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A History of the University of Cambridge

A History of the University of Cambridge

A History of the University of Cambridge

Volume 3: 1750–1870
Peter Searby , University of Cambridge
November 1997
3. 1750–1870
Available
Hardback
9780521350600

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£165.00
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Hardback

    Cambridge in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries was a place of sharp contrasts. At one extreme a gifted minority studied mathematics intensively for the Tripos, the honours degree. At the other, most undergraduates faced meagre academic demands and might idle their time away. The dons, the fellows of the colleges that constituted the University, were chosen for their Tripos performance and included scholars of international reputation such as Whewell and Sidgwick, but also men who treated their fellowships as sinecures. A pillar of the Church of England that denied membership to non-Anglicans, the University functioned largely as a seminary, while teaching more mathematics than theology. This volume describes the complex institution of the University, and also the beginnings of its transformation after 1850 - under the pressure of public opinion and the State - into the University as it exists today: inclusive in its membership, diverse in its curricula, and staffed by committed scholars and teachers.

    • The latest in a major four-volume series on the history of the University of Cambridge
    • Tackles the great educational and social changes and reforms of the nineteenth century more thoroughly than ever before
    • Includes new material on the origins of boating and ball-game traditions, including the annual Boat Race

    Reviews & endorsements

    'Peter Searby … admirably meets the challenge of describing the transition from 'unreformed Cambridge' to something beginning to display recognizable marks of the University as it exists today. This is full of rich and fascinating detail … wide-ranging study …'. The Times Literary Supplement

    '… a surefooted account of the university's response to the upheavals generated by the revolutionary climate of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries and by the movement for reform which followed it … it illuminates not only the history of a particular university but also that of the period more generally.' Economic History Review

    See more reviews

    Product details

    November 1997
    Hardback
    9780521350600
    815 pages
    235 × 163 × 52 mm
    1.415kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • General editor's preface
    • Introduction
    • 1. Townscape and University: topographical change
    • 2. The University: its constitution, personnel and tasks
    • 3. Colleges: buildings, masters and fellows
    • 4. Colleges: tutors, bursars and money
    • 5. Mathematics, law and medicine
    • 6. Science and other studies
    • 7. Religion in the University: its rituals and significance
    • 8. The orthodox and latitudinarian traditions, 1700–1800
    • 9. Cambridge religion 1780–1840: evangelicanism
    • 10. Cambridge religion: the mid-Victorian years
    • 1. The University as a political institution, 1750–1815
    • 12. The background to University reform, 1830–50
    • 13. Cambridge and reform, 1815–1870
    • 14. The Graham Commission and its aftermath
    • 15. The undergraduate experience, I: Philip Yorke and the Wordsworths
    • 16. The undergraduate experience, II: Charles Astor Bristed and William Everett
    • 17. The undergraduate experience, III: William Thomson
    • 18. Games for gownsmen: walking, athletics, boating and ball games
    • 19. Leisure for town and gown: music, debating and drama
    • Appendices
    • Bibliography.
      Author
    • Peter Searby , University of Cambridge