University of Cambridge
The University of Cambridge (informally Cambridge University or simply Cambridge) is a collegiate public research university in Cambridge,England.
Founded in 1209, Cambridge is the second-oldest university in the English-speaking world and the world's fourth-oldest
surviving university. The university grew out of an association of scholars who left
the University of Oxford after a dispute with the townspeople. The
two ancient universities share many common features and are often referred to
jointly as "Oxbridge".
Cambridge is formed from a
variety of institutions which include 31 constituent colleges and over 100 academic departments organised
into six schools. Cambridge University Press, a
department of the university, is the world's oldest publishing house and the
second-largest university press in the world. The university also operates
eight cultural and scientific museums, including the Fitzwilliam Museum, and a botanic garden. Cambridge's libraries hold a
total of around 15 million books, eight million of which are in Cambridge University Library, a legal deposit library.
In the year ended 31 July 2015,
the university had a total income of £1.64 billion, of which £397 million was
from research grants and contracts. The central university and colleges have a
combined endowment of around £5.89 billion, the largest of any university outside the United States. The university is closely linked with
the development of the high-tech business
cluster known
as "Silicon Fen". It is a member of numerous
associations and forms part of the "golden triangle"
of leading English universities and Cambridge University Health
Partners, an academic health science centre.
Cambridge is consistently
ranked as one of the world's best universities. The university has educated many notable alumni,
including eminent mathematicians, scientists, politicians, lawyers, philosophers,
writers, actors, and foreign Heads of State. Ninety-two
Nobel laureates and ten
Fields medalists have
been affiliated with Cambridge as students, faculty, staff or alumni. Throughout its history, the university
has featured in literature and artistic works by numerous authors including Geoffrey
Chaucer, E. M.
Forster and C. P.
Snow.
By the late 12th century, the
Cambridge region already had a scholarly and ecclesiastical reputation, due to
monks from the nearby bishopric church of Ely. However, it was an incident at Oxford which
is most likely to have formed the establishment of the university: two Oxford
scholars were hanged by the town authorities for the death of a woman, without
consulting the ecclesiastical authorities, who would normally take precedence
(and pardon the scholars) in such a case, but were at that time in conflict
with the King John. The
University of Oxford went into suspension in protest, and most scholars moved
to cities such as Paris, Reading, and Cambridge. After the University of Oxford
reformed several years later, enough scholars remained in Cambridge to form the
nucleus of the new university.[18] In order to claim precedence, it is common
for Cambridge to trace its founding to the 1231 charter from King Henry III granting
it the right to discipline its own members (ius non-trahi extra) and an
exemption from some taxes. (Oxford would not receive a similar enhancement
until 1248.)
A bull in 1233 from Pope
Gregory IX gave
graduates from Cambridge the right to teach "everywhere in
Christendom". After
Cambridge was described as a studium
generale in a
letter by Pope
Nicholas IV in
1290, and confirmed as such in a
bull by Pope
John XXII in
1318, it became common for
researchers from other European medieval universities to visit Cambridge to study or to give
lecture courses.
Foundation of the colleges
The colleges at the University
of Cambridge were originally an incidental feature of the system. No college is
as old as the university itself. The colleges were endowed fellowships of
scholars. There were also institutions without endowments, called hostels. The
hostels were gradually absorbed by the colleges over the centuries, but they
have left some indicators of their time, such as the name of Garret Hostel
Lane.
Hugh Balsham, Bishop
of Ely, founded Peterhouse, Cambridge's first college, in 1284. Many
colleges were founded during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, but
colleges continued to be established throughout the centuries to modern times,
although there was a gap of 204 years between the founding of Sidney Sussex in 1596 and Downing in 1800. The most recently established
college is Robinson, built in the late
1970s. However, Homerton College only achieved full university college
status in March 2010, making it the newest full college (it was previously an
"Approved Society" affiliated with the university).
In medieval times, many colleges were founded so that
their members would pray for the souls of the founders, and were often associated with
chapels or abbeys. A
change in the colleges' focus occurred in 1536 with the Dissolution of the Monasteries. King Henry VIII ordered
the university to disband its Faculty of Canon Law and to stop teaching "scholastic philosophy". In response, colleges
changed their curricula away from canon law, and towards the classics, the
Bible, and mathematics.
Nearly a century later, the
university was at the centre of a Protestant schism. Many nobles, intellectuals
and even commoners saw the ways of the Church
of England as
being too similar to the Catholic Church and that it was used by the crown to
usurp the rightful powers of the counties. East
Anglia was the
centre of what became the Puritan movement and at Cambridge, it was
particularly strong at Emmanuel, St Catharine's Hall, Sidney Sussex and Christ's College.They
produced many "non-conformist" graduates who greatly influenced, by
social position or pulpit, the approximately 20,000 Puritans who left for New
England and especially the Massachusetts Bay Colony during the Great Migration decade of the 1630s. Oliver
Cromwell, Parliamentary commander during the English Civil War and head
of the English Commonwealth (1649–1660), attended Sidney
Sussex.







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