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Page "Keble College, Oxford" ¶ 15
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Keble and College
A talented musician, he won the college's organ scholarship in his first term ( he had previously tried for the organ scholarships at St Catharine's College, Cambridge and Keble College, Oxford ) which enabled him to stay at the university for a fourth year ; he eventually graduated with a Second Class Honours BA in Philosophy, Politics and Economics in 1939.
Some of the more prominent members of the association were Dr. G. G. Bradley, Master of University College, T. H. Green, a prominent liberal philosopher and Fellow of Balliol College, and Edward Stuart Talbot, Warden of Keble College.
* Dame Averil Cameron, professor of Late Antique and Byzantine History and former Warden of Keble College
He went on to study music at Keble College, Oxford, serving as organist at Hertford College, but left without taking his degree.
Category: Alumni of Keble College, Oxford
At Oxford, Butterfield designed Keble College, in a style radically divergent from the University's existing traditions of Gothic architecture, its walls boldly striped with various colours of brick.
Keble College Chapel, Oxford
* Keble College, Oxford 1876
Category: Keble College, Oxford
However, it was with his religious paintings that he became famous, initially The Light of the World ( 1851 – 1853, now in the chapel at Keble College, Oxford ; a later version ( 1900 ) toured the world and now has its home in St Paul's Cathedral.
John Keble, a leader of the Oxford Movement, was an undergraduate at Corpus at the start of the nineteenth century, and went on to a fellowship at Oriel and to have a college named after him ( Keble College, Oxford ).
Keble College is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England.
The College itself is named after John Keble, one of Pusey's colleagues in the Oxford Movement, who died four years before its foundation in 1870.
Sir Kenneth Clark recalled that during his Oxford years it was then generally believed in Oxford not only that Keble College was " the ugliest building in the world " but that the buildings had their polychromatic origins in Ruskinian Gothic.
On its construction, Keble was not widely admired within the University, particularly by the undergraduate population of nearby St John's College ( from which Keble had purchased their land ).
Horace Rumpole, the barrister in John Mortimer's books, was a law graduate of Keble College after World War II.
In 2005, Keble College featured in the national UK press when its bursar, Roger Boden, was found guilty of racial discrimination by an employment tribunal.
The College publishes a termly magazine called The Brick which is sent to Keble alumni to update them on College life.

Keble and is
The college is bordered to the north by Keble Road, to the south by Museum Road, and to the west by Blackhall Road.
Keble is one of the larger colleges, with 435 undergraduates and 245 graduate students.
Keble is mentioned in John Betjeman's poem " Myfanwy at Oxford ", as well as in the writings of John Ruskin and in Monty Python's " Travel Agent " sketch.
The Keble Ball is planned by the student committee to coincide with the day-long graduation ceremony in Trinity term week 2.
Keble owns the original of William Holman Hunt's famous painting The Light of the World, which is hung in the side chapel ( accessed through the chapel ).
On Museum Road near Keble College is a further accommodation complex, consisting of the EPA Centre ( constructed in the early 21st century, containing apartment-style accommodation, teaching facilities and the College's archives ) and 12 terraced houses ( the latter officially called Lincoln Hall, but most commonly referred to simply as ' Mus Road ').
In his essay on " Tractarian Aesthetics and the Romantic Tradition ," Gregory Goodwin claims that The Christian Year is " Keble ’ s greatest contribution to the Oxford Movement and to English literature.
He is also an Honorary Fellow of Keble College, Oxford ; an Honorary Fellow of Emmanuel College, Cambridge ; a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature ; and since 1996 a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
As well as being a monument to the Reformation, the memorial is also a landmark of the 19th century Oxford Movement, propagated by John Keble, John Henry Newman and others.
To justify its idea of a via media the Oxford Movement attributed this position to the works of the Elizabethan theologian Richard Hooker and in particular his book Lawes of Ecclesiastical Polity, which is accepted as a founding work on Anglican theology, a view of Hooker promoted by John Keble, who was one of the first to argue that English theology underwent such a " decisive change " in Hooker ’ s hands.
He is an honorary fellow at Keble College, Oxford.
The Christian Year is a series of poems for all the Sundays and some other feasts of the liturgical year of the Church of England written by John Keble in 1827.
Keble is buried at All Saint's Church, Hursley.
Andrea Christofidou is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy at Keble College and Lecturer in Philosophy at Worcester College, Oxford.
William Keble Martin, botanist and botanical illustrator, vicar of Wath, and is also remembered by a streetname, Keble Martin Way

Keble and on
The British government's action in 1833 of beginning a reduction in the number of Church of Ireland bishoprics and archbishoprics inspired a sermon from John Keble in the University Church in Oxford on the subject of " National Apostasy ".
Keble School has in recent years re-erected a similar-style building on the site here.
* Keble, John ( 1912 ) Keble's Lectures on Poetry, 1832-1841 ; translated by Edward Kershaw Francis.
The teams included one made up of students from Keble College, Oxford, which had fielded the winning team in the final 1987 season ; and a graduates team made up of celebrity alumni who had previously starred on the programme as students, including journalist John Simpson and actor Stephen Fry.
Shairp was stirred by Newman's sermons, and he had a great admiration for the poetry of John Keble, on whose character and work he wrote an enthusiastic essay ; but he remained faithful to his Presbyterian upbringing.
In 1836, he won the Newdigate Prize for a poem on " The Knights of St John ," which elicited special praise from John Keble.
In 1875 he was named Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford and in 1876 assumed the new Chair of Chinese Language and Literature at Oxford, where he attracted few students to his lectures but worked hard for some 20 years in his study at 3 Keble Terrace, on his translations of the Chinese classics.
At Oxford he became a close friend of John Keble and John Henry Newman, with whom he collaborated on the Lyra Apostolica, a collection of religious poems.
He spent the winter of 1832 – 33 travelling in the Mediterranean with his father and Newman for the sake of his health ( he suffered from tuberculosis ), contributing on his return to the formation of the Oxford Movement, a group of Christian theologians, inclusing Keble and Newman, who argued for the reinstatement of lost Christian traditions of faith and their inclusion into Anglican liturgy and theology.

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