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Founding provost William de Muskham 1349 1350 John de Hotham: 1350 1361 Henry Whitfield 1361 1377 Thomas de Carlisle 1377 1404 Roger Whelpdale: 1404 1420 Walter Bell 1420 1426 Roland Byres 1426 1432 Thomas Eglesfield 1432 1440 William Spenser 1440 1460 John Pereson 1460 1483 Henry Bost 1483 1487 Previously Provost of Eton College Thomas Langton ...
The full name of the College, as indicated in its annual reports, is The Provost and Scholars of The Queen's College in the University of Oxford. [10] Queens' College in Cambridge positions its apostrophe differently and has no article, as it was named for multiple queens ( Margaret of Anjou and Elizabeth Woodville ).
John de Hotham (or Hodum; died 1361) was an English medieval college head and university chancellor. [1] John de Hotham was Provost of The Queen's College, Oxford, from 1350 to 1361. [2] He was for two periods Chancellor of the University of Oxford between 1357 and 1360. [3] He was buried at Chinnor in Oxfordshire, originally in the chancel of ...
Pages in category "Provosts of the Queen's College, Oxford" The following 31 pages are in this category, out of 31 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Septimus Collinson (11 September 1739 – 24 January 1827) was provost of Queen's College, Oxford. Collinson was the seventh son of Joseph and Agnes Collinson, was born at Gotree, near Hunsonby, Cumberland. He was brought up at Great Musgrave, Westmoreland, where his parents had purchased a small estate.
A Plea for the Study of Theology in the University of Oxford, 1868; Selections from Aristotle’s Organon, 1868, 2nd ed. 1877; Papers on University Reform, 1877 'Queen's College', in Clark's Colleges of Oxford, 1891; The Flemings in Oxford, vol. I 1904, vol. II 1913, vol. III 1924; The Obituary Book of Queen's College, Oxford, 1910
In 1968 he was elected provost of The Queen's College, Oxford, a post he retained until retirement in 1987. On 17 May 1971, on the recommendation of the Prime Minister Edward Heath , Blake was created a life peer as Baron Blake , of Braydeston in the County of Norfolk . [ 5 ]
On 3 December 1756, Browne was elected Provost of Queen's College. [1] From 1759 to 1765 he held the office of Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University . [ 2 ] [ 3 ] He had a severe stroke of palsy 25 March 1765, and died on 17 June 1767.