Linacre College | ||||||||
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University of Oxford | ||||||||
Location | St Cross Road | |||||||
Coordinates | 51°45′34″N 1°14′59″W / 51.75935°N 1.24984°W | |||||||
Motto | No End To Learning | |||||||
Established | 1962 | |||||||
Named after | Thomas Linacre | |||||||
Previous names | Linacre House (until 1965) | |||||||
Sister college | Hughes Hall, Cambridge | |||||||
Principal | Nick Brown | |||||||
Undergraduates | None | |||||||
Postgraduates | 550 | |||||||
Grace | Benedictus benedicat | |||||||
Endowment | £19.0 million (2020)[1] | |||||||
Website | www | |||||||
Boat club | Linacre College Boat Club | |||||||
Map | ||||||||
Linacre College is a constituent college of the University of Oxford in the UK whose members comprise approximately 50 fellows and 550 postgraduate students.
Linacre is a diverse college in terms of both the international composition of its members (the majority of whom are from outside the UK and have come from over 133 countries), as well as the disciplines studied. Linacre was the first graduate college in the UK for both sexes and all subjects. Unlike most colleges, students and fellows share the same common room and there is no high table.
The college was founded in 1962 and is named after Thomas Linacre (1460–1524), founder of the Royal College of Physicians as well as a distinguished renaissance humanist — multidisciplinary interests that the college aims to reflect.
The college is located on St Cross Road at its junction with South Parks Road, bordering University Parks to the north and the University Science Area to the west.