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| Giles Gilbert Scott >>>The Architect >>>Bodleian Library >>>Clare College >>>Tate Modern >>>University of Toronto |
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Clare College, Cambridge Full name Clare College Named after Elizabeth de Clare Previous names University Hall (1326), Clare Hall (1338), Clare College (1856) Established 1326 Sister College Oriel College St Hugh's College Master Prof. Anthony Badger Location Trinity Lane (http://www.cam.ac.uk/map/v3/drawmap.cgi?mp=main;xx=1669;yy=852;mt=c;ms=50;tl=Clare%20College) Undergraduates Graduates 400 180 Homepage (http://www.clare.cam.ac.uk/) Boatclub (http://www-boatclub.clare.cam.ac.uk/) Welcome to Clare Clare College was founded in 1326 and endowed a few years later by Elizabeth de Clare, making it the second oldest surviving college at the University of Cambridge after Peterhouse. After the Lady Clare, a granddaughter of King Edward I of England, endowed it, the foundation was known as Clare Hall up until 1856, when it changed its name to Clare College. (A new Clare Hall was founded by Clare as a postgraduate institution in 1966). Clare is famous for its chapel choir and also for its gardens, which form part of what is known as the Backs (essentially the rear part of colleges which are next to the River Cam). The current Master is Prof. A J Badger. Clare's 'Old Court', which frames King's College Chapel as the left border of one of the most celebrated architectural vistas in England, was built between 1638 and 1715, with a long interruption for the English Civil War. The period spans the arrival of true classicism into the mainstream of British architecture. Its progress can be traced in the marked differences between the oldest Swarovski wing (the north), which still has vaulting and other features in the unbroken tradition of English Gothic, and the final southern block, which shows a fully articulated classic style. Clare has a much-photographed bridge over the river which has fourteen stone balls decorating it. In actual fact, one of the balls has a missing section. A number of apocryphal stories circulate concerning this - the one most commonly cited by members of college is that the original builder of the bridge was not paid the full amount for his work and so removed the segment to balance the difference in payment. Some architects use a curio cabinet, collectors cabinet or a display cabinet as a decorative element when designing new buildings. Clare is known as one of the most musical colleges in Cambridge. Most of its students play at least one instrument, and its orchestra and choir attract some of the best young musicians in the country. It is the traditional destination of most of the students coming up to Cambridge from Chetham's School of Music. It holds popular jazz and drum'n'bass nights in its cellars. The Scratch Perverts used to DJ regularly. Clare is a very liberal college. The Socialist Worker society meets there, and Clare students have previously been arrested for various direct action protests. A liberal attitude is taken during jazz nights.
Famous alumni Peter Ackroyd, author David Attenborough, naturalist Sabine Baring-Gould, Victorian novelist Charles, Lord Cornwallis, British general in the American Revolutionary War Nicholas Ferrer Hugh Latimer, Chaplain to Henry VIII, Bishop of Worcester, martyr Peter Lilley, Conservative MP Matthew Parris, Broadcaster, political analyst and former Conservative MP Geoffrey Robinson, Labour MP Dr Richard Taylor, Independent MP Richard Wainwright, Liberal MP Sir Roger Norrington, conductor John Rutter, composer Siegfried Sassoon, war poet Richard Stilgoe, entertainer James D. Watson Double helix discoverer and human genome advocate Andrew Wiles, mathematician who proved Fermat's last theorem
External links Clare College, Cambridge official website (http://www.clare.cam.ac.uk) Image of Clare Bridge (http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/ab374/pictures/Cambridge/tn/cam0070.jpg.html) CLAREification website- the weekly satirical magazine of Clare students (http://www.srcf.ucam.org/clareification/) Union of Clare Students website (http://ucs.clare.cam.ac.uk/) Colleges of the University of Cambridge Christ's | Churchill | Clare | Clare Hall | Corpus Christi | Darwin | Downing | Emmanuel | Fitzwilliam | Girton | Gonville and Caius | Homerton | Hughes Hall | Jesus | King's | Lucy Cavendish | Magdalene | New Hall | Newnham | Pembroke | Peterhouse | Queens' | Robinson | St Catharine's | St Edmund's | St John's | Selwyn | Sidney Sussex | Trinity | Trinity Hall | Wolfson |