View allAll Photos Tagged Colleges
The iconic view of the Naval College complex at Greenwich from across the Thames.
The laser light illuminates the path of the Prime Meridian Line across the London sky and originates at the Home of Time, the Royal Observatory behind the College.
ⓒRebecca Bugge, All Rights Reserved
Do not use without permission.
The Great Gate of Christ's College, Cambridge is one of the college's original buildings. The college was actually founded two times, first in the middle of the 15th century (then under the name God's house) and then again in 1505 by Lady Margaret Beaufort, mother of the then king of England. It is her coat of arms that can be seen over the gate. The gate dates to this time. The paint job (which might very well be inspired by how it would have looked back then) is not.
ⓒRebecca Bugge, All Rights Reserved
Do not use without permission.
This college was founded (and this part of the college built) in the 1880s. The style is Victorian Late Perpendicular Gothic Revival (though to my untrained eyes it looks an awful lot like Tudor revival), designed by the architect Sir Arthur Blomfield.
Merton College is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England. Its foundation can be traced back to the 1260s when Walter de Merton, chancellor to Henry III and later to Edward I, first drew up statutes for an independent academic community and established endowments to support it.
ⓒRebecca Bugge, All Rights Reserved
Do not use without permission.
The second quadrangle at Jesus college. This part of the college was begun in 1640, the work was interrupted by the Civil war and resumed again in 1676, and it not completely finished until 1712. It's famous the Dutch gables (which is what that type of 'facade topping' is called).
Carmel College, with extensive buildings and gardens leading down to the River Thames at the village/hamlet of Mongewell in South Oxfordshire, was founded in 1948 as a Jewish boarding school for boys. Since its closure in 1997 and after arguments about the sale of the site and an abuse scandal, little use seems to have been made of the property - much is now seriously derelict - other than as an occasional film & TV location.
The Collège de France, founded in 1530, is a renowned higher education and research establishment (grand établissement) in France and an affiliate college of PSL University. It is located in Paris, in the 5th arrondissement, or Latin Quarter, across the street from the historical campus of La Sorbonne. The Collège is considered to be France's most prestigious research university. As of 2017, 21 Nobel Prize winners and 8 Fields Medalists have been affiliated with the Collège.
This Cambridge college was founded in the 1880s. The style of the whole place is Victorian Late Perpendicular Gothic Revival and it was designed by the architect Sir Arthur Blomfield. The chapel dates to 1895.
ⓒRebecca Bugge, All Rights Reserved
Do not use without permission.
This Cambridge college was founded (and this part of the college built) in the 1880s. The style is Victorian Late Perpendicular Gothic Revival (though to my untrained eyes it looks an awful lot like Tudor revival), designed by the architect Sir Arthur Blomfield.
ⓒRebecca Bugge, All Rights Reserved
Do not use without permission.
Eton College is a 13–18 independent boarding school and sixth form for boys in the parish of Eton, near Windsor in Berkshire.
Oxford University. This college was closed to the public so I took the photo from the entrance arch over the gate. It was open doors weekend in Oxford. Some opened to the public on Saturday and some on Sunday. Our photowalk was on the Sunday so assume this was accessible the previous day.
I like the way the small tree added to the rather elegant architecture of the cloister in Magdalen College in Oxford
The Cloister or Great Quad was built in 1474–80 by William Orchard and has been altered several times down the centuries it has though never lost is medieval charm
THANKS FOR YOUR VISITING BUT CAN I ASK YOU NOT TO FAVE AN IMAGE WITHOUT ALSO MAKING A COMMENT. MANY THANKS KEITH. ANYONE MAKING MULTIPLE FAVES WITHOUT COMMENTS WILL SIMPLY BE BLOCKED
Le Collège franco-britannique est géré par la fondation nationale Cité internationale universitaire de Paris. Le bâtiment a Inauguré le 16 juillet 1937. Il a été créé par Pierre Martin et Maurice Vieu, deux architectes qui furent aussi les auteurs de la Maison des étudiants de l’Asie du Sud-Est. Ils ont imaginé un bâtiment sobre et harmonieux. Son style architectural est ancré dans la tradition britannique des « red brick universities » : brique rouge sombre, toitures à forte pente, pignons éclairés par des bow-windows, baies à meneaux, tourelles pour les escaliers, rappellent les collèges d’outre-Manche.
New College is a historic building at the University of Edinburgh which houses the university's School of Divinity. It is one of the largest and most renowned centres for studies in Theology and Religious Studies in the United Kingdom. Students in M.A., M.Th. and Ph.D. degree programmes come from over 30 countries, and are taught by almost 40 full-time members of the academic staff. New College is situated on The Mound in the north of Edinburgh's Old Town.
New College originally opened its doors in 1846 as a college of the Free Church of Scotland, later of the United Free Church of Scotland, and since 1935 has been the home of the School of Divinity (formerly the Faculty of Divinity) of the University of Edinburgh. As "New College" it continues the historic commitment to offer a programme of academic preparation for ministry in the Church of Scotland, also made use of by ministerial candidates from other churches. In the 1970s the Faculty of Divinity also began offering undergraduate degrees in Theology and Religious Studies, and students in these programmes now make up the majority of the nearly 300 undergraduates enrolled in any given year.
The founding of New College came as a result of a religious conflict that emerged from the Disruption of 1843 in which clergy and laity left the established Church of Scotland to establish the Free Church of Scotland – free from state connections and submitting only to the authority of Christ. New College was established as an institution for the Free Church of Scotland to educate future ministers and the Scottish leadership, who would in turn guide the moral and religious lives of the Scottish people. New College opened its doors to 168 students in November 1843 and, under the guidance of its first principal Thomas Chalmers, oversaw the construction of the current building. A competition for design of the Free High Church and Free Church College was held in 1844 and, though not one of the winners, the design by William Henry Playfair was chosen and built 1845–1850. At the formation of the United Free Church, the United Free Church was granted the buildings, and the continuing Free Church operated from new premises in 1907. This Free Church College was renamed Edinburgh Theological Seminary in 2014.
Eye catching features on The Chanonry, Old Aberdeen. These buildings are much more recent than the street itself, the name coming from the fact that it was once home to the canons (clergy) of St Machar’s Cathedral, which sits at the far end. The college of canons was incorporated as early as 1240, although canons may have lived here longer than that - the nearby church became a cathedral in the 1100s.
One of the buildings on the campus of Montreat College is highlighted on a late Autumn afternoon. This is a private Christian college located just outside of Black Mountain, North Carolina. Montreat was the longtime home of the evangelist Billy Graham.
Super collaboration with my dear girls ♥♥♥
For more details and close-up images, you can visit my BLOG
(no landmarks) feel free to contact me and I'll provide it for you.
XOXO ♥
Any