The Queen’s College Oxford was founded in 1341 ‘under the name of the Hall of the Queen’s scholars of Oxford\u27 by the endowment of Robert de Eglesfield. The queen in question was Queen Philippa of Hainault, consort of King Edward III of England: Robert Eglesfield, who became Provost of the college, was her chaplain. The college statutes contain one tantalising passage that might or might not refer to something that we would regard as academic dress, which is contained in and discussed in the article. [Excerpt]
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300-level Award Recipient for 2014. Paper written for course: ENG 325, Advanced Studies in Sixteenth...
The new Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, published to great acclaim in 2004, contains over 5...
Throughout the ‘long’ eighteenth century undergraduates at Oxford and Cambridge were differentiated ...
A book generated from a selection of papers given at the 2014 Costume Colloquium conference in Flore...
Queen Elizabeth I is one of the most documented and iconic Queens recorded in British history. Histo...
From time to time, various writers on the subject, Franklyn included, put out a call for a ‘national...
Following the very successful study day in Cambridge in November 2003, a similar event was held in O...
If one now looks back at the regulations as proposed, the evidence clearly points towards the intent...
This is a study of a one-page manuscript in the Oxford University Archives with the title ‘Different...
The clothing and style of wig in a portrait of an Oxford nobleman hanging in Hatfield House, Hertfor...
Le titre prévu par l'auteur est 'Elizabeth I, Dido and Oxford: Staging Power in the University Dram...
Elizabeth I is England’s most iconic queen. Born to Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn and declared illegiti...
Everybody knows that doctors wear scarlet, at least on red-letter days. Many are aware that, in addi...
Eleanor of Provence was probably just 12 years old when she arrived in England in 1236 to marry Henr...
During two particular decades of her reign—the 1560s and the 1590s—Queen Elizabeth I strategically a...
300-level Award Recipient for 2014. Paper written for course: ENG 325, Advanced Studies in Sixteenth...
The new Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, published to great acclaim in 2004, contains over 5...
Throughout the ‘long’ eighteenth century undergraduates at Oxford and Cambridge were differentiated ...
A book generated from a selection of papers given at the 2014 Costume Colloquium conference in Flore...
Queen Elizabeth I is one of the most documented and iconic Queens recorded in British history. Histo...
From time to time, various writers on the subject, Franklyn included, put out a call for a ‘national...
Following the very successful study day in Cambridge in November 2003, a similar event was held in O...
If one now looks back at the regulations as proposed, the evidence clearly points towards the intent...
This is a study of a one-page manuscript in the Oxford University Archives with the title ‘Different...
The clothing and style of wig in a portrait of an Oxford nobleman hanging in Hatfield House, Hertfor...
Le titre prévu par l'auteur est 'Elizabeth I, Dido and Oxford: Staging Power in the University Dram...
Elizabeth I is England’s most iconic queen. Born to Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn and declared illegiti...
Everybody knows that doctors wear scarlet, at least on red-letter days. Many are aware that, in addi...
Eleanor of Provence was probably just 12 years old when she arrived in England in 1236 to marry Henr...
During two particular decades of her reign—the 1560s and the 1590s—Queen Elizabeth I strategically a...