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25 : Part 23
2507-9745
DAY23
- 100km(1 20 )- Cambridge -100km(1 20 )-
2:00
Kidnapped in London1896
Gray Inn, Holborn Street 10 11
Portland Street 49 George Cole Howe
James Cantlie
1879 7 1 8
16
1900 9 28
1900 10 6
Darwin
31 (College)6 (School, Arts and Humanities, Biological Sciences, Clinical Medicine, Humanities and
Social Sciences, Physical Sciences, and Technology.) Christ's College(1505)Churchill
College(1960)Clare College( 1326)Clare Hall( 1965)Corpus Christi College(1352)Darwin College(1964)Downing
College(1800)Emmanuel College(1584)Fitzwilliam College(1869)Girton College(1869)Gonville & Caius College(1348)Homerton
College(1768)Hughes Hall(1885)Jesus College(1496)King's College(1441)Lucy Cavendish College( 1965)Magdalene
College(1428)Murray Edwards College(1954)Newnham College(1871)Pembroke College(1347)Peterhouse(
1284)Queens' College(1448)Robinson College(1979)Selwyn College(1882)Sidney Sussex College(1596)St Catharine's
College(1473)St Edmund's College(1896)St John's College(1511)Trinity College(1546)Trinity Hall(1350)Wolfson College(1965)
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River Cam
1928 :
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King's College
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Fleur-de-lis ()
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Aesulapius.
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1865 1972
John Maynard Keynes
EM Forster
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Scott's building
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fan vault 22 1515
26 24 16
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1634 (The Adoration of the Magi)
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BBC
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1949
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High Table ( )
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Wren Library
( 17 )( 16
)
A
Herbert Mayow Adams (Brass)John Frank Adams (Brass)Edgar Douglas Adrian (Brass)Richard Appleton (academic) (Brass)
William Joscelyn Arkell (Brass)Francis William Aston (Brass)
B
Humphrey Babington (Interment)Thomas BabingtonLord Macaulay (Statue)Francis Bacon (Statue)Thomas Bainbrig (Interment)
Francis Maitland Balfour (Brass)Isaac Barrow (Statue)Edward Bathurst (Interment)John Beaumont (Interment)William John
Beaumont (Beamont) (Interment)Edward White Benson (Brass)Richard Bentley (Interment)Abram Samoilovitch
Besicovitch (Brass)Anthony Ashley Bevan (Brass)Alfred Maurice Binnie (Brass)Maurice Black (Brass)Edward William Blore (Brass /
Interment)Anchitel Harry Fletcher Boughey (Brass)William Lawrence Bragg (Brass)Daniel Bratteli (Interment)Charlie Dunbar
Broad (Brass)Benjamin Chapman Browne (Brass)Isaac Hawkins Browne (Sculpture)John[?] Browning (Interment)Francis Crawford
Burkitt (Brass)Robert Burn (Brass)
John Burnaby (Brass)Samuel Henry Butcher (Brass)Henry Montagu Butler (Brass)James Ramsay Montagu Butler (Brass)Richard
Austen Butler (Brass)
33
: Francis Bacon (1561-1626) was the 1st Viscount St Alban, known as the father of empiricism and first modern philosopher and theorist.
Admitted to Trinity at just thirteen years old, while an undergraduate he first met Queen Elizabeth, who was impressed by his precocious
intellect, and was accustomed to calling him the young Lord Keeper. Thomas Jefferson wrote: Bacon, Locke and Newton; I consider them as
the three greatest men that have ever lived, without any exception, and as having laid the foundation of those superstructures which have been
raised in the Physical and Moral sciences. (John Locke studied at Trinitys sister college, Christ Church, Oxford.) Bacon was Lord Chancellor
1618-21. Bacon's death from pneumonia was described in John Aubrey's "Brief Lives" as the result of his idea of using snow to preserve meat.
This statue, a copy of one at Gorhambury in Hertfordshire, claims to depict the way Bacon sat. The sculpture is very fine, realistically depicting
the fur and lace of his clothes; in places the marble is thin enough to be translucent. Sculptor: Henry Weekes, 1845
: Isaac Barrow (1630-77) distinguished himself in Classics, Mathematics and Divinity. He was appointed Regius Professor of Greek three
years before becoming the first Lucasian professor of Mathematics an illustration of the way the elements of the quadrivium were closely
connected in the seventeenth century. Best known for his discovery of the fundamental theorem of calculus, Barrow resigned the Lucasian chair
in favour of his pupil Isaac Newton, and devoted the rest of his life to theology writing and preaching and to being the Master of Trinity (167277) who commissioned the Wren Library. The statue of Barrow was commissioned in preference to one of Richard Bentley, who was
a moreinfluential but also highly controversial Master. The foremost scholar and textual critic of his day, Bentley was regarded, together with
Newton, as one of the intellectual founders of Trinity, but as Master he ruled like an irresponsible despot. The statues of Bacon and Barrow
were given by William Whewell. Sculptor: Matthew Noble, 1858
C
John Walton Capstick (Brass)Edward Hallett Carr (Brass)Arthur Cayley (Brass)George Chare (Sculpture / Interment)George Sidney
Roberts Kitson Clark (Brass)John Willis Clark (Brass)Gerard Francis Cobb (Brass)Patrick Cock (Interment)Nathanael
Cole (Interment)
John Cooper (Interment)William Corker (Interment)Francis MacDonald Cornford (Brass)Roger Robert Cotes (Sculpture)Peter
Courthope (Interment)William Cunningham (Brass)
D
Henry Hallett Dale (Brass)William Cecil Dampier Dampier (Brass)George Howard Darwin (Brass)Harold Davenport (Brass)John
Davies (Sculpture)Basil Denis Dennis-Jones (Sculpture)Maurice Herbert Dobb (Brass)Peter Paul Dobree (Sculpture)William
Drury (Interment)James Duff Duff (Brass)Patrick William Duff (Brass)Frederick James Dykes (Brass)
E
Arthur Stanley Eddington (Brass)Henry Outram Evennett (Brass)
F
The inscription under Lord Macaulays statue, by Thomas Woolner (1868), one of the best of the many specimens of elegant Latinity on the
memorials, contains the appropriate words Qui primus annales ita scripsit ut vera fictis libentius legerentur (He was the first to write history in
such a way that the true facts might be read with more pleasure than fiction). He was the author of the Lays of Ancient Rome, which contains
the lines, memorised by many schoolchildren: Then out spake brave Horatius, / The Captain of the Gate: / 'To every man upon this earth / Death
cometh soon or late. / And how can man die better / Than facing fearful odds, / For the ashes of his fathers, / And the temples of his Gods'.
35
Isaac Newton (Statue)Tressilian Charles Nicholas (Brass)Reynold Alleyne Nicholson (Brass)John North (Interment)
Louis-Franois Roubiliacs 1755 statue of Isaac Newton, presented to the Ante-Chapel by the Master Robert Smith, is the finest work of art in
the College, as well as the most moving and significant. The lips parted and the eyes turned up in thought give life to marble. The
inscription, Qui genus humanum ingenio superavit, is a pun ennobled by its truth. This inscription is a quotation from the third book of
LucretiussDe rerum natura, meaning in intellect he surpassed / survived the human race. Newton (1642-1727) was the greatest English
mathematician of his generation. Developing his teacher Isaac Barrows work he laid the foundation for differential and integral calculus. His
work on optics and gravitation make him one of the greatest scientists the world has known. His 1687 book Philosophi Naturalis Principia
Mathematica lays the foundations for most of classical mechanics. He also excelled in the realms of astronomy, natural philosophy, alchemy,
and somewhat unorthodox theology. Newton is buried in Westminster Abbey.
O
Charles William Oatley (Brass)
P
Carl Frederick Abel Pantin (Brass)Reginald St John Parry (Brass)Alfred Chilton Pearson (Brass)Richard Porson (Sculpture /
Interment)John Percival Postgate (Brass)Joseph Prior (Brass)Mark Gillachrist Marlborough Pryor (Brass)
R
Srinavasa Ramanujan (Brass)Robert Mantle Rattenbury (Brass)Dennis Holme Robertson (Brass)Donald Struan
Robertson (Brass)John Arthur Thomas Robinson (Brass)Robert Robson (Brass)Thomas Rotherham (Interment)Francis John
Worsley Roughton (Brass)Walter William Rouse Ball (Brass)William Albert Hugh Rushton (Brass)Bertrand Russell (Brass)Ernest
Rutherford (Brass)Martin Ryle (Brass)
S
Thomas Slater (Interment)Francis Henry Sandbach (Brass)Thomas Secford (Interment)Adam Sedgwick (Brass / Interment)Thomas
Kynaston Selwyn (Sculpture)Richard Sheepshanks (Sculpture)Henry Sidgwick (Brass)Frederick Arthur Simpson (Brass)Elizmar
Smith (Brass)Robert Smith (Interment)Thomas Smith (Interment)James Spedding (Sculpture)Piero Sraffa (Brass)Charles Villiers
Stanford (Brass)Vincent Henry Stanton (Brass)Richard Stevenson (Sculpture)Hugo Fraser Stewart (Brass)James Stuart (Brass)
T
Henry Martyn Taylor (Brass)Sedley Taylor (Brass)Frederick Robert Tennant (Brass)Alfred, Lord Tennyson (Statue)Arthur
Thacker (Interment)William Hepworth Thompson (Brass / Interment)Joseph John Thomson (Brass)Thomas Thorp (Brass)George
Macaulay Trevelyan (Brass)Coutts Trotter (Brass)
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:In the bas-relief of the statue of the poet Alfred, Lord Tennyson (1809-92) a pipe bowl lies half-hidden among the laurel wreaths; children
always delight in its discovery. It was put there by a secret conspiracy between the sculptor Thornycroft and the donor Harry Yates Thompson, a
life-long friend of the then Master Montagu Butler, who was well aware of the Masters dislike of the nasty habit of smoking. Tennyson won the
Chancellor's Medal for poetry, but left Trinity without a degree, owing to his father's illness. The much-quoted Tennyson was the author of The
Charge of the Light Brigade, Crossing the Bar, and In Memoriam, which he wrote to commemorate his friend Arthur Hallam, another Trinity poet,
and which contains the immortal lines Tis better to have loved and lost / Than never to have loved at all. Verse 87 is a nostalgic sketch of life at
Trinity. Sculptor: Sir Hamo Thornycroft, 1909
: statue of Alfred, Lord Tennyson
U
Walter Ullmann (Brass)
V
Ralph Vaughan Williams (Brass)Arthur Woollgar Verrall (Brass)John Michal Kenneth Vyvyan (Brass)
W
Thomas Attwood Walmisley (Brass)Edward Walpole (Interment)James Ward (Brass)Brooke Foss Westcott (Brass)William
Whewell (Statue / Interment)Stephen Whisson (Interment)Alfred North Whitehead (Brass)John Willis Clark (Brass)John
Wilson (Interment)Denys Arthur Winstanley (Brass)Carl Winter (Brass)Arthur John Terence Dibben Wisdom (Brass)Ludwig
Wittgenstein (Brass)John Wordsworth (Sculpture / Interment)William Aldis Wright (Brass)
37
William Whewell (1794-1866) spent his whole adult life at Trinity, coming up as an Exhibitioner in 1812, and dying as Master in 1866, after falling
from a horse. He was Professor of Mineralogy, and subsequently of Philosophy (then called moral theology and casuistical divinity), and
endowed a chair of international law; he was also interested in architecture and, having presciently bought the land, he signed the contract for,
and contributed financially to, the Gothic courts east of Trinity Street named in his honour but built in the worst period of Victorian
architecture. He is chiefly remembered for his encouragement of the study of the moral and natural sciences; he also coined many scientific
terms, including the word scientist. As well as being a polymath with a prodigious memory, Whewell was as powerful physically as his statue
suggests. It is a well-authenticated Trinity tradition that Whewell, when Master, jumped up the Hall steps at one leap, a feat that is very seldom
accomplished even by youthful athletes. Sculptor: Thomas Woolner, 1872
1673
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1599Oliver Cromwell
1642Isaac Newton, 1755 Louis Franois Roubiliac Isaac Burrow
1607John Harvard
1608John Milton
1731Henry Cavendish
1759William Wilberforce
1770William Wordsworth
1788Lord Byron
1809Alfred Tennyson
1809Charles Darwin
1871Ernest Rutherford
1883John Maynard Keynes
1897
1934 :
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Lady Margaret Beaufort1512
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Scott
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Trinity Lane
Mitre
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Master's Lodge
William Gilbert
gilbert
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Bridge of Sighs
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Bridge of Sighs
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River Cam bridge Cambridge
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King's Bridge
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College Chapel
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Clare Bridge
1640 Clare College bridge, Parliamentarian forces
()
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Queens'
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15 Old Hall
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Cripps Court :
1473
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William Wotton1666
Salisbury Cathedral :
Salisbury Cathedral
The four Virgins St. Lucy with lamp and dagger, St. Agatha with the pincers of her torture, St. Agnes with
lamb, St. Cecilia with organ
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Salisbury Cathedral
CloisterChapter House Elias de Derham 95
2012 30 (2013 )
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2012 Stadium
Orbit
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East End
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L'Italiano
PARK PLAZA COUNTY HALL LONDON