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Christ's College Cambridge

Christ's College Cambridge

Ahead of you is a broad courtyard with a remarkably round lawn at its heart, framed by those classic Cambridge honey-colored buildings. Look for the white-trimmed windows, the flowers perched on sills, and the little clock turret keeping watch like a polite but judgmental chaperone. If you’re facing the green and spot the ivy-clad frontage on your right, congratulations: you’ve found Christ’s College.

This place has serious pedigree. It all began in 1437, when William Byngham founded a college with a wonderfully blunt name: God’s House. His plan was forward-thinking for the time: train teachers for grammar schools, which were scarce enough in England that you’d brag about finding one. But Cambridge history loves a plot twist. After only a few years, the original site was sold off to King’s College, and the young institution had to relocate and reinvent itself. The big makeover came in 1505, thanks to the formidable Lady Margaret Beaufort, mother of Henry VII, whose generosity turned God’s House into Christ’s College. The name, apparently, was suggested by a bishop who also happened to be Lady Margaret’s personal confessor. Nothing like a spiritual advisor with branding instincts.

As you stroll around this round court, picture the generations who’ve paced these stones before you. Two headline alumni: John Milton, author of Paradise Lost, and Charles Darwin, the father of evolutionary theory. Toss in a healthy number of Nobel Prize winners, and you may feel tempted to inhale deeply-purely for the academic benefits, of course.

The oldest ranges, built between the 1400s and 1500s, wrap around the court: the Great Gate, the Master’s Lodge (that’s the head of the college’s official residence), and the Chapel. The lawn is almost perfectly circular-almost-because students still occasionally attempt the timeless scientific experiment of punting a football from one end to the other. Also, take a look at the main entrance: the gate looks oddly “cut off” at the bottom because the street level has risen over the centuries, leaving the doorway with steps that now go down rather than up.

On the right is the grand dining hall, restored in the 19th century by architect George Gilbert Scott. People still argue in there about philosophy, mathematics, and-inevitably-what’s for dinner. And here’s a quirky local rule: unlike in some colleges, students don’t stand up every time a fellow (that is, a senior academic member of the college) enters or leaves. Supposedly it’s a hard-won tradition dating back to a long-running dispute around the time of the English Civil War. Even Cambridge has its rebellions.

Don’t miss the wisteria curling around the Master’s Lodge. In Second Court you’ll find the Fellows’ Building, put up in the 1640s. Through an arch lies the Fellows’ Garden, home to two mulberry trees-one planted in 1608, the year Milton was born. They’ve survived fierce storms, and though they now lean more than they stand, they still produce fruit every year. Tougher than a PhD thesis.

And Christ’s best secret? A swimming pool. Yes, really: one of the very few historic university pools in England, fed by Hobson’s Conduit, and probably the oldest outdoor pool in the UK, dating to the 17th century.

Christ’s is big on tradition: the Marguerites Club for top athletes, the oldest Boat Club in Cambridge, choirs, drama, and Shakespearean flair during the themed May Balls. Every two years the courts transform into a dreamscape-1920s Paris, Brazilian carnivals, even the Emerald City or A Midsummer Night’s Dream.

So take a look around. You’re standing on centuries of stories, mysteries, and just a dash of brilliant madness. My advice? Don’t try to out-Darwin Darwin. Just enjoy the roundest-and maybe the cleverest-courtyard in Cambridge. If you want more details on the buildings, academics, or student life, open the chat section below and ask away.

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