Once I was a clever boy learning the arts of Oxford... is a quotation from the verses written by Bishop Richard Fleming (c.1385-1431) for his tomb in Lincoln Cathedral. Fleming, the founder of Lincoln College in Oxford, is the subject of my research for a D. Phil., and, like me, a son of the West Riding. I have remarked in the past that I have a deeply meaningful on-going relationship with a dead fifteenth century bishop... it was Fleming who, in effect, enabled me to come to Oxford and to learn its arts, and for that I am immensely grateful.


Thursday, 22 January 2026

Oriel - restoration and renewal



Whilst preparing my post yesterday about the 700th anniversary of the foundation of Oriel College by King Edward II I came upon an online feature by the people who had carried out the very impressive renovation of the College Hall and Chapel in advance of the anniversary.

The range which contains the Hall and Chapel dates from the 1620s and 1630s and, as part of a building which has been continuously occupied and used has seen many changes. The Chapel as we see it now is the result of a late nineteenth century realignment of the west end. The Hall was remodelled in the time of Queen Anne and again in 1911 by Ninian Comper, followed by the introduction of the splendid stained glass with its fine heraldry in the inter-war years.

Under the new scheme the kitchens have been completely replaced, and revealing significant evidence in their foundations of the early defences of Anglo-Saxon Oxford. The rather tired looking entrance and screens passage has been redesigned in a sympathetic way. The Hall has lost its slight sense of faded splendour, having had its panelling cleaned and lightened, the Comper cresting painted to bring out the heraldic and monogram features, and the portraits rearranged and rehung. I see that St John Henry Newman now has pride of place behind the Provost’s chair, beneath the full length eighteenth century portrait of King Edward II.

The one thing that seems to be missing is the Oriel Sword, which can be seen in the photographs of the Hall before the restoration. Whatever its true origins that seems rather a pity to this old Orielensus.

The piece about the renewal with splendid images can be seen at Oriel College Dining Hall → 5th Studio

Wednesday, 21 January 2026

Floreat Oriel


Today is the 700th anniversary of the foundation of Oriel College in Oxford. Oriel is my college, and I am very proud to be part of such a long tradition of scholarship and piety.

It was on this day in 1326 that King Edward II granted a charter to establish it as a new college to the small academic community established in late 1324 which he had taken over from its founder Adam de Brome, rector of St Mary’s church in the High, exactly three weeks earlier. One of the endowments he gave to the college was the rectory of Saint Mary’s, and so it became known as the House of Blessed Mary the Virgin in Oxford, which is still its legal name. In the reign of King James I it gained the suffix of ‘commonly called Oriel College’.

I have sometimes observed that King Edward II’s sole enduring successful action as monarch was the foundation of Oriel. Our “memorable founder”, to quote the college prayer, had a singularly unhappy and unfortunate reign, but Oriel has now survived for seven centuries.



King Edward II
The effigy on his tomb in Gloucester Cathedral

Image: History Jar

It was the first Oxford college to be founded by a monarch, and was often referred to in the medieval period as King’s College or King’s Hall. Nine years earlier, the King had founded King’s Hall in Cambridge for the study of Civil Law, but that was merged in 1546 into King Henry VIII’s new creation of Trinity College. Oriel is, therefore, the oldest royal foundation with a continuous history in either of the ancient universities and the reigning monarch is The Visitor.

In 1326 there were only four existing colleges - University, Balliol, Merton and Exeter - all for graduates, alongside the undergraduate Halls - the solitary survivor being St Edmund Hall - and the friaries and the early Benedictine houses of study. Amongst the colleges Oriel might not be the first in order of foundation, but it was the first college to consistently refer to itself as a college, And therefore, might buy a stretch of terminology seen as the oldest college in the University.

Under the new establishment, the original founder, Adam de Brome, was constituted the first Provost, and spent the remainder of his life adding to the endowments of his new creation. These included the Hospital of St Bartholomew, or Bartlemas, east of Oxford, which served as a summer retreat or as a refuge from the plague, and eventually became, with its surviving medieval chapel, the college sports ground. He was, however, unsuccessful in attempting to seize for the college, the benefaction of the books of Bishop Cobham of Worcester, which went on to become the nucleus of the University Library, later the Bodleian.

Originally based in Tackley’s Inn facing the High, and which is still occupied in part by Oriel students, and establishing the old rectory house as St Mary’s Hall for undergraduates, and which in 1902 merged into Oriel and is buildings became St Mary’s or Third Quad it was not until 1329 that the new college acquired the adjacent house that gave its usual name. In that year its owner Master James of Spain, the illegitimate son of a brother of King Edward II’s mother Queen Eleanor of Castile, and a distinguished musical scholar, born in England, made over to the college the house called ‘La Oriole’. This was probably the largest private house in the town centre and arranged around a courtyard which lies under the early seventeenth century Front Quod. 

Oriel has formed the lives and careers of many over the seven centuries - the great and the good, the not so great and the not so good, clergy, writers, philosophers and theologians, historians, Nobel Prize winners, VCs, eccentrics and humourists, two cardinals, some sinners, some martyrs and Saints. 

What struck me as a member was its sense of community, created from a very diverse group of students - and Fellows - who melded together, and stood by one another. It was not a college that was just a one subject place, not just relentlessly hearty and sporty, not just abstrusely academic, but rather a community that was uniquely itself, a place to be a part of, to make friends, a place to belong.

When I used to show visitors around the college I used to conclude by saying that Oriel is not quite the oldest, not the largest, and indeed the second smallest, of the undergraduate colleges, not the wealthiest, but not the poorest, not necessarily the most successful academically, even if more often than not it is in rowing, but it is simply the best college.


The coat of arms of Oriel

Image: Oriel Alumni

Floreat Oriel!

Tuesday, 20 January 2026

Mad dogs and Romans go out in the midday Egyptian sun


I wrote a while ago in A Roman sunhat about the exceptional survival of what is recognised as Roman military sun hat discovered in Egypt and now, due to its being a textile in the Museum at Bolton. Having once visited Egypt during the autumn I can confirm the comfort and utility of such a covering to protect the head from scorching.



This is the end of this thread, but I will probably do others on the Roman theme as I find stories that I think are worth sharing.

Jerash


Art Net recently had an article about the very impressive ruins of the Roman city of Jerash, which lie close to Amman in Jordan.

The article, which has some excellent illustrations can be seen at The Forgotten Roman Ruins of the ‘Pompeii of the Middle East’


The House of the Griffins


Art Net has a recent article about the conservation of the House of the Griffins which dates from the first century BC, and is on the slopes of the Palatine Hill in Rome. It remains an extremely well preserved site, because the house was absorbed into the complex of the Imperial Palace and, whilst losing its upper floors, the basement survived having been filled with earth to support Domitian’s extension above it.

The restored building will open at the beginning of March and includes the latest technology to facilitate virtual visits to inaccessible parts.

The history of the building and the modern project can be viewed at Long-Buried Roman Domus Opens to Public—With a High-Tech Twist




Caesarea Maritima


A regular reader shared with me an online article from the Daily Mail about the ruins of Caesarea Maritima, the Roman era port on the coast of the Holy Land, and one of those sites where the archaeology of the Empire meets the archaeology and texts of the New Testament.

Cleaning and restoring the column of Marcus Aurelius in Rome


Although it is not perhaps as well known as that of Trajan the column of Marcus Aurelius in Rome is a marvellous survival of a celebration of the life and military achievements of a great second century Emperor. 

An online article and video about the current restoration project for the column from the Daily Telegraph website can be seen at Rome’s brutal imperial past brought back to life in restored 1,800-year-old column

A carriage workshop on the Via Claudia Augusta


A recent excavation by Italian archaeologists has uncovered a carriage workshop alongside the Via Claudia Augusta, the road which linked Italy to Innsbruck and Munich. This roadside repair outfit is described in an article from Popular Mechanics at Archaeologists Discovered the Remains of an Ancient Roman Mechanic Shop