December 1428 A.D. Buckingham College
Priory, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire—Benedictine Monks; Dependent on Lincolnshire; Dissolved 1540; Refounded 1542 at College of St. Mary
Magdalene; Archbishop Cranmer Appointed
Lecturer, 1515
Buckingham College, Cambridge
From Wikipedia, the free
encyclopedia
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Buckingham College
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Founder
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John Lytlington
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Named after
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Established
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Previously named
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Monks' Hostel
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First Court facing the chapel (left) and the hall
(centre)
Buckingham College is the name of a former college of the University of
Cambridge, that
existed between 1428 and 1542, when it was reformed as Magdalene
College.[1]
Abbot John Lytlington of Crowland
Abbey was licensed by Letters Patent of King Henry VI to acquire a site so that a hostel could be
established in Cambridge for Benedictine student-monks. The Benedictines sited their Monks'
Hostel north of the River Cam at a distance from the temptations of town.
The Benedictine monks began
fine new buildings early in the 1470s. John of Wisbech, Abbot of Crowland,
planned First Court and completed the Chapel. Individual Benedictine abbeys
were invited to provide their own student chambers there. Four local Benedictine
abbeys, Crowland, Ely, Ramsey and Walden, contributed to the college buildings.
As a result of patronage by
the family of Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham, the name of the institution was changed from
Monks' Hostel to Buckingham College (the change is known to have occurred
between 1472 and 1483). Some students who were not monks were admitted and such
lay students would have paid rent to the host abbey whose rooms they occupied.
Thomas Cranmer, later Archbishop of Canterbury, was appointed a
lecturer at Buckingham in 1515. In 1519 Edward Stafford, 3rd Duke of Buckingham built the college Hall.
At the Dissolution
of the Monasteries one of the abbeys involved in the College, Walden, came into the possession
of Thomas, Lord Audley who then refounded Buckingham College as the College of St
Mary Magdalene in 1542. Much of Magdalene's First Court dates from Buckingham College.
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