Oxford Re-Formed

Title

Oxford Re-Formed

Description

How has the Reformation been commemorated, forgotten, or re-imagined in Oxford over the past five hundred years? We first began thinking about this question when we noticed a memorial on Oxford’s High Street that surprised us. On the front of Oriel College’s Rhodes Building, opened in 1911, is a statue of Cardinal William Allen. A fierce enemy of Queen Elizabeth I, Allen spent his life trying to undo the Protestant Reformation in England. He set up schools and seminaries in Europe to train priests and encouraged English Catholics to rebel against their queen by aiding the Spanish Armada in 1588. Why was a statue of this exceptionally controversial figure put up in the centre of early twentieth-century Oxford?

Allen was, for a short time, head of St Mary’s Hall which was incorporated into Oriel in 1902; so, his statue signals continuity with the disappearing pre-Reformation past, especially as the College’s surviving medieval quadrangle was demolished to make room for the Rhodes Building. But, as we have discovered, this is not the whole story. The statue also reflects the many dramatic changes in Oxford since the sixteenth-century Reformations. It evokes the nineteenth-century Oxford Movement which sought to return the English Church to its pre-Reformation past and which began at Oriel, led by another English Cardinal, John Henry Newman. Paid for out of the profits of Empire, the Rhodes building is a testament to the transformation of Oxford through the processes of colonialism. As such, it also foreshadows the arrival and expansion of communities of different faiths in the City and University in the twentieth century. As debates about the weight of the past on the present have gripped Oxford and the wider world, this exhibition takes a long view of the contested memories of the Reformation in this history-making city. ‘Oxford Re-Formed’ traces how from being a Catholic and then a Protestant stronghold, the City and the University have become a home for diverse communities of all faiths and none.

Curated by Christopher Archibald (Faculty of English, New College), Anna Clark (Faculty of History, St John's College), Susan Doran (Faculty of History, Jesus College and St Benet’s Hall), Paulina Kewes (Faculty of English, Jesus College), and William Whyte (Faculty of History, St John's College)

Generously supported by Jesus College Oxford and the Faculty of History, University of Oxford, and by the team at the Museum of Oxford.

Publisher

Museum of Oxford

Rights

All reasonable efforts have been made to obtain permission from copyright holders. If you are rights holder and are concerned that you have found material on our website for which you have not given permission, we will of course remove it. 

Collection Items

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Oxford celebrates Chanukah, 2021
Chanukah 2021 celebrations in Broad Street, Oxford.Return to exhibition

Lakshman Sarup
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Ernst Chain (1906-1979)
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Louise Richardson, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford
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Missionaries were not just sent out from Oxford; they also sent things back. These included collections of material created by and for indigenous religions. Such objects provided a record of what Christians had encountered and apparent proof of the…

Christopher Patten, Lord Patten of Barnes, Chancellor of the University of Oxford
Lord Patten of Barns is the the first Catholic to hold the position of Chancellor of the University of Oxford since 1558.Return to exhibition
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