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Christ's College, Cambridge

Christ's College
Christ's College First Court, Cambridge, UK - Diliff.jpg
First Court, Christ's College
Christs shield.png
Arms of Christ's College, being the arms of the foundress Lady Margaret Beaufort: Royal arms of England a bordure componée azure and argent
University University of Cambridge
Location St Andrew's Street (map)
Motto Souvent me Souvient (Old French)
Motto in English I often remember
Founders William Byngham (1437);
King Henry VI (1448);
Lady Margaret Beaufort (1505)
Established 1437,
Refounded 1505
Named for Jesus Christ
Previous names God's House (1437–1505)
Sister colleges Wadham College, Oxford
Branford College, Yale
Adams House, Harvard
Master Jane Stapleton
Undergraduates 450
Postgraduates 170
Website www.christs.cam.ac.uk
JCR www.thejcr.co.uk
MCR www.christsmcr.co.uk
Boat club www.christs.cam.ac.uk/boatclub/

Christ's College is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge. The college includes the Master, the Fellows of the College, and about 450 undergraduate and 170 graduate students. The college was founded by Lady Margaret Beaufort in 1505, its royal charter granted on 1 May of that year, and was the twelfth of the Cambridge colleges to be founded in its current form. It was originally established as God's House in 1437. The college is renowned for educating some of Cambridge's most famous alumni, including Charles Darwin and John Milton.

Within Cambridge, Christ's has a reputation for strong academic performance and tutorial support. It has averaged 1st place on the Tompkins Table from 1980–2006 and third place from 2006 to 2013.

As of 2013, it had an endowment of £138 million, making it one of the wealthier colleges in Cambridge.

Christ's College was originally founded by William Byngham in 1437 as God's House, on land which was soon after sold to enable the enlargement of King's College. Byngham obtained the first royal licence for God's House in July 1439. Originally, the college was founded to provide for the lack of grammar-school masters in England at the time, and the college has been described as "the first secondary-school training college on record". The original site of Godshouse was surrendered in 1443 to King's College, and currently about three quarters of King's College Chapel stands on the original site of God's House.

After the original royal licence of 1439, three more licenses, two in 1442 and one in 1446, were granted before in 1448 God's House received the charter upon which the college was in fact founded. In this charter, King Henry VI was named as the founder, and in the same year the college moved to its current site.

In 1505, the college was endowed by Lady Margaret Beaufort, mother of King Henry VII, and was given the name Christ's College, perhaps at the suggestion of her confessor, the Bishop John Fisher. The expansion in the population of the college in the seventeenth century led to the building, in the 1640s, of the Fellow's Building in what is now Second Court.


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