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Wellington College is a private (English fee-charging) boarding and day school in the village of Crowthorne, Berkshire, England. Wellington is a registered charity [ 1 ] and currently educates roughly 1,100 pupils aged between 13 and 18. [ 2 ]
Wellington College, a fictional liberal arts college, setting of the 2005 novel On Beauty by Zadie Smith; Wellington College, Berkshire, an independent school in Crowthorne, Berkshire, England Wellington College International Shanghai; Wellington College International Tianjin; Wellington College Belfast, a grammar school in Belfast, Northern ...
King's College London, founded in 1829 by King George IV and the Duke of Wellington, is one of the University of London's two founding colleges. Entrance to Imperial College London. Universities are those institutions which hold university status. Key (lower numbers are better): GUG: Guardian University Guide 2025 (published 2024) [5]
This is a list of university colleges in the UK.Institutions included on this list are university colleges that are recognised bodies with their own degree awarding powers; [1] it does not include institutions with "university college" in their title that are listed bodies as parts of a university (see colleges within universities in the United Kingdom), or other institutions with "university ...
This is a category of alumni of Wellington College, Berkshire, England, known as "Old Wellingtonians". The abbreviation OW is sometimes used to indicate this.
Wrekin College is a private co-educational boarding and day school located in Wellington, Shropshire, England. It was founded by Sir John Bayley in 1880. It was founded by Sir John Bayley in 1880. It is now co-located with a preparatory school, The Old Hall School , founded by 1835.
Eton College (/ ˈ iː t ən / ⓘ EE-tən) [3] is a public fee-charging and boarding secondary school for boys aged 13–18, in Eton, Berkshire, England.It has educated prime ministers, world leaders, Nobel laureates, Academy Award and BAFTA award-winning actors, and generations of the aristocracy, and has been referred to as "the nurse of England's statesmen". [4]
The first college at Oxford, University College, was founded in 1249, and the first at Cambridge, Peterhouse, followed in 1284. Over the following centuries, the universities evolved into federations of autonomous colleges, with a small central university body, rather than universities in the common sense.