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* Balliol, especially the Master, [[Andrew Graham (academic)|Andrew Graham]], played a major role in 2000 and 2001 in setting up the [[Oxford Internet Institute]]. This was the world's first multidisciplinary research and policy centre in a university devoted to examining the impact on society of the Internet. It is a department of [[Oxford University]], but is located in Balliol, and its Director is a Professorial Fellow of Balliol.
* Balliol, especially the Master, [[Andrew Graham (academic)|Andrew Graham]], played a major role in 2000 and 2001 in setting up the [[Oxford Internet Institute]]. This was the world's first multidisciplinary research and policy centre in a university devoted to examining the impact on society of the Internet. It is a department of [[Oxford University]], but is located in Balliol, and its Director is a Professorial Fellow of Balliol.

==NEWS: JCR President Death==

Current Balliol JCR President Andrew Mason died 02/05/2007 (February 5th, 2007). As yet it is unclear what was the cause but sources suggest suicide by hanging.


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 02:19, 8 February 2007

For other meanings of Balliol, see Balliol (disambiguation)

Balliol College
Oxford
File:Balliol crest.png
Full nameBalliol College
Established1263
Named forJohn de Balliol
Colours                 
Sister collegeSt John's
HeadAndrew Graham
Undergraduates403
Postgraduates228
WebsiteHomepage
Boat clubBoatclub

Balliol College, founded in 1263, is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom.

Balliol is Oxford's most popular college measured in terms of the number of students who want to enter. In 2005, Balliol had the largest number of applications of any Oxford college from both undergraduate students and from graduate students (for at least the third year running). Balliol also traditionally attracts more international students than the other undergraduate colleges.

Traditionally, the undergraduates are amongst the most politically active in the university, and the college's alumni include several former prime ministers. H. H. Asquith (a Balliol undergraduate and British Prime Minister) once described Balliol men as possessing "the tranquil consciousness of an effortless superiority". During Benjamin Jowett's Mastership in the 19th century, the College rose from its relative obscurity to occupy the first rank of colleges, and indeed continues to play a prominent role. In 2006, 45.1% of its members got First Class Honours degrees, a higher proportion than any other Oxford college has ever achieved, and Balliol was placed second in the Norrington Table.

History

The College was founded in about 1263 (leading many to argue that it is, indeed, the University's oldest college) by John de Balliol under the guidance of the Bishop of Durham. After his death in 1269, his widow, Dervorguilla of Galloway, made arrangements to ensure the permanence of the college. She provided capital, and in 1282, formulated the college statutes, documents that survive to this day.

Student life

The college provides its students with a broad range of facilities, including accommodation, the great hall (refectory), a library, two bars, and separate common rooms for the fellows, the graduates and undergraduates. There are also garden quadrangles and a nearby sportsground and boat-house. The sportsground is mainly used for cricket, tennis, hockey and soccer. The majority of undergraduates are housed within the main college or in the modern annexes around the sportsground. Croquet may be played in the Master's Field, or garden quadrangles in the summer. The graduates are housed mainly within Holywell Manor which has its own bar, gardens, canteen, common room, laundry and computing facilities. Balliol is proud to have a long standing Music Society which organises four free Sunday evening concerts in the College Hall each term. Balliol is the only Oxford college to have its own bridge club.

Balliol also takes pride in its college tortoise, Rosa, named after the notable German Marxist Rosa Luxemburg. Each June, pet tortoises from various Oxford colleges are brought to Corpus Christi College, Oxford where they participate in a very slow race; Balliol's own Rosa has competed and won many times. Taking care of the resident tortoise is one of the many tasks assigned to Balliol students each year. Sadly, Rosa has been missing for over two years now raising the unanswered question of whether she exists any longer.

Balliol students are noted for their left-wing tendencies; the college ethos has been described as "conservatively left-wing". The JCR has had requests for the Sun and News of the World newspapers several times, but each time a majority of students voted against the idea.

Balliol's JCR is noted for being particularly active, providing many services for its members. These range from laundry facilities, one of the few enitrely student run bars in Oxford (the Manager, Lord/Lady Lindsay, is elected each year by students in the JCR) to a cafeteria (known as Pantry) which serves itemised cooked breakfast until 11.30am each day, Lunch 6 days a week, afternoon tea and cakes, and dinner 5 nights a week. Members of the JCR are encouraged to get involved with the running of these facilities.

Traditions and customs

The front of the college in Broad Street.

Along with many of the ancient colleges, Balliol has evolved its own traditions and customs over the centuries, many of which occupy a regular calendar slot.

  • Another important feast in the College calendar is the Snell Dinner (normally held on the Friday of the 3rd week in March). This dinner is held in memory of John Snell, whose benefaction established exhibitions for students from the University of Glasgow to study at Balliol (the first exhibitioners were matriculated in 1699). The feast is attended by fellows of Balliol College, the current Snell Exhibitioners, and representatives from Glasgow University and St John's College, Cambridge.
  • By far the most eccentric is The Nepotists carol-singing event organised by the College's Arnold and Brackenbury society. This event happens on the last Friday of Michaelmas term each year. On this occasion Balliol students congregate in the college hall to enjoy mulled wine and the singing of hymns. The evening ends with a rendition of "The Gordouli" on Broad Street, outside the gates of Trinity College. The Gordouli is an eccentric song written by Balliol students in the 1890s, inspired by (and inspiring) the rivalry between the students of Trinity and Balliol.
  • As with most other Colleges, another tradition is the Betting Book. After formal college meals, the fellows of the college retire to the senior common room. From time to time, the fellows discuss and place small amicable bets on a whole range of issues. Once made, bets are placed in the Book. The Book has existed since at least the 1930s and provides an insight into how famous historical events were perceived by learned people at the time.

The College buildings

Alfred Waterhouse built the main Broad Street frontage of Balliol College, with gateway and tower, known as the Brackenbury Buildings, in 1867-68, as well as the adjoining Master's Lodgings. These replaced earlier structures. The 20th century saw several further additions to the college's buildings.

Many undergraduates and some graduates live in buildings on Jowett Walk, five minutes' walking distance from the main buildings. The majority of graduates, and some fourth-year undergraduates, are housed in the Holywell Manor complex, on Manor Road.

Notable former students

Main article: List of Balliol College people

In common with many Oxford colleges, Balliol has produced a wide range of graduates in the fields of economics, history, law, physiology, medicine, management, humanities, mathematics, science, technology, media, philosophy, poetry, politics, and religion. They have also contributed significantly to public life. Balliol people were, for example, prominent in establishing the International Baccalaureate, the National Trust, the Workers Educational Association, the Welfare State and Amnesty International.

Balliol has produced four Nobel Prize winners: Sir Cyril Norman Hinshelwood (Chemistry), Sir John Hicks (Economics), Baruch S. Blumberg (Medicine), and Anthony J. Leggett (Physics). Seven more have been Fellows of the College: George Beadle (Medicine), Norman Ramsey (Physics), Robert Solow (Economics), John Van Vleck (Physics), Gunnar Myrdal (Economics), and Linus Pauling (both Peace and Chemistry). It has also produced three British Prime Ministers (Edward Heath, H. H. Asquith, and Harold Macmillan), several Archbishops of Canterbury (Tait, Stanley, Morton, Lang, Temple, and Abbott), two cardinals (Heard and Manning), the Guardian of the Bahá'í Faith (Shoghi Effendi), two kings (Olav V and Harald V of Norway) and the most prolific hashish dealer in Britain's history (Howard Marks). Oliver Smithies was awarded the Lasker Prize (America's 'Nobel Prize') in 2001. Sir Peter Morris, a Fellow, became President of the Royal College of Surgeons and George Alberti President of the Royal College of Physicians. Balliol lawyers have also been prominent. Lord Bingham, who read History and has been the College's Visitor for many years, is the Senior Law Lord of the United Kingdom, while Sir Brian Hutton and Alan Rodger have held equivalent positions in Northern Ireland and Scotland at one point all three simultaneously. Literary figures include Graham Greene and Aldous Huxley.

Academics and visiting academics

As with all Colleges, Balliol has a more or less permanent set of teaching staff, known as Fellows. These include both Tutorial Fellows and Professorial Fellows, many of them with international reputations (e.g. Joseph Raz). These are supplemented by academics on short term contracts. In addition, there are distinguished visiting international academics who come to Oxford for periods of up to a year. The official list of current senior members of the College can be found here. There is an incomplete list of Balliol College academics past and present.

Fictional Balliol

Main article: Balliol College in fiction

Balliol has featured in fiction since the 19th century. This may be because it has historically been regarded as the college of the intellectual elite. The college has been regarded as typifying a whole range of attributes for good or ill. On the one hand it is positioned as the ultimate target for any educationally ambitious school boy (or girl - but only relatively recently). It is also selected as the typical college of a superior sort of person. Having placed the fictional character at the college the author may then endorse its academic excellence or alternatively take a swipe at its intellectual pretensions.

Institutes and centres

  • Balliol, especially the Master, Andrew Graham, played a major role in 2000 and 2001 in setting up the Oxford Internet Institute. This was the world's first multidisciplinary research and policy centre in a university devoted to examining the impact on society of the Internet. It is a department of Oxford University, but is located in Balliol, and its Director is a Professorial Fellow of Balliol.

NEWS: JCR President Death

Current Balliol JCR President Andrew Mason died 02/05/2007 (February 5th, 2007). As yet it is unclear what was the cause but sources suggest suicide by hanging.

References