flooding.[137] 132.9 mm of rain falls in Oxford this month.[178]
    • December: First permanent Oxfam charity shop begins trading, in Broad Street. Its first dedicated bookshop opens in 1987, in St Giles'.
    • City twinned with Bonn, West Germany.
    • The University's Oxford Swift Research Project, based on the colony at the University Museum, is started by David and Elizabeth Lack. It will still be running more than sixty years later.[234][235]
  • 1948 – 20 September: New Morris Minor launched.
  • 1949
    • 21 April: Foundation stone of Nuffield College is laid on the site of a canal basin; it is substantially completed in 1958.
    • June: Oxford University Dramatic Society production of Shakespeare's The Tempest beside Worcester College lake, directed by Nevill Coghill.[24]
    • Footbridge over Cherwell near Parson's Pleasure, probably the world's first prestressed concrete fixed-arch bridge, designed by Alfred Goldstein of R. Travers Morgan & Partners.
  • 1950
    • 3 February: Oxford University parliamentary constituency abolished;[236] the last sitting members (since 1945) are Sir Arthur Salter and A. P. Herbert.
    • 9 October: St Antony's College, founded by gift of Sir Antonin Besse in 1948, admits its first (graduate) students. It occupies the original Halifax House in Woodstock Road (a former convent at this time leased from St John's College).[237]
  • 1951
    • June: Arthur Lehman Goodhart becomes the first American and the first Jew to head an Oxford college on being elected Master of University College.[238]
    • September–October: Small epidemic of Bornholm disease.
    • 1 October: Rewley Road railway station closed to passengers.[131]
  • 1952
    • Early: Jacob Epstein's sculpture Lazarus (1948) is installed in the antechapel of New College.
    • 9 April: Keble College's statutes are amended to give it full rights as a constituent college of the University.[24]
    • 19 May: St Anne's College chartered as a full college for women in the University.
    • 12 August: Last hanging at Oxford Prison.[239]
  • 1953
    • 1 April: St Antony's College chartered.[237]
    • 9 October: Severe fire at St Michael at the North Gate caused by arson.
    • St Clare's opened as a tutorial institution, The Oxford English Centre for Foreign Students.[240]
    • City Council completes a 20-year Development Plan.[204]
  • 1954
    • 6 May: Oxford graduate Roger Bannister becomes the first person in the world to break the four-minute mile, at the University's Iffley Road Track.[241]
    • October: City of Oxford Motor Services recruit bus conductors from Jamaica.[197]
    • November: Severe flooding.[137] 112.2 mm of rain falls in Oxford this month.[178]
  • 1955
    • 20 August: Dorothy Hodgkin publishes the structure of vitamin B12, for which she will be awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.[242]
    • Mansfield College becomes a Permanent Private Hall of the University.
  • 1956
    • 21 April
      • Delegates agree to incorporate St Catherine's College as a full college within the University.[243]
      • Nikita Khrushchev and Nikolai Bulganin visit Oxford as part of a state visit to Britain.
    • 23 April: Civil marriage of C. S. Lewis and Joy Gresham at Oxford register office.[244]
    • 14 August: Iris Murdoch marries John Bayley at the register office.
  • 1957–1959 – First examples of modernist architecture in Oxford constructed: buildings in the University science area by Basil Ward and new college boathouses.[89]
  • 1957
    • 15 February: St Edmund Hall granted status as a full college of the University but retains its traditional name.
    • 21 March: C. S. Lewis marries Joy Gresham in a Christian ceremony at her bedside in the Churchill Hospital.[245]
    • May: Oxford Historic Buildings Fund established to assist replacement of decayed stonework.[246]
    • c. October: Blackbird Leys estate construction begins;[123] first houses occupied 1958.
  • 1958 – Green belt adopted in planning.
  • 1959
    • 9 March: Cutteslowe Walls demolished permanently.
    • April: Visit of Queen Elizabeth II.
    • 8 May: First production Morris Mini-Minor from the Cowley plant.
    • July: Westminster College, a Methodist teacher training institution established in 1851, moves from London to new premises on Harcourt Hill.
    • 22 August: Ron Atkinson makes his playing debut for Headington United F.C. under manager Arthur Turner. Atkinson will spend his entire playing career (until 1971) at Oxford, rapidly rising to captain; his brother Graham makes his playing debut on 2 September.
    • 20 October: Women's colleges are granted status as full colleges of the University.
    • Grandpont House becomes a study centre for the Catholic organisation Opus Dei.
    • Oxford Instruments established.
  • 1960
    • Early: St John's College's "Beehives" completed, first substantial student accommodation in a modern architectural style (designed by Architects Co-Partnership).
    • 4 November: Visit of Queen Elizabeth II to lay the foundation stone for St Catherine's College.
    • Oxford College of Further Education founded.[247]
  • 1961
    • 24 January: St Peter's College granted the status of a full college in the University.
    • 14 March: The New English Bible (New Testament) is co-published by Oxford University Press.[248]
    • Brasenose College Staircases 16, 17 and 18 completed, first academic building by Powell and Moya.
    • A34 Road Bridge over the Thames built.
  • 1962
    • 9 April: Windrush Tower, the first tower block at Blackbird Leys, is opened.
    • 2 June: Oxford United F.C., champions of the Southern League, are elected to The Football League[177] in place of Accrington Stanley.
    • 1 August: Linacre College is founded as Linacre House, a graduate society in the University.
    • October: St Catherine's College admits its first students (official opening 16 October 1964).
    • 22 October: Donnington Bridge opened.
    • 23 October: Style of Mayor of Oxford elevated to Lord Mayor by letters patent.[41]
    • 5 November: Rioting.
    • Women are allowed to become members of the Oxford Union student debating society.
  • 1963
    • 16 February: The Beatles play their only live gig in Oxfordshire, at the Carfax Assembly Rooms (on the corner of Cornmarket).[249]
    • St Antony's College becomes a full college of the University.
    • Women are allowed to become members of the Oxford University Dramatic Society.
  • 1964 – University's St Cross Building, designed by Leslie Martin and Colin St John Wilson, completed.[77]
  • 1965
    • March: Ring road over Isis Bridge opened.[24]
    • Trinity Term: Wolfson College (as Iffley College) is founded as a graduate institution in the university.
    • May: Cowley Centre opened.[250]
    • 1 October: St Cross College is founded as a graduate institution in the university.
    • Templeton College is founded as Oxford Centre for Management Studies.
    • Telephone House built.[11]
  • 1966
    • 3 January: Last steam train operated by the Western Region of British Railways from Oxford.[131]
    • 14 February: Oxford University Dramatic Society production of Marlowe's Doctor Faustus at Oxford Playhouse with Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor, directed by Nevill Coghill, opens.
    • 26 March: Commission of Enquiry into the University of Oxford chaired by Lord Franks completes its report.
    • 31 March: UK general election: Evan Luard becomes the only person to take the undivided Oxford parliamentary constituency for Labour.
    • 16 June: Blackwell's open the 930 m2 underground Norrington Room in their main bookshop in Broad Street as part of a joint development with Trinity College.[251]
    • October:
      • Museum of Modern Art Oxford opened in the former City Brewery in Pembroke Street.
      • Seacourt Tower opened by Hartwell Motors.
  • 1967 – University's Nuclear Physics Laboratory in Banbury Road built.[77]
  • 1968
    • 2 May: The largely underground Christ Church Picture Gallery, designed by Powell and Moya, is opened.
    • 10 July: Wettest day on record in Oxford, 87.9 mm of rain.[126]
  • 1969
    • 1 April: Thames Valley Police formed by amalgamation of Oxford City Police, Oxfordshire Constabulary and other local forces. Headquarters are at Kidlington.
    • 24 June: An explosives expert blows up himself and his house at Littlemore.
    • Summer: St Hilda's College provides the first women's rowing crew to qualify for Eights Week.
    • 27 November: Oxford Civic Society formed.[252]
    • Dorothy Hodgkin and university colleagues determine the structure of insulin.[253]
  • 1970–72 – Original Westgate Shopping Centre built.
Oxford's dreaming spires from South Park
  • 1970
    • 27 February–1 March: First National Women's Liberation Conference held at Ruskin College.[254]
    • 24 April: Oxford College of Technology at Headington becomes Oxford Polytechnic.
    • 29 October: BBC Radio Oxford begins broadcasting, from studios in Summertown.
  • 1971
    • Florey Building in St Clement's completed as residential accommodation for Queen's College, one of architect James Stirling's "red trilogy" of English academic buildings.
    • October–November: Inner relief road through Christ Church Meadow, a scheme first officially proposed in 1945, is finally rejected.[204]
    • 12 November: Marston Ferry Road opened, replacing the ferry over the Cherwell.[159]
  • 1972 – July: Phase 1 of the John Radcliffe Hospital, the maternity unit, opens at Headington.[255] Main block opens 1979.
  • 1973
    • September: J. R. R. Tolkien buried in Wolvercote Cemetery alongside his wife Edith ("Beren" and "Lúthien").
    • October: First woman elected as a fellow in a previously all-male college of the university, Dr. Carol Clark at Balliol.
    • 31 October: New Oxford Central Library opened at the Westgate Shopping Centre.
    • December: Permanent park and ride facility for the city begins.
  • 1974
    • 31 March: Local Government Act 1972 comes into effect ending formal university representation on the city council.
    • October: Five previously all-male colleges admit women undergraduates for the first time,[24] initially on a trial basis (Brasenose, Hertford, Jesus, St Catherine's and Wadham).
  • 1975
    • January: Colin Dexter's detective novel Last Bus to Woodstock, introducing his Oxford police officer Inspector Morse, is published.
    • The university administration moves to new offices in Wellington Square from the Clarendon Building, which becomes offices for the Bodleian Library.
    • The Museum of Oxford is founded in Oxford Town Hall.
    • The Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies is founded as an educational charity by Drs John and Sandy Feneley, establishing a facility at the Victorian St. Michael's Hall (Shoe Street) in 1978; in 2014 it becomes part of the American Middlebury College Schools Abroad.[256]
  • 1976
    • 2 January: Severe gale.
    • 19 July–27 August: 1976 British Isles heat wave: Longest period of absolute drought on record in Oxford.[126]
    • New underground reading room for Radcliffe Science Library (part of the university's Bodleian Library), designed by Jack Lankester, opened beneath the University Museum lawn.[257]
  • 1977
    • The University permits colleges to extend co-educational admissions.
    • French chef Raymond Blanc opens the first restaurant of his own, Les Quat' Saisons in Summertown.
  • 1979
    • 21 March: Last cattle market at Oxpens. Last general market held here 28 July 1982, having reverted to Gloucester Green.
    • 1 September: Green College is opened in the university on the site of the Radcliffe Observatory for the study of human welfare, following a gift from Cecil Howard Green.
  • 1980
    • St Stephen's House moves to the East Oxford site vacated by the Society of St. John the Evangelist.
    • John B. Goodenough, working with colleagues at the university's Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory, identifies the cathode material that enables development of the rechargeable lithium-ion battery.[258][259]
    • First commercial MRI whole body scanner manufactured by Oxford Instruments at Osney Mead for installation at Hammersmith Hospital, London.[260]
  • 1981
    • 4 April: The Boat Race 1981 – Susan Brown, a 23-year-old biology student, becomes the first female cox in a winning Boat Race crew.[261]
    • September: St Cross College moves to part of the Pusey House site in St Giles' as its main location.
    • Susan Hurley becomes the first woman Fellow of All Souls.
  • 1982
    • 20 July: Allen Hill and colleagues at the university develop a glucose biosensor.[262]
    • September: Privileged, the first release for the Oxford University Film Foundation, provides significant screen debuts for Hugh Grant, Imogen Stubbs, Mark Williams and composer Rachel Portman.
    • November: Helen House, the world's first children's hospice, is set up by Sister Frances Dominica.[263]
  • 1983 – Oxford Centre for Management Studies renamed Templeton College.
  • 1984
    • John Allen ceases production at its Cowley works.[148]
    • 1 December: Oxford Ice Rink opened.
  • 1985
    • 29 January: Somerville graduate Margaret Thatcher becomes the first post-war Prime Minister to be refused an honorary degree by the university.[264]
    • 4 July: 13-year-old Ruth Lawrence of St Hugh's College achieves a first in Mathematics, becoming the youngest British person ever to earn a first-class degree.[265]
    • Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies established.
  • 1986
    • 20 April: Oxford United, in the First Division for the first time, win the Football League Cup with a 3–0 victory over Queens Park Rangers at Wembley.
    • 1 August: Linacre College chartered as a full college in the university.
    • 9 August: The Headington Shark, designed by John Buckley, is installed on the roof of Bill Heine's home.[266]
    • Late: Alternative rock band Radiohead, as "On a Friday", play their first gig, at the Jericho Tavern.[267]
    • City formally twinned with León, Nicaragua.
  • 1987
    • 6 January: The Inspector Morse television series begins airing on ITV with "The Dead of Jericho" with location scenes filmed the previous summer in Oxford.
    • 7 March: Thames Transit begins operations with high-frequency minibus service in Oxford and introduction of Oxford Tube express coach service to London via the M40 motorway.
  • 1989
    • May: Members of the National Union of Journalists begin a picket of Robert Maxwell's Headington Hill Hall headquarters of Pergamon Press which lasts until September 1992.
    • 2 May: Oxford University Press Printing House closes.[268]
    • 15 September: Fox FM begins radio broadcasting from Cowley.
    • 26 October: Gloucester Green reopened after redevelopment with shops and flats.[69]
    • City twinned with Grenoble, France.
  • 1990
    • 1 March: Kellogg College established at Rewley House for the education of external part-time students in the university.
    • 8 April: Oxford railway station rebuilt.
    • 3 August: Joint warmest day on record in Oxford, 35.1 °C.[126]
    • Pembroke College opens its Geoffrey Arthur Building beside the Isis in Grandpont.
    • Oxford Science Park established.
  • 1991
    • 3 September: National outbreaks of rioting extend to Blackbird Leys.
    • "Parson's Pleasure" gentlemen's nude bathing place on the Cherwell is closed.
  • 1992 – 4 June: Oxford Polytechnic, in common with most British polytechnics, is given the power to award degrees in its own right, giving it the status of a new university; on 16 November its change of name to Oxford Brookes University is approved.
  • 1993
    • February: Alternative rock band Supergrass formed.
    • 26 March: Veronica Stallwood's detective novel Death and The Oxford Box, introducing her historical novelist sleuth Kate Ivory, is published.
    • Oxford Oratory established as an independent congregation.
  • 1994
    • 1 October: Kellogg College so named.
    • Oxford University Press last uses flatbed letterpress printing.
Port Meadow
  • 1995
    • 11 April: Mansfield College chartered as a full college in the University of Oxford.
    • July: Philip Pullman's young-adult fantasy novel Northern Lights, opening in a parallel-universe Oxford, first of the His Dark Materials trilogy, is published.
    • City twinned with Perm, Russia, following academic links established since 1985 (formal twinning 2001).[269]
  • 1996
    • Harris Manchester College becomes a full college of the University of Oxford under this name.
    • Saïd Business School formed from the University of Oxford's School of Management Studies.
    • First Oxford Literary Festival.
  • 1997
    • 28 February: Lucy's make the last casting at Eagle Ironworks.[108]
    • North Commission of Inquiry into the University of Oxford.
  • 1998
    • April: Severe flooding.[137] 107.7 mm of rain falls in Oxford this month.[178]
    • Morrells cease brewing at the Lion Brewery.
  • 1999
    • 18 June: Oxford Broadcasting launches The Oxford Channel as the UK's last free-to-air analogue terrestrial television operation under a Restricted Service Licence; it shuts down on 3 April 2009.
    • 31 December: Cézanne's painting View of Auvers-sur-Oise is stolen from the Ashmolean Museum.
    • Cornmarket pedestrianised[270] and most through traffic diverted from The High.[28]

21st century[]

  • 2000
    • 5 April: Westminster College merges into Oxford Brookes University.
    • 7 July: Millennium foot and cycle bridge over A40 ring road at Cutteslowe is opened.
    • End: BMW begin production of the new Mini car at Plant Oxford (on the former Pressed Steel site at Cowley).
    • Hertford College opens its graduate centre adjacent to Folly Bridge.
  • 2001
    • First Cowley Road Carnival.
    • 4 August: Oxford United F.C. move from Manor Ground to the Kassam Stadium.[271]
    • 1 November: The University of Oxford's Saïd Business School new building is opened on the site of Rewley Road railway station.
    • 4 November: Release of the film Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone with scenes filmed earlier in the year in parts of the Bodleian Library. Dragon and Headington School pupil Emma Watson is cast in a major rôle.
    • Oxford University Student Union radio station Oxygen FM is replaced by Fusion FM (later Oxide Radio).
  • 2003
    • Oxford University Police ("Bulldogs") abolished.[272]
    • Oxford Buddha Vihara founded.
  • 2004 – Late: Oxford Central Mosque in Manzil Way opens.[273]
  • 2005
    • July: Plater College closes.
    • 18 October: Jack FM begins radio broadcasting from Oxford.
    • University of Oxford Future of Humanity Institute founded.
    • Lucy's cease manufacturing at Eagle Ironworks; the site is fully redeveloped for housing by December 2008.[108]
Mathematical Institute with Penrose tiling and a glimpse of the Radcliffe Observatory
  • 2006
    • 5 May: Official inauguration of Oxford Castle quarter (the former prison, closed 1996) as a mixed-use heritage, hotel and restaurant complex.[274]
    • Oxford Office Village in Langford Lane, Kidlington is completed.
  • 2007
    • January: The Radcliffe Infirmary closes, hospital facilities having transferred to the John Radcliffe Hospital and other locations in the city, and the site is handed over to the University of Oxford for development as the Radcliffe Observatory Quarter.[275]
    • 2 July: North Wall Arts Centre, designed by Haworth Tompkins on the site of a Victorian swimming pool in the grounds of St Edward's School in South Parade, Summertown, is opened to the public.
    • July: Severe flooding. 105.5 mm of rain falls in Oxford this month.[178]
  • 2008
    • 1 June: Jamie Oliver opens the first of his Jamie's Italian restaurant chain, in George Street.[276]
    • June: Greyfriars ceases to be a Permanent Private Hall of the University of Oxford; students transfer to Regent's Park College.
    • September: The Oxford Academy opens as a secondary school on the site of the failing Peers School in Littlemore.
    • 1 October: Green Templeton College formed by merger of Green and Templeton Colleges.
    • October: St Hilda's, the last single-sex college in the University of Oxford (since Somerville admitted men in 1994), starts to admit male undergraduates.[277]
  • 2009
    • St Bede's Hall opens as a Catholic college at 42 St Giles' but survives only for a year.[278]
    • May: Oxford Fashion Week launched.
    • 7 November: Ashmolean Museum reopens to the public after major reconstruction by architect Rick Mather.[279][280]
  • 2010 – Spring: ECB Oxford University Centre of Cricketing Excellence (established in 2000 in The Parks) is renamed Oxford Marylebone Cricket Club University (MCCU).
  • 2011
    • January: Oxford Spires Academy opens.
    • 5 July: The Bodleian Library opens its "Gladstone Link" to readers, the former underground bookstore beneath Radcliffe Square linked with both the old library and the Radcliffe Camera.[257]
  • 2012
    • September: Blavatnik School of Government in the University of Oxford (established 2010) takes its first students.
    • 10 October: Ertegun House officially opens in St Giles' as a centre attached to the University of Oxford providing an international graduate scholarship programme in the humanities.
    • 28 October: Ruskin College officially reopens on its new site in Old Headington.[281]
  • 2013
    • 23 April: Pembroke College opens its Rokos Quad with a glass-sided footbridge over Brewer Street.[282]
    • Spring: Controversial graduate student housing at Castle Mill completed for the University of Oxford.
    • May: Oxford child sex abuse ring, having operated since 2006, is convicted.
    • Michaelmas: Andrew Wiles building for Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford opened in Radcliffe Observatory Quarter.
    • November: Oxford & Cherwell Valley College renamed City of Oxford College.[247]
  • 2014
    • 26 February: Oxford Brookes University's John Henry Brookes Building opened.[283]
    • March: First woman appointed as director of a University of Oxford museum, Silke Ackermann at the Museum of the History of Science.
    • May: Harris Manchester College's Siew-Sngiem Clock Tower and Sukum Navapan Gate completed.[284]
    • 20 June: Christ Church opens the Jubilee Bridge, a footbridge over the Cherwell in Christ Church Meadow.[285]
    • 29 September: The New Bodleian Library building reopens to readers of rare books and manuscripts after major reconstruction as the Weston Library by Wilkinson Eyre Architects.[286]
    • October: St Benet's Hall admits its first women students, as graduates.
  • 2015
    • 11 April: The Boat Races 2015, the first occasion when the women's and men's races are rowed on the same course (in London) on the same day; the Oxford crews win both.
    • 26 October: Oxford Parkway railway station officially opened, giving rail passengers an alternative route from the city to London (Marylebone).
    • 10 November: The Bodleian Library acquires its twelve millionth book, a unique copy of Shelley's subversive Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things "By a Gentleman of the University of Oxford" printed in Oxford in 1811 while the poet was an undergraduate.[107]
    • 30 November: Blavatnik School of Government in the University of Oxford begins to move into its new Radcliffe Observatory Quarter building in Walton Street (designed by Herzog & de Meuron).
  • 2016
    • 12 January: Induction of the first woman Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford, Louise Richardson, she having taken office on 4 January.[287][288]
    • From January: Oxford Centre for Islamic Studies plans staged full occupation of its new premises on Marston Road, 13 years after the beginning of work on the site.[289]
    • 7 May: Oxford United F.C. wins promotion to Football League One.
    • October: St Benet's Hall admits its first women undergraduates (resident in Norham Gardens), ending single-sex education in the University of Oxford.[290]
  • 2017
    • 14 February: An explosion destroys a 3-storey block of flats at Osney with one fatality.[291]
    • 18–19 March: Exeter College's Cohen Quad, on Ruskin College's former Walton Street site (designed by Alison Brooks Architects), is formally opened (occupied from 8 January).[292]
    • 29–30 March: 17 men arrested in connection with an Oxford child sex abuse ring;[293] 8 are convicted in February–March 2018.
    • 18 October: Worcester College opens the Sultan Nazrin Shah Centre.[294]
    • 24 October: Opening of new Westgate shopping centre (Curzon Cinema opens 1 December; refurbished Oxford Central Library opens as Oxfordshire County Library 18 December, officially 22 February 2018).
  • 2018
    • 23–28 March: Peking University HSBC Business School opens a campus at Boars Hill.[295]
    • 10 May: Agreement signed for the city to be twinned with Padua in Italy (formalised 11 April 2019).
    • 20 August: The University of Oxford proposes creation of at least one new graduate college in its draft 5-year development plan.[296]
    • October: Keble College begins occupation of its H. B. Allen Building, graduate accommodation (designed by Rick Mather) on the site of the former Acland Hospital (official opening 3 October 2019).
    • 5 October: City twinned with Wrocław in Poland.
  • 2019 – 19 June: The University of Oxford announces receipt of its largest-ever donation, of £150M from American private equity company founder Stephen A. Schwarzman, intended to fund a new Institute for Ethics in Artificial Intelligence within a Stephen A. Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities in the Radcliffe Observatory Quarter, also including community performance and exhibition spaces.[297]
  • 2020
    • March: COVID-19 pandemic reaches Oxford. On 31 October the city moves to the tier 2 level of restrictions and on 26 December Oxfordshire goes up to tier 4 under the "all tiers regulations".
    • 30 December: The COVID-19 vaccine AZD1222, designed in January and developed by the University of Oxford's Jenner Institute and Oxford Vaccine Group in conjunction with AstraZeneca, is approved for use in the COVID-19 vaccination programme in the United Kingdom.[298]
  • 2021
    • 27 August: Planned closure of Oxuniprint, the last printing operation of Oxford University Press.[299]
    • Projected: Jesus College completes its Northgate development in Cornmarket and Market Streets.[300]
  • 2022 – October (projected): Reuben College, a non-residential graduate college of the University, opens, partly using the premises of the Radcliffe Science Library.[301][302]

Births[]

Jane Burden sketched by William Morris
  • 1157 – 8 September: Richard I of England (died 1199)
  • 1166 – 24 December: John, King of England (died 1216)
  • c.1477 – Lambert Simnel, pretender to the English throne (probable birthplace; died c. 1525)
  • c.1517 – Thomas Cooper, Bishop of Winchester, lexicographer, controversialist and physician (died 1594)
  • 1522/23 – John Piers, Archbishop of York (died 1594)
  • c.1560 – Thomas Harriot, polymath (died 1621)
  • c.1562 – Nicholas Owen, Jesuit lay brother (martyred 1606)
  • 1583 – 25 December (bapt.): Orlando Gibbons, composer (died 1625)
  • 1602
    • 12 October: William Chillingworth, religious controversialist (died 1644)
    • Approximate date: Henry Marten, lawyer, radical politician, soldier and regicide (died 1680)
  • 1606 – 3 March (bapt.): William Davenant, dramatist (died 1668)
  • 1632 – 17 December: Anthony Wood, antiquary (died 1695)
  • 1651/2 – William Turner, composer and countertenor (probable birthplace; died 1740)
  • 1668 – 5 January (bapt.): Alicia D'Anvers, born Alicia Clarke, poet (died 1725)
  • 1734 – William Buckland, architect in colonial America (died 1774)
  • 1753 – 27 February (bapt.): James Sadler, balloonist (died 1828)
  • 1758 – 28 October: John Sibthorp, botanist (died 1796)
  • 1787 – Eliza Salmon, born Eliza Munday, soprano (died 1849)
  • 1826 – 17 December: Frank Buckland, natural historian (died 1880)
  • 1831 – 12 January: Philip Webb, Arts and Crafts architect (died 1915)
  • 1837 – 12 December: J. R. Green, historian (died 1883)
  • 1839 – 19 October: Jane Morris, born Jane Burden, artists' model (died 1914)
  • 1842 – 14 May: Henry Taunt, topographical photographer (died 1922)
  • 1845 – 8 December: Herbert Giles, sinologist (died 1935)
  • 1847 – 1 April: Hamilton Hamilton, painter in the United States (died 1928)
  • 1849 – 26 June: Sarah Angelina Acland, pioneer colour photographer (died 1930)
  • 1856 – 15 February: Annie Mary Anne Henley Rogers, pioneer of higher education for women (died in accident 1937)[303]
  • 1861 – 25 April: Gertrude Tuckwell, trade unionist (died 1951)
  • 1873 – 8 May: Nevil Sidgwick, theoretical chemist (died 1952)
  • 1884 – 9 November: Christopher Chavasse, Bishop of Rochester (died 1962) & his twin brother Noel Godfrey Chavasse, surgeon, twice winner of the Victoria Cross (died of wounds 1917)
  • 1888 – 25 December: Michael Sadleir, born Michael Sadler, novelist (died 1957)
  • 1889
    • 29 May: Basil Blackwell, bookseller and publisher (died 1984)
    • 12 September: Ronald Poulton, rugby union footballer (killed in action 1915)
  • 1892 – 5 November: J. B. S. Haldane, polymath (died 1964)
  • 1893
    • 13 June: Dorothy L. Sayers, author (died 1957)
    • 21 December: Winifred Nicholson, born Rosa Roberts, impressionist painter (died 1981)
    • 23 December: Sholto Douglas, Marshal of the Royal Air Force (died 1969)
  • 1903
    • 22 January: Robin Milford, classical composer (died 1959)
    • 12 May: Lennox Berkeley, classical composer (died 1989)
  • 1911 – 4 October: C. L. Mowat, historian (died 1970)
  • 1915 – 26 August: Humphrey Searle, classical composer (died 1982)
  • 1917 – 24 March: John Kendrew, biochemist, winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry (died 1997)
  • 1918 – 17 February: Olive Gibbs, born Olive Cox, Labour politician, peace campaigner and twice mayor of Oxford (died 1995)
  • 1920 – 3 August: P. D. James, writer of detective fiction (died 2014)
  • 1924
    • 3 February: E. P. Thompson, Marxist historian (died 1993)
    • 14 May: Tristram Cary, electronic composer (died 2008)
  • 1927 – 30 March: Robert Armstrong, civil servant (died 2020)
  • 1928 – 12 November: Maureen Gardner, Olympic hurdler (died 1974)
  • 1929 – 22 June: Humphry Bowen, chemist and botanist (died 2001)
  • 1934 – 16 March: Roger Norrington, orchestral conductor
  • 1937 – 17 February: Benjamin Whitrow, actor (died 2017)
  • 1938 – 12 September: Patrick Mower, born Patrick Shaw, television actor
  • 1940
    • 21 August: Dominick Harrod, broadcast economic journalist (died 2013)
    • 27 December: Toni Arthur, born Antoinette Wilson, folk singer and children's television presenter
  • 1941
    • 18 May: Miriam Margolyes, character actress
    • 30 August: Sue MacGregor, broadcaster
  • 1942
    • 7 January: Will Wyatt, chief executive, BBC broadcasting
    • 8 January: Stephen Hawking, theoretical physicist and cosmologist (died 2018)
    • 24 February: David Sherwin, screenwriter (died 2018)
  • 1943
    • 21 March: Viv Stanshall, musician (died 1995)
    • 28 August: Simon LeVay, neuroscientist
  • 1944
    • 12 April: Lisa Jardine, born Lisa Bronowski, Renaissance historian and polymath (died 2015)
    • 14 April: John Sergeant, television journalist
  • 1945
    • 26 January: Jacqueline du Pré, cellist (died 1987)
    • 2 June: Lord David Dundas, rock singer and screen composer
  • 1946 – 29 April: Humphrey Carpenter, biographer (died 2005)
  • 1947 – 10 September: David Pountney, opera director
  • 1949 – 25 August: Martin Amis, novelist
  • 1956 – 14 March: Jonathan Bowen, computer scientist
  • 1958 – 11 July: Mark Lester, child actor
  • 1959
  • 1960 – 16 October: Cressida Dick, police officer, Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis
  • 1961 – 7 August: Walter Swinburn, flat racing jockey and trainer (died 2016)
  • 1962 – Ray Harrison Graham, dramatist and director
  • 1964 – 29 October: Yasmin Le Bon, born Yasmin Parvaneh, model
  • 1965 – 20 January: Sophie, Countess of Wessex, born Sophie Rhys-Jones, member of the royal family
  • 1966 – 24 July: Martin Keown, footballer
  • 1972 – Zinnie Harris, dramatist
  • 1975 – 31 August: Daniel Harding, orchestral conductor
  • 1976 – 1 April: David Oyelowo, actor
  • 1979 – 11 September: Ting-Ting Hu, film actress
  • 1983 – 21 April: Gugu Mbatha-Raw, television actress
  • 1987 – 6 March: Hannah England, middle-distance runner
  • 1996 – 3 January: Florence Pugh, actress

Deaths[]

Osney Cemetery (on the site of the Abbey)
  • 727 – 19 October: Frideswide, abbess (b. c.650)
  • 924 – 2 August: Ælfweard of Wessex, royal prince (b. c.902)
  • 1002 – 13 November: Gunhilde, Viking noblewoman
  • 1040 – 17 March: Harold Harefoot, king of England (b. c.1015)
  • 1151 – Walter of Oxford, archdeacon
  • 1176 – Rosamund Clifford, royal mistress
  • 1222 – 17 April: Robert of Reading (Haggai), convert to Judaism, executed
  • 1236 – 7 May: Agnellus of Pisa, Franciscan friar (b. 1195)
  • 1292 – June?: Roger Bacon, friar, philosopher and scientist (b. c.1214)
  • 1553 – 15 February: Catherine Vermigli, ex-nun[51]
  • 1610 – 9 November: George Napper, Catholic priest, executed (b. 1550)
  • 1644
    • 5 February: Sir Thomas Byron, Royalist commander (b. c.1610)
    • 4 July: Brian Twyne, antiquary (b. 1581)
  • 1680 – 4 February: Jacob Bobart the Elder, botanist (b. 1599 in Brunswick)
  • 1686 – 10 July: John Fell, Bishop of Oxford (b. 1625)
  • 1703 – 28 October: John Wallis, mathematician (b. 1616)
  • 1709 – 30 June: Edward Lhuyd, Welsh natural historian and antiquary (b. 1660)
  • 1747 – 2 April: Johann Jacob Dillenius, botanist (b. 1684 in Darmstadt)
  • 1773 – 10 June: Thomas Hearne, antiquary (b. 1678)
  • 1790 – 21 May: Thomas Warton, poet laureate (b. 1728)
  • 1854 – 22 December: Martin Routh, classicist and President of Magdalen College (b. 1755)
  • 1862 – 7 August: William Turner, topographical watercolourist (b. 1789)
  • 1882 – 16 September: E. B. Pusey, high churchman (b. 1800)
  • 1893 – 1 October: Benjamin Jowett, theologian, Master of Balliol and academic reformer (b. 1817)
  • 1894 – 30 July: Walter Pater, art critic (b. 1839)
  • 1896 – 8 February: Charles Umpherston Aitchison, colonial governor (b. 1832 in Edinburgh)
  • 1899 – 6 October: Felicia Skene, writer and prison reformer (b. 1821 in Aix-en-Provence)
  • 1900
    • 16 October: Sir Henry Acland, academic physician (b. 1815)
    • 28 October: Max Müller, orientalist (b. 1823 in Dessau)
  • 1901 – 31 March: Sir John Stainer, organist, composer and professor of music (died on holiday in Verona; burial 6 April at Holywell Cemetery) (b. 1840)
  • 1912 – 30 April: Henry Sweet, philologist (b. 1845)
  • 1919
    • 8 April: Sir Thomas Chapman, 7th Baronet, Anglo-Irish landowner, father of T. E. Lawrence (b. 1846)
    • 29 December: Sir William Osler, hospital physician, "father of modern medicine" (b. 1849 in Ontario)
  • 1920 – 5 June: Rhoda Broughton, popular novelist (b. 1840)
  • 1930
    • 21 April: Robert Bridges, poet laureate (b. 1844)
    • 2 December: Sarah Angelina Acland, pioneer colour photographer (b. 1849)
  • 1932 – 29 February: George Claridge Druce, botanist, pharmacist and mayor of Oxford (b. 1850)
  • 1934 – 14 March: Francis Llewellyn Griffith, Egyptologist (b. 1862)
  • 1936 – 19 March: Eleanor Constance Lodge, promoter of women's higher education (b. 1869)
  • 1941
    • 16 January: A. G. Macdonell, writer (b. 1895)
    • 11 July: Sir Arthur Evans, archaeologist of Minoan civilisation (b. 1851)
  • 1943 – 14 October: Michael Sadler, educationalist, Master of University College (b. 1861)
  • 1944 – 26 June: Edward Brooks, soldier, winner of the Victoria Cross (b. 1883)
  • 1945 – 15 May: Charles Williams, writer (b. 1886)
  • 1946 – 20 February: Hugh Allen, conductor, died of effects of road accident (b. 1869)
  • 1952
    • 18 July: Sir Hugh Cairns, neurosurgeon (b. 1896 in Australia)
    • 27 November: Franz Baermann Steiner, anthropologist (b. 1909 in Prague)
  • 1954 – 8 June: Kenneth Kirk, Bishop of Oxford and moral theologian (b. 1886)
  • 1955 – 31 March: Thomas Dunbabin, classical archaeologist and resistance leader (b. 1911 in Australia)
  • 1956 – 27 September: Gerald Finzi, composer (b. 1901)
  • 1957
    • 3 July: Frederick Lindemann, 1st Viscount Cherwell, physicist (b. 1886 in Baden-Baden)
    • 27 October: Paul Jacobsthal, archaeologist (b. 1880 in Berlin)
  • 1963
    • 16 March: William Beveridge, social scientist, Master of University College (b. 1963)
    • 22 November: C. S. Lewis, author (b. 1898 in Belfast)
  • 1971 – 4 July: Sir Maurice Bowra, classicist, Warden of Wadham College and wit (b. 1898)
  • 1975
    • 18 May: Christopher Strachey, computer scientist (b. 1916)
    • 29 September: John Henry Brookes, educator (b. 1891)
  • 1980 – 19 November: Edmund Bowen, physical chemist (b. 1898)
  • 1981 – 22 November: Sir Hans Krebs, biochemist (b. 1900 in Hildesheim)
  • 1982 – 20 November: John Redcliffe-Maud, civil servant and Master of University College (b. 1906)
  • 1985 – 13 April: Oscar Nemon, sculptor (b. 1906 in Osijek)
  • 1988 – 21 December: Nikolaas Tinbergen, animal behaviourist (b. 1907 in The Hague)
  • 1992 – 24 January: John Sparrow, literary scholar and Warden of All Souls (b. 1906)
  • 1994 – 24 May: John Wain, poet, novelist and critic (b. 1925)
  • 1997 – 5 November: Sir Isaiah Berlin, philosopher and President of Wolfson College (b. 1909 in Riga)
  • 1999 – 27 March: Michael Aris, orientalist (b. 1946)
  • 2001 – 15 October: Anne Ridler, poet (b. 1912)
  • 2005 – 24 July: Sir Richard Doll, epidemiologist (b. 1912)
  • 2007 – 21 August: Siobhan Dowd, children's novelist (b. 1960)
  • 2011 – 18 January: John Herivel, cryptanalyst (b. 1918)
  • 2014 – 14 October: A. H. Halsey, sociologist (b. 1923)
  • 2017
    • 21 March: Colin Dexter, detective fiction writer (b. 1930)
    • 19 August: Brian Aldiss, science fiction writer (b. 1925)
  • 2018 – 3 March: Sir Roger Bannister, mile runner, neurologist and Master of Pembroke College (b. 1929)

See also[]

  • History of Oxford
  • Timelines of other cities in South East England: Portsmouth, Reading, Southampton

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d "Oxford Archaeological Resource Assessment". Retrieved 30 July 2018.
  2. ^ "Timeline History of Oxford – 8th Century". Welcome to Oxford. Retrieved 14 October 2014.
  3. ^ Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (date adjusted).
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Tames, Richard (2002). A Traveller's History of Oxford. London: Phoenix Press. ISBN 1-84212-684-9.
  5. ^ "Timeline History of Oxford – 10th Century". Welcome to Oxford. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b c Graham, Malcolm (2015). On Foot from Catte Street to Parson's Pleasure. Oxford Heritage Walks, 3. Oxford Preservation Trust. ISBN 978-0-9576797-2-6.
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Palmer, Alan; Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History. London: Century Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7126-5616-0.
  8. ^ Stenton, Frank (1971). Anglo-Saxon England (3rd ed.). Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 399. ISBN 9780198217169.
  9. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Timeline History of Oxford – 11th Century". Welcome to Oxford. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  10. ^ Historia Ecclesie Abbendonensis.
  11. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Graham, Malcolm (2016). On Foot from Paradise Street to Sheepwash. Oxford Heritage Walks, 4. Oxford Preservation Trust. ISBN 978-0-9576797-5-7.
  12. ^ Jump up to: a b "History". Oxford: St Mary Magdalen. Archived from the original on 26 October 2014. Retrieved 26 October 2014.
  13. ^ "Norman Britain". British History Timeline. BBC. Retrieved 21 December 2007.
  14. ^ "All Saints Church: City Church of Oxford 1896–1971". Oxford History.
  15. ^ "History of St Peter-in-the-East". Oxford: St Edmund Hall. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
  16. ^ Jump up to: a b Henry of Huntingdon. Historia Anglorum.
  17. ^ Turner, William (1912). "Robert Pullus". The Catholic Encyclopedia. 13. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved 22 October 2016.
  18. ^ Newman, John Henry (1894). "The Schoolmen". Historical Sketches. London: Longman, Green.
  19. ^ Jump up to: a b c Koenig, Chris (2013). Oxford Past Times. Oxford: Signal Books. ISBN 978-1-908493-65-1.
  20. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Timeline History of Oxford – 12th Century". Welcome to Oxford. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  21. ^ Hilton, Lisa (2008). Queens Consort: England's Medieval Queens. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-7538-2611-9.
  22. ^ King, Edmund (22 September 1994). The Anarchy of King Stephen's Reign. p. 5. ISBN 9780191590726. Retrieved 18 December 2007.
  23. ^ Fauvel, John; Flood, Raymond; Wilson, Robin J. (2000). Oxford figures: 800 years of the mathematical sciences. Oxford University Press. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-19-852309-3.
  24. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am Hibbert, Christopher, ed. (1988). The Encyclopædia of Oxford. London: Macmillan. ISBN 0-333-39917-X.
  25. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Crossley, Alan, ed. (1979). A History of the County of Oxford. Vol. 4: The City of Oxford. Victoria County History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0197227147. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  26. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j Williams, Hywel (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0-304-35730-8.
  27. ^ Holt, J. C. (1992). Magna Carta (2nd ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 484–9. ISBN 9780521259705.
  28. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Graham, Malcolm (2014). On Foot from Broad Street. Oxford Heritage Walks, 2. Oxford Preservation Trust. ISBN 978-0-9576797-1-9.
  29. ^ Jump up to: a b "History of the Hall". Oxford: St Edmund Hall. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
  30. ^ Jump up to: a b Powicke, F. M. (1949). "Oxford". Ways of Medieval Life and Thought: Essays and Addresses.
  31. ^ Duffy, Eamon (2006). Marking the Hours: English People and Their Prayers, 1240–1570. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-11714-0.
  32. ^ Graham, Malcolm (2019). On Foot from Carfax to Turn Again. Oxford Heritage Walks, 5. Oxford Preservation Trust. p. 49. ISBN 978-0-9576797-6-4.
  33. ^ Jump up to: a b c Lawrence, C. H. (1984). "The University in State and Church". In Aston, T. H.; Catto, J. I. (eds.). The History of the University of Oxford. 1. Oxford University Press.
  34. ^ "Balliol College: History". Archived from the original on 9 October 2007. Retrieved 4 December 2007.
  35. ^ Jump up to: a b c Jones, John (2005). Balliol College: a history (2nd ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-920181-1.
  36. ^ Finucane, R. C. (2004). "Cantilupe, Thomas de [St Thomas of Hereford] (c. 1220–1282)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/4570. Retrieved 30 October 2014. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  37. ^ "Library & Archives – History". Oxford: Merton College. Archived from the original on 13 May 2012. Retrieved 8 May 2012.
  38. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Catholic Oxford". Retrieved 14 October 2014.
  39. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Hamilton, Sidney Graves (1903). Hertford College. University of Oxford college histories. London: Robinson.
  40. ^ Weir, Alison (2005). Isabella: She-Wolf of France, Queen of England. London: Jonathan Cape. ISBN 9780224063203.
  41. ^ Jump up to: a b Display in Town Hall.
  42. ^ Jump up to: a b "Timeline History of Oxford – 15th Century". Welcome to Oxford. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  43. ^ "College History". Magdalen College. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
  44. ^ Commentarius in symbolum apostolorum, a 4th century exposition of the Apostles' Creed attributed to St. Jerome but actually by Tyrannius Rufinus, perhaps printed by Theoderic Rood, and apparently misdated 1468. "Printing in universities: the Sorbonne Press and Oxford" (PDF). Manchester: John Rylands University Library. Archived (PDF) from the original on 10 March 2012. Retrieved 6 March 2012.
  45. ^ Stanier, R. S. (1958). Magdalen School: a history of Magdalen College School, Oxford (2nd ed.). Oxford: Blackwell.
  46. ^ Clarke, D. L. L. (1980). Magdalen School: Five Hundred Years On. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-12516-7.
  47. ^ Page, William, ed. (1907). "Colleges: St George, Oxford". A History of the County of Oxford. British History Online. Victoria County History. 2. London. pp. 160–161. Retrieved 8 January 2019.
  48. ^ Duff, E. Gordon (2009) [1917]. Printing in England in the Fifteenth Century. London: Bibliographical Society; British Library.
  49. ^ Gillam, Stanley (1988). The Divinity School and Duke Humfrey's Library at Oxford. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-951558-1.
  50. ^ Jump up to: a b "Timeline History of Oxford – 16th Century". Welcome to Oxford. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  51. ^ Jump up to: a b Taplin, Mark (2004). "Vermigli, Pietro Martire [Peter Martyr] (1499–1562)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/28225. Retrieved 1 November 2014. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  52. ^ Jump up to: a b Malden, Jo, ed. (2009). Celebrating 80 Years of the Wolvercote Commoners' Committee 1929–2009. Wolvercote Commoners' Committee.
  53. ^ Nichols, John (1823). The Progresses and Public Processions of Queen Elizabeth (PDF). 1 (New ed.). London.
  54. ^ "Honorary Degrees - Early History". University of Oxford. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  55. ^ The Nuttall Encyclopædia. 1907.
  56. ^ Adams, William (2010). A Dictionary of the Drama: A Guide to the Plays, Play-Wrights, Players, and Playhouses of the United Kingdom and America, from the Earliest Times to the Present. 1 (Repr. ed.). Nabu Press. p. 557. ISBN 978-1-144-71419-0. Rivales is lost.
  57. ^ Carter, Harry (1975). A History of the Oxford University Press. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 17–22.
  58. ^ Nichols, John (1823). The Progresses and Public Processions of Queen Elizabeth (PDF). 3 (New ed.). London.
  59. ^ Nicolson, Adam (2003). Power and Glory. London: HarperCollins. ISBN 0-00-710893-1.
  60. ^ Nicoll, Allardyce, ed. (1951). Shakespeare Survey. 4. Cambridge University Press.
  61. ^ Grafton, Anthony. "A Sketch Map of a Lost Continent: The Republic of Letters". Archived from the original on 22 May 2010. Retrieved 28 April 2010.
  62. ^ "A History of The Gardens". The University of Oxford Botanic Garden. Archived from the original on 9 July 2011. Retrieved 15 March 2011.
  63. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Craster, Edmund (1952). History of the Bodleian Library 1845–1945. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  64. ^ Colvin, Howard (1968). The Canterbury Quadrangle, St John's College, Oxford. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-920-159-5.
  65. ^ "A Short History of Oxford University Press". Oxford University Press. 2012. Retrieved 30 July 2013.
  66. ^ Yerby, George (2006) [2004]. "Byron, Sir Thomas". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/4283. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  67. ^ Wood, Anthony. "The Oxford Journals" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 February 2012. Retrieved 3 November 2014.
  68. ^ "Civil War: Surrender of Oxford". Oxfordshire Blue Plaques Scheme. Oxfordshire Blue Plaques Board. 2013. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
  69. ^ Jump up to: a b "Inscriptions: The Levellers". History on the streets of Oxford. 2013. Retrieved 10 October 2014. The Banbury mutiny had taken place earlier in the year.
  70. ^ "Eagle & Child pub". St Giles', Oxford. Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  71. ^ A Scholler in Oxford (1651). Newes from the Dead, or a True and Exact Narration of the Miraculous Deliverance of Anne Greene; whereunto are prefixed certain Poems casually written upon that subject. Oxford: printed by Leonard Lichfield for Tho. Robinson. Includes Latin verses by Christopher Wren.
  72. ^ Hughes, J. Trevor (1982). "Miraculous Deliverance of Anne Green: An Oxford Case of Resuscitation in the Seventeenth Century". British Medical Journal. 285 (6357): 1792–1793. doi:10.1136/bmj.285.6357.1792. JSTOR 29509089. PMC 1500297. PMID 6816370.
  73. ^ Orme, William (1820). Memoirs of the Life, Writings, and Religious Connexions of John Owen. London: T. Hamilton. p. 142. Retrieved 16 November 2015. oliver Cromwell Chancellor Oxford January 1651.
  74. ^ Acott, Chris (1999). "The diving "Law-ers": A brief resume of their lives". South Pacific Underwater Medicine Society Journal. 29 (1). ISSN 0813-1988. OCLC 16986801. Retrieved 17 April 2009.
  75. ^ Boyle, Robert (1660). New Experiments Physico-Mechanicall, Touching the Spring of the Air, and its Effects. The 2nd edition of Boyle's book, published in 1662 in Oxford, contains Boyle's Law.
  76. ^ Display in Ashmolean Museum.
  77. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i j k Pevsner, Nikolaus (1974). Oxfordshire. The Buildings of England. Harmondsworth: Penguin. ISBN 0-14-071045-0.
  78. ^ "Ashmolean Museum". The Invention of Museum Anthropology. Pitt Rivers. 2012. Retrieved 25 May 2019.
  79. ^ Synopsis Astronomia Cometicae.
  80. ^ "Christchurch, Peckwater Quadrangle, Oxford". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
  81. ^ Lee, Sidney, ed. (1899). "Trapp, Joseph" . Dictionary of National Biography. 57. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  82. ^ Jump up to: a b "Library Architecture". The Codrington Library. Oxford: All Souls College. Retrieved 12 November 2016.
  83. ^ An Inventory of Nonconformist Chapels and Meeting-houses in Central England.
  84. ^ McConnell, Anita. "Smith, William". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/25927. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  85. ^ "The Holy Club". Christianity Today. 1983. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  86. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Gillam, Stanley (1992). The Radcliffe Camera. Oxford: Bodleian Library. ISBN 1-85124-026-8.
  87. ^ Ffrench, Andrew (27 November 2019). "Boswells in Oxford set to close next year". Oxford Mail. Retrieved 27 November 2019.
  88. ^ Ffrench, Andrew (4 April 2020). "Historic department store Boswells will never reopen following coronavirus crisis". Oxford Mail. Retrieved 4 April 2020.
  89. ^ Jump up to: a b Tyack, Geoffrey (1998). Oxford: An architectural guide. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-14-071045-0.
  90. ^ Jump up to: a b Guest, Ivor (1991). Dr. John Radcliffe and His Trust. London: The Radcliffe Trust. ISBN 0-9502482-1-5.
  91. ^  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainStephen, Leslie (1886). "Blandy, Mary". In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. 5. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  92. ^ "Notes on Individual Earthquakes". British Geological Survey. Archived from the original on 16 May 2011. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
  93. ^ Spain, Jonathan (2004). "Guise, John (1682/3–1765)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/11727. Retrieved 18 November 2014. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  94. ^ Herbert, A. S. (1968). Historical Catalogue of Printed Editions of the English Bible, 1525-1961. British and Foreign Bible Society. p. 1196. ISBN 0564001309.
  95. ^ Rhodes, John; Munby, Julian (2008). Castle, Canal & College: Worcester Street Car Park & related areas, Oxford. Oxford Preservation Trust.
  96. ^ "Oxford History: City Wall". 12 September 2012. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
  97. ^ Jump up to: a b Jaine, T. W. M. (1971). "The Building of Magdalen Bridge, 1772–1790" (PDF). Oxoniensia. 36: 59–71. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
  98. ^ "Christchurch, Canterbury Quadrangle, Oxford". British Listed Buildings. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
  99. ^ Lovill, Justin, ed. (2009). Ringing Church Bells to ward off Thunderstorms, and other curiosities from the original Notes and Queries. Padstow: Bunbury Press. pp. 187–93. ISBN 978-0-9562046-0-8.
  100. ^ Jump up to: a b Thacker, Fred S. (1920). The Thames Highway. 2. Kew.
  101. ^ Mais, S. P. B. (1951). The Story of Oxford. London: Staples Press. p. 70.
  102. ^ Allen, Brigid (1994). Morrells of Oxford: the family and their brewery 1743–1993. Oxford: Oxfordshire Books. ISBN 9780750906340.
  103. ^ Corley, T. A. B. (1996). "Jane Austen's school days". Report. Jane Austen Society: 10–20.
  104. ^ "Inscriptions: Methodist meeting house". History on the streets of Oxford. 2013. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
  105. ^ "1791–1795: The London Journeys". Haydn 100 & 7. Retrieved 8 January 2015.
  106. ^ Scott, Winifred (1951). Jefferson Hogg: Shelley's Biographer. London: Jonathan Cape.
  107. ^ Jump up to: a b "Shelley's Poetical Essay: The Bodleian Libraries' 12 millionth book". Oxford: Bodleian Library. 10 November 2015. Retrieved 13 November 2015.
  108. ^ Jump up to: a b c Winckworth, Tony; Hobbs, Mike (2009). The Lucy Story: portrait of a family company. Oxford: Lucy & Co.
  109. ^ Burt, Stephen; Tim (2019). Oxford Weather and Climate since 1767. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198834632.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  110. ^ Sherwood, W. E. (1900). "The Eights". Oxford Rowing: A History of Boat-Racing at Oxford from the Earliest Times. Oxford: Henry Frowde. Retrieved 22 October 2014.
  111. ^ "History". Oxford: Symm. Retrieved 20 November 2014.
  112. ^ Ffrench, Andy (13 February 2020). "More than 100 jobs lost as historic building firm Symm & Co goes bust". The Oxford Times. p. 9.
  113. ^ Jump up to: a b c Woolley, Liz (2012). Oxford's Working Past. Oxford: Huxley Scientific Press. ISBN 978-0-9522671-7-1.
  114. ^ Graham, Malcolm. On Foot in Oxford. 8. Summertown. Oxford: Oxfordshire Libraries.
  115. ^ "Warm Baths, At the Oxford Baths, St. Clement's". Jackson's Oxford Journal (3885). 13 October 1827.
  116. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Bertram, Jerome (2010). Newman's Oxford. Oxford: Family Publications. ISBN 978-1-907380-07-5.
  117. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN 0-14-102715-0.
  118. ^ "Foundations of The Boat Race". The Xchanging Boat Race. Theboatrace.org. Retrieved 29 March 2012.
  119. ^ Bruce, Alastair; Calder, Julian (2002). Keepers of the Kingdom. London: Cassell. pp. 194–5. ISBN 0-304-36201-8.
  120. ^ Bulteel, Henry Bellenden (1831). A sermon on 1 Corinthians ii. 12, preached before the University of Oxford at St. Marys, on Sunday, Feb. 6, 1831. To which is added A Sequel containing an account of the author's ejectment from his curacy by the Bishop of Oxford for his indiscriminate preaching (6 ed.). Oxford: W. Baxter. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  121. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Cholera in Oxford". Oxford History. 9 November 2008. Archived from the original on 20 October 2014. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
  122. ^ Butler, Perry (2004). "Keble, John (1792–1866)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. Retrieved 16 May 2014.
  123. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Graham, Malcolm (2010). "The Growth and Impact of Oxford after 1800". In Tiller, Kate; Darkes, Giles (eds.). An Historical Atlas of Oxfordshire. ORS vol. 67. Chipping Norton: Oxfordshire Record Society. pp. 146–7. ISBN 978-0-902509-68-9.
  124. ^ Brent, Richard (2004). "Hampden, Renn Dickson (1793–1868)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/12171. Retrieved 6 June 2012. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  125. ^ Bonham, Valerie (2004). "Hughes, Marian Rebecca (1817–1912)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. Retrieved 26 November 2010.
  126. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i Burt, Stephen; Burt, Tim (2019). Oxford Weather and Climate since 1767. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-883463-2.
  127. ^ Lewis, Darcy (2006). "Timeline: Oxford". TimeTravel-Britain.com. Retrieved 18 October 2010.
  128. ^ "The Martyr's Memorial". Jackson's Oxford Journal (4694). 15 April 1843. p. 3.
  129. ^ Douglas, Brian (2015). The Eucharistic Theology of Edward Bouverie Pusey: Sources, Context and Doctrine within the Oxford Movement and beyond. Anglican-Episcopal theology and history, 1. Leiden: Brill. pp. 95–6. ISBN 9789004304574.
  130. ^ "Timeline Modern". Oxford Jewish Heritage. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  131. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Waters, Laurence (1986). Rail Centres: Oxford. Shepperton: Ian Allan. ISBN 0-7110-1590-2.
  132. ^ "John Everett Millais 1829–1896". Tate Etc. London. Retrieved 4 October 2014.
  133. ^ Sutherland, John (1988). The Longman Companion to Victorian Fiction. London.
  134. ^ Waters, Lawrence (March 2017). "The first broad gauge excursion trains to and from Oxford". 81F (60): 5–10.
  135. ^ Jump up to: a b Phillips, Geoffrey (1981). Thames Crossings. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-8202-0.
  136. ^ Shearman, Montague (1887). Athletics and Football. London: Longman.
  137. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g "Floods in Oxford". Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  138. ^ "Opening of the Oxford Public Library". Jackson's Oxford Journal (5275). 3 June 1854.
  139. ^ Jump up to: a b "Timeline History of Oxford – 19th Century". Welcome to Oxford. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  140. ^ Wenham, Simon (2014). Pleasure Boating on the Thames: a History of Salter Bros, 1858–Present Day. Stroud: The History Press. ISBN 978-0-7509-5833-2.
  141. ^ Davies, Mark J. (2010). Alice in Waterland: Lewis Carroll and the River Thames in Oxford. Oxford: Signal Books. ISBN 978-1-904955-72-6.
  142. ^ "The Works of Charles Dodgson: Alice". The Lewis Carroll Society. 20 September 2014. Retrieved 21 October 2014.
  143. ^ "Execution of Noah Austin, for the murder of Mr. Allen". Jackson's Oxford Journal (5735). 28 March 1863.
  144. ^ Horn, Pamela (Spring 1993). "Oxford's last public hanging: The case of Noah Austin". Cake and Cockhorse. Banbury Historical Society. 12 (5).
  145. ^ "History". Oxford Brookes University. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
  146. ^ "Opening of the Randolph Hotel". Jackson's Oxford Journal (5886). 17 February 1866.
  147. ^ "About Us". UK: Society of St. John the Evangelist. Archived from the original on 21 November 2008. Retrieved 25 November 2010.
  148. ^ Jump up to: a b c Brown, Jonathan (2012). Allen's of Oxford. Stonehouse: Road Locomotive Society. ISBN 978-0-9508480-5-1.
  149. ^ The History of the University of Oxford. 7. 1984. to the general dismay of his listeners.
  150. ^ Phillips, John (1871). Geology of Oxford and the Valley of the Thames. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  151. ^ Jump up to: a b Display in University Museum.
  152. ^ Napier, Arthur S. (30 December 1893). "The Oxford College Stamps". Stanley Gibbons Monthly Journal. 4 (42): 120–123.
  153. ^ "History". The Varsity Match. Archived from the original on 22 October 2014. Retrieved 22 October 2014.
  154. ^ Roberts, Pamela (2013). "Christian Frederick Cole, 1852-85". Black Oxford: The Untold Stories of Oxford University's Black Scholars. Oxford: Signal Books. ISBN 9781908493835.
  155. ^ "84: The Grand Café". Oxford History: The High. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  156. ^ Pope, Rhianne (16 September 2011). "Literary giants tried building a road". Oxford Mail. Retrieved 22 October 2014.
  157. ^ Wilde, Oscar. "Art and the Handicraftsman". Essays and Lectures. Lecture delivered 1882.
  158. ^ Jump up to: a b Jenkins, Stanley C. (2014). Oxfordshire at War Through Time. Stroud: Amberley. ISBN 978-1-4456-1946-0.
  159. ^ Jump up to: a b "Marston, Oxfordshire: Timeline". Marston history. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
  160. ^ Earl, R. A. J. The Development of the Telephone in Oxford 1877–1977.
  161. ^ Salter, H. E.; Lobel, Mary D., eds. (1954). "St Anne's College". A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 3: The University of Oxford. London: Victoria County History. pp. 347–348.
  162. ^ "Opening of the New Wesleyan Chapel". Jackson's Oxford Journal (6553). 19 October 1878.
  163. ^ "Nos. 48–51: Blackwell's Bookshop". Broad Street, Oxford. 2008. Archived from the original on 2 July 2011. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  164. ^ "Bodleian acquires manuscript of Hopkins poem 'Binsey Poplars'". Oxford: Bodleian Library. 2 May 2013. Retrieved 20 November 2014. Like most of Hopkins' poetry, it remains unpublished until Robert Bridges produces a posthumous collection in December 1918.
  165. ^ Salter, H. E.; Lobel, Mary D., eds. (1954). "Somerville College". A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 3: The University of Oxford. London: Victoria County History. pp. 343–347.
  166. ^ Osley, Julian (2010). Built for Service: Post Office Architecture. London: British Postal Museum & Archive. pp. 14–15. ISBN 978-0-9553569-3-3.
  167. ^ "Opening of the Indian Institute". Jackson's Oxford Journal (6865). 18 October 1884.
  168. ^ Jump up to: a b Adderley, J. G. (1888). The Fight for the Drama at Oxford. Oxford: Blackwell. pp. 30–2.
  169. ^ Carpenter, Humphrey (1985). OUDS : a centenary history of the Oxford University Dramatic Society, 1885–1985. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-212241-X.
  170. ^ Eade, John (2005). "Where Thames Smooth Waters Glide". Retrieved 4 October 2014.
  171. ^ Under a statute of 1881. "Library History". Balliol College. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
  172. ^ Alden, Edward C. (1903). Alden's Oxford Guide. Oxford: Alden & Co. p. 121.
  173. ^ Jump up to: a b "Burial grounds: churchyards and cemeteries". Oxford Burials. Retrieved 12 July 2016.
  174. ^ "The female firsts". Oxford Today. University of Oxford. 22 (1). 2009. Archived from the original on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 12 August 2011.
  175. ^ "The Electric Light in Oxford: Opening of the Works". Jackson's Oxford Journal (7266). 25 June 1892.
  176. ^ An Academic Sketch.
  177. ^ Jump up to: a b Brodetsky, Martin (19 July 2012). "Oxford United timeline". Oxford United Football Club. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
  178. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h "Oxford". Met Office. Retrieved 29 June 2015.
  179. ^ Meyrick, Ian (2007). Oxfordshire Cinemas. Images of England. Brimscombe Port: Tempus. ISBN 978-0-7524-4333-1.
  180. ^ Jump up to: a b Wansbrough, Henry; Marett-Crosby, Anthony, eds. (1977). Benedictines in Oxford. London: Darton, Longman & Todd. ISBN 0-232-52176-X.
  181. ^ Jump up to: a b Pollins, Harold (1984). The History of Ruskin College. Oxford: Ruskin College Library.
  182. ^ "William Kimber (1872–1961)". Headington history. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
  183. ^ "Exhibition of Morris Dancing". Jackson's Oxford Journal (7618). 18 March 1899.
  184. ^ The memorial is moved from Oxford to Abingdon in 2008. "Oxford War Memorials: South African War". 28 November 2014. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  185. ^ Saint, Andrew, Three Oxford Architects, Oxfordshire Architectural and Historical Society, archived from the original on 28 September 2007, retrieved 19 October 2014
  186. ^ 3–0 against Bishop Auckland, played at the ground of Stockton (who had beaten Oxford in the 1903 final) in snowy conditions; H. F. Hodges scores the first goal. "1905–06 F.A. Amateur Cup". Football Club History Database. Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  187. ^ "Oxford Historical Pageant". The Redress of the Past. Retrieved 9 November 2019.
  188. ^ "St Giles' in 1908". St Giles', Oxford. Retrieved 18 March 2017.
  189. ^ "Site of Iffley Mill". Where Thames Smooth Waters Glide. Retrieved 27 July 2016.
  190. ^ Winn, Christopher (2016). I Never Knew That About the English (New ed.). London: Ebury. ISBN 978-1-78503-392-6.
  191. ^ "Students Revolt: Novel Situation at Ruskin College". The Evening Post. LXXVII (114). Wellington, New Zealand. 15 May 1909. p. 6. Retrieved 12 May 2015.
  192. ^ "The Amateur International". Jackson's Oxford Journal. 20 March 1909. p. 8.
  193. ^ London: Sidgwick & Jackson.
  194. ^ Jolly, Stephen; Taylor, Nick (2003). The Book of Oxford Buses and Trams (Rev. ed.). Long Hanborough: Oxford Bus Museum Trust. ISBN 0-9506739-2-7.
  195. ^ Tyerman, Christopher (2013). "Hertford's bridge". Hertford College Magazine. 93: 17–21.
  196. ^ "Oxford and the First World War: Third Southern General Hospital". 31 August 2014. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
  197. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e Graham, Malcolm (2010). Diverse Oxfordshire: the county and its people. Oxford: Registration Service of Oxfordshire County Council.
  198. ^ Moult, Thomas (2004). "Coppard, Alfred Edgar (1878–1957)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/32561. Retrieved 18 November 2015. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  199. ^ Howes, Frank (1969). Oxford Concerts: a Jubilee record. Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-12220-6.
  200. ^ "Oxford War Memorial: St Giles". 12 January 2015. Retrieved 25 August 2015.
  201. ^ Jump up to: a b "Oxford Playhouse". Oxfordshire Blue Plaques Scheme. Oxfordshire Blue Plaques Board. 2013. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
  202. ^ "Oxfordshire And Buckinghamshire Light Infantry". War Memorials Register. Imperial War Museums. Retrieved 15 August 2016.
  203. ^ "The Life of C. S. Lewis Timeline". Redlands, CA: C. S. Lewis Foundation. Retrieved 19 December 2017.
  204. ^ Jump up to: a b c Newman, Roland (1988). The Road and Christ Church Meadow. Minster Lovell: Bookmarque. ISBN 1-870519-01-9.
  205. ^ "Barton Road". Headington history. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
  206. ^ Simcock, A. V., ed. (1985). Robert T. Gunther and the Old Ashmolean. Oxford: Museum of the History of Science. ISBN 0-903364-04-2.
  207. ^ Sephton, Robert S. (1993). Oxford and the General Strike 1926. Oxford. ISBN 0952058006.
  208. ^ "Biography of J.R.R. Tolkien". Planet Tolkien. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
  209. ^ Bevan, William Ham (2015). "Pulling Together". Cam: Cambridge Alumni Magazine. 74: 12–16.
  210. ^ "Preservation of Oxford". The Times (44720). London. 24 October 1927. p. 17.
  211. ^ Chavasse, C. M. (8 November 1930). "St. Peter's Hall, Oxford". The Times (45665). London. p. 8.
  212. ^ "Rhodes House". The Times (45197). London. 8 May 1929. pp. 13, 20.
  213. ^ "Closed collections". The Bartlett Society. Retrieved 24 May 2015.
  214. ^ Ceadel, Martin (1979). "The King and Country Debate, 1933: Student Politics, Pacifism and the Dictators". The Historical Journal. 22 (2): 397–422. doi:10.1017/s0018246x00016885.
  215. ^ "Lily Sophia Tawney, Mayor of Oxford 1933/4". Oxford History: Mayors & Lord Mayors. Retrieved 21 February 2016.
  216. ^ 48.28 km/h. "To the Limit: Not so fast". cbrd. Retrieved 21 July 2018.
  217. ^ Winn, Christopher (2010). I Never Knew That About the River Thames. London: Ebury. ISBN 9780091933579.
  218. ^ Green, Christopher; Wright, Barnaby, eds. (2012). Mondrian / Nicholson in Parallel. London: Courtauld Gallery. ISBN 978-1-90737232-2.
  219. ^ "Injuries and arrests at Oxford Mosley meeting". Oxford Mail. 26 May 1936.
  220. ^ "Campion Hall". The Tablet: 7. 27 June 1936. Retrieved 7 July 2014.
  221. ^ Symonds, Ann Spokes (1998). The Changing Faces of North Oxford. 2. Witney: Robert Boyd Publications. ISBN 1-899536-33-7.
  222. ^ Jump up to: a b Farman, Chris; Rose, Valery; Woolley, Liz (2015). No Other Way: Oxfordshire and the Spanish Civil War 1936–39. Oxford International Brigade Memorial Committee. ISBN 978-1-910448-05-2.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  223. ^ Drews, Jürgen (March 2000). "Drug Discovery: a Historical Perspective". Science. 287 (5460): 1960–4. Bibcode:2000Sci...287.1960D. doi:10.1126/science.287.5460.1960. PMID 10720314.
  224. ^ Jump up to: a b Robertson, Patrick (1974). The Shell Book of Firsts. London: Ebury Press. pp. 124–5.
  225. ^ "Majestic Cinema". Cinema Treasures. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  226. ^ Symonds, Ann Spokes (2012). "Remembering where the bomber crashed". Wolfson College Record. Oxford.
  227. ^ Bradford, Richard (2012). The Odd Couple: The curious friendship between Kingsley Amis and Philip Larkin. London: Robson Press. ISBN 9781849543750.
  228. ^ "Story of a Masterpiece: Paul Nash: Totes Meer". Tate Etc. 1 February 2008. Retrieved 20 November 2014.
  229. ^ "Our history". Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
  230. ^ Larkin, Philip (1975). "Introduction". Jill: a novel (New ed.). London: Faber. ISBN 0-571-10691-9.
  231. ^ Carlisle, C. H.; Crowfoot, D. (1945). "The crystal structure of cholesteryl iodide". Proceedings of the Royal Society. A184 (996): 64–83. JSTOR 97644.
  232. ^ Glusker, Jenny P. (1994). "Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin (1910–1994)". Protein Science. 3 (12): 2465–2469. doi:10.1002/pro.5560031233. PMC 2142778. PMID 7757003.
  233. ^ Keown, Callum (7 July 2016). "70th anniversary of the bond between Oxford and Leiden". The Oxford Times. p. 22.
  234. ^ "The swifts in the tower". Oxford University Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 17 March 2011.
  235. ^ Lack, Andrew; Overall, Roy (2002). The Museum Swifts: the story of the swifts in the tower of the Oxford University Museum of Natural History. Oxford University Museum of Natural History. ISBN 0-9542726-0-9.
  236. ^ Representation of the People Act 1948.
  237. ^ Jump up to: a b Nicholls, C. S. (2000). The History of St Antony's College, Oxford, 1950-2000. Basingstoke: Macmillan. ISBN 0-333-79183-5.
  238. ^ "Jewish Heads of Oxford Colleges". Oxford Jewish Heritage. Retrieved 20 October 2014. The second American head of house is also at University College, Kingman Brewster, from 1986 to his death in 1988.
  239. ^ "The last man hanged in Oxfordshire". Oxford Mail. 24 March 2014. Retrieved 27 October 2014.
  240. ^ "Timeline History of Oxford – 20th Century". Welcome to Oxford. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  241. ^ "Bannister breaks four-minute mile". On This Day. BBC News. 6 May 1954. Archived from the original on 7 March 2008. Retrieved 6 February 2008.
  242. ^ Hodgkin, Dorothy Crowfoot; et al. (1955). "Structure of Vitamin B12". Nature. 176 (4477): 325–8. Bibcode:1955Natur.176..325H. doi:10.1038/176325a0. PMID 13253565. S2CID 4220926.
  243. ^ "College History". St. Catherine's College, Oxford. Archived from the original on 9 November 2006. Retrieved 22 April 2016.
  244. ^ At 42, St Giles' from late 1955 to late 1975. Hooper, Walter (23 June 1998). C. S. Lewis: A Complete Guide to His Life and Works. p. 79. ISBN 9780060638801. Retrieved 3 December 2011.
  245. ^ Edwards, Bruce L. (2007). C. S. Lewis: An Examined Life. p. 287. ISBN 9780275991173. Retrieved 17 May 2012.
  246. ^ Oakeshott, W. F., ed. (1975). Oxford Stone Restored: The Work of the Oxford Historic Buildings Fund, 1957-1974. Oxford Historic Buildings Fund. ISBN 0950484601.
  247. ^ Jump up to: a b "History of the College". City of Oxford College. 2013. Retrieved 14 October 2014.
  248. ^ Hunt, Geoffrey (1970). About the New English Bible. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-180015-5.
  249. ^ "Live: Carfax Assembly Rooms, Oxford". The Beatles Bible. 16 February 1963. Retrieved 18 November 2015.
  250. ^ Hearn, Dan (14 August 2009). "We're beating the recession, says Oxford shopping centre". Oxford Mail. Retrieved 7 October 2014.
  251. ^ Graham, Rigby (Winter 1966). "Two views of the Norrington Room". The Private Library. 7 (4): 84–6.
  252. ^ "Oxford Civic Society – Special Commemorative Issue To accompany the 100th circulation of the Society's Newsletter" (PDF). March 2005. Retrieved 12 July 2017.
  253. ^ Adams, M. J.; et al. (1 November 1969). "Structure of Rhombohedral 2 Zinc Insulin Crystals". Nature. 224 (5218): 491–495. Bibcode:1969Natur.224..491A. doi:10.1038/224491a0. S2CID 4216737.
  254. ^ Cochrane, Kira (26 February 2010). "Forty years of women's liberation". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 6 April 2016.
  255. ^ "Our history". Oxford University Hospitals NHS Trust. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
  256. ^ "About Middlebury-CMRS". Middlebury College CRS Oxford Humanites Research Program. Retrieved 14 October 2017.
  257. ^ Jump up to: a b Clapinson, Mary (2015). A Brief History of the Bodleian Library. Oxford: Bodleian Library. ISBN 978-1-85124-273-3.
  258. ^ Mizushima, K.; Jones, P. C.; Wiseman, P. J.; Goodenough, J. B. (June 1980). "LixCoO2 (0<x≪-1): A new cathode material for batteries of high energy density". Materials Research Bulletin. 15 (6): 783–789. doi:10.1016/0025-5408(80)90012-4.
  259. ^ Dronsfield, Alan (January 2011). "Inorganic Chemical Laboratory, Oxford/John Goodenough Landmark Award" (PDF). RSC Historical Group Newsletter. Royal Society of Chemistry: 25–27. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 17 January 2012.
  260. ^ "MRI Scanner (1980)". Oxfordshire Blue Plaques Scheme. Oxfordshire Blue Plaques Board. 2 June 2011. Retrieved 6 January 2012.
  261. ^ "1981 – In brief". Those were the days. Wolverhampton. 1976. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
  262. ^ "RSC honours Oxford University team behind diabetic breakthrough". Royal Society of Chemistry. 16 July 2012. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
  263. ^ Midgley, Emma (9 September 2009). "The story of Helen House". BBC Berkshire. Retrieved 7 September 2013.
  264. ^ "Thatcher snubbed by Oxford dons". On This Day. BBC News. 29 January 1985. Archived from the original on 1 February 2008. Retrieved 29 January 2008. The refusal was opposed by Conservative ex-Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, at this time University Chancellor. David Sturdy in Historic Oxford (Tempus, 2004) pp. 180–1 claims that Macmillan's earlier nomination for an honorary degree was quietly withdrawn as a result of his approving (as Minister of Housing and Local Government up to 1954) demolition of the Clarendon Hotel in Cornmarket around 1955 for a Woolworth store opened in December 1957 and closed in 1983 to accommodate the Clarendon Shopping Centre.
  265. ^ "Teenage genius gets a first". On This Day. BBC News. 4 July 1985. Archived from the original on 7 March 2008. Retrieved 29 January 2008.
  266. ^ Heine, Bill (2011). The Hunting of the Shark. Oxford: Oxfordfolio. ISBN 978-0-9567405-2-6. Archived from the original on 8 December 2015. The sculpture's official name is Untitled 1986.
  267. ^ Clarke, Martin (2006). Radiohead: Hysterical & Useless (3rd ed.). London: Plexus. ISBN 0-85965-383-8.
  268. ^ Barker, Nicolas (25 February 1989). "The death of the OUP Printing House". The Spectator. London: 32. Retrieved 30 April 2018.
  269. ^ "Oxford and Perm – a brief history of the twinning links". Oxford Perm Association. October 2013. Retrieved 6 June 2015.
  270. ^ "Cornmarket Timeline". Cornmarket, Oxford. Retrieved 15 October 2014.
  271. ^ "The Kassam Stadium". The Stadium Guide. Retrieved 6 October 2014.
  272. ^ "Oration by the Senior Proctor". Oxford University Gazette. 27 March 2003. Archived from the original on 5 February 2012. Retrieved 20 October 2014.
  273. ^ "Oxford Central Mosque". Halal Guide. Retrieved 14 July 2016.
  274. ^ "Inscriptions: The Castle". History on the streets of Oxford. 2013. Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  275. ^ Moss, Andrew (2007). "The RI: a medical history". Oxford Today. 17 (3): 14–15.
  276. ^ Paskin, Becky (1 June 2008). "Oxford opening for Oliver". BigHospitality. Retrieved 17 February 2018.
  277. ^ Agreed by its governing body 7 June 2006. Martin, Nicole (8 June 2006). "St Hilda's to end 113-year ban on male students". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 13 September 2010. Amending charter October 2007.
  278. ^ Myers, Andrew (6 January 2011). "Closure of St Bede's Hall, Oxford". Independent Catholic News. Retrieved 5 April 2017.
  279. ^ "Ashmolean Museum opens to public". BBC News. 7 November 2009. Archived from the original on 8 November 2009. Retrieved 8 November 2009.
  280. ^ "Transforming: Transformed". Ashmolean Museum. Archived from the original on 27 May 2014. Retrieved 20 June 2012.
  281. ^ Jenkins, Stephanie (2012). "Ruskin College's move to Headington". Welcome to Headington, Oxford. Retrieved 5 October 2014.
  282. ^ "New footbridge for Pembroke College in Oxford". BBC News. 23 April 2013. Retrieved 19 October 2014.
  283. ^ "John Henry Brookes Building Opening Timeline". Oxford Brookes University. 2014. Archived from the original on 21 October 2014. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
  284. ^ "Harris Manchester College Siew-Sngiem Clock Tower and Sukum Navapan Gate". Knowles & Son. Archived from the original on 20 October 2014. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
  285. ^ "Jubilee Bridge opened at Christ Church, Oxford". Oxford: Christ Church. 30 June 2014. Retrieved 22 October 2014.
  286. ^ "Weston Library opens to academics after £80m revamp". BBC News. Oxford. 29 September 2014. Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  287. ^ "Professor Louise Richardson nominated as next Vice-Chancellor". University of Oxford. 28 May 2015. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
  288. ^ "Declaration of approval of the appointment of a new Vice-Chancellor". Oxford University Gazette. University of Oxford. 25 June 2015. p. 659. Retrieved 28 June 2015.
  289. ^ Keown, Callum (29 October 2015). "Tree planting marks a symbolic step along way to Islamic centre opening". The Oxford Times. p. 3. Retrieved 2 November 2015.
  290. ^ "Male-only bastion ends". The Oxford Times. 6 October 2016. p. 4.
  291. ^ "Oxford explosion". BBC News. Oxford. 15 February 2017. Retrieved 15 February 2017.
  292. ^ "Exeter College holds formal opening of Cohen Quad". Oxford: Exeter College. 20 March 2017. Retrieved 13 August 2018.
  293. ^ "Oxford child sex abuse raids". BBC News. Oxford. 1 April 2017. Retrieved 4 April 2017.
  294. ^ Hughes, Pete (18 October 2017). "Malaysian Sultan and Duchess of Cornwall open new building at Oxford University". The Oxford Times. Retrieved 19 October 2017.
  295. ^ "Peking University to open new Oxford campus". BBC News. Oxford. 9 March 2017. Retrieved 10 March 2017.
  296. ^ "The first college for nearly 30 years planned for Oxford University". BBC News. 20 August 2018. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
  297. ^ Jeffreys, Branwen (19 June 2019). "Oxford University accepts £150m from US private equity boss". BBC News. Retrieved 19 June 2019.
  298. ^ Gallagher, James; Triggle, Nick (30 December 2020). "Covid-19: Oxford-AstraZeneca coronavirus vaccine approved for use in UK". BBC News. Retrieved 30 December 2020.
  299. ^ Flood, Alison (9 June 2021). "Oxford University Press to end centuries of tradition by closing its printing arm". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 10 June 2021.
  300. ^ Ffrench, Andrew (3 April 2019). "Jesus College demolition scheme in Cornmarket reaches new phase". Oxford Mail. Retrieved 24 September 2019.
  301. ^ "Oxford unveils plans for new graduate college". University of Oxford. 7 December 2018. Retrieved 7 December 2018.
  302. ^ "Parks College to benefit from transformational £80 million gift from the Reuben Foundation". Parks College. 11 June 2020. Retrieved 11 June 2020.
  303. ^ Howarth, Janet (2004). "Rogers, Annie Mary Anne Henley (1856–1937)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/35810. Retrieved 8 October 2014. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)

Further reading[]

Books in Merton College Library
  • See also List of books about Oxford

Published before 1800[]

  • David Loggan (1675). Oxonia illustrata. Oxford: at the Sheldonian Theatre.
  • Anthony Wood (1674). Historia et antiquitates Universitatis Oxoniensis. Oxford: at the Sheldonian Theatre.
  • Anthony Wood (1691). Athenæ Oxonienses: an Exact History of all the Writers and Bishops who have had their Education in the University of Oxford from 1500 to 1690. London.

Published in the 19th century[]

Published in the 20th century[]

  • Edward Thomas (1903). Oxford. London: A. & C. Clark.
  • Andrew Lang (1906). Oxford. Boston: Cornhill Publishing Co. OL 13507496M.
  • Cecil Headlam (1907). The story of Oxford. London: Dent & Co. OL 14043719M.
  • Rhoda Murray (1912). The making of Oxford. Oxford: B.H. Blackwell. OL 25402026M.
  • John Betjeman (1938). An Oxford University Chest. London: John Miles.
  • Thomas Sharp (1948). Oxford Replanned. London: Architectural Press.
  • Edward Godfrey Cox (1949). "Cambridge and Oxford". Reference Guide to the Literature of Travel. 3: Great Britain. Seattle: University of Washington. hdl:2027/mdp.39015049531448 – via Hathi Trust.
  • Jan Morris (1965). Oxford. London: Faber.
  • W. N. Hargreaves-Mawdsley (1973). Oxford in the Age of John Locke. Centers of Civilization Series. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. OL 5284855M.
  • Jennifer Sherwood and Nikolaus Pevsner (1974). Oxfordshire. The Buildings of England. Harmondsworth: Penguin. ISBN 0-14-071045-0. "Oxford" by Pevsner.
  • A. R. Woolley (1975). The Clarendon Guide to Oxford (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-951047-4.
  • James Stevens Curl (1977). The Erosion of Oxford. Oxford Illustrated Press. ISBN 0-902280-40-6.
  • Alan Crossley, ed. (1979). A History of the County of Oxford. Vol. 4: The City of Oxford. Victoria County History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0197227147.
  • T. H. Aston, ed. (1984– ). The History of the University of Oxford. Oxford University Press.
  • Christopher Hibbert, ed. (1988). The Encyclopædia of Oxford. London: Macmillan. ISBN 0-333-39917-X.

Published in the 21st century[]

  • Daniel A. Bell; Avner de-Shalit (2011). "Oxford". Spirit of Cities: Why the Identity of a City Matters in a Global Age. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691151441.
  • L. W. B. Brockliss (2016). The University of Oxford: a history. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-924356-3.

External links[]

Coordinates: 51°45′N 1°15′W / 51.750°N 1.250°W / 51.750; -1.250

Retrieved from ""