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Cambridge: the city of crocuses and daffodils on the Backs, of green
open spaces and cattle grazing only 500 yards from the market square.
The Cambridge of Brooke, Byron, Newton and Rutherford, of the summer idyll
of punts, 'bumps', cool willows and May Balls.
Yet
Cambridge was important long before the University existed. Here, at the
meeting of dense forests to the south and trackless, marshy Fens to the
north, was the lowest reliable fording place of the River Cam, or Granta.
In the first century BC an Iron Age Belgic tribe built a settlement on
what is now Castle Hill. Around AD40 the Romans took over the site and
it became the crossing point for the Via Devana which linked Colchester
with the legions in Lincoln and beyond. The Saxons followed, then the
Normans under William the Conqueror, who raised a castle on a steep mound
as a base for fighting the Saxon rebel, Hereward the Wake, deep in the
Fens at Ely. The motte of William's castle still stands and Ely Cathedral
is visible from the top on a clear day.
The first scholars didn't arrive in Cambridge until 1209 and another
75 years passed before Hugh de Balsham, Bishop of Ely, founded Peterhouse,
the first college. Clare (1326), Pembroke (1347), Gonville and Caius (1348),
Trinity Hall (1350) and Corpus Christi (1352) were established in the
first half of the fourteenth century. Ten more colleges were founded during
the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, including Christ's (1505), King's
(1441), Queens' (1448), Jesus (1496), St. John's (1511), Trinity (1546),
and Emmanuel (1584).
Henry VI took nearly a quarter of the medieval city for King's College;
Henry VIII united two existing colleges to make Trinity grand enough to
rival Christ Church in the "Other Place". Women didn't have
a proper college until Girton (founded in 1869) opened in 1873. There
are now thirty one colleges; the latest is Robinson College founded in
1977 by a local millionaire.
The
colleges contain the great architectural treasures of Cambridge. Founded
not by remote bureaucrats, but by kings, queens (Queens' was founded by
two queens), bishops, nobles, guilds and rich widows, they attracted powerful
patrons and large endowments of land and money. Such wealth, plus natural
discrimination, led the colleges to use the best architects - whether
unknown Tudor masons, Sir Christopher Wren or Powell and Moya - to create
beautiful buildings that reflect perfectly 700 years of British architectural
heritage. It is a heritage symbolised by the soaring windows and fan vaults
of King's College Chapel.
As the colleges grew so too did the University with its own fine buildings:
the Old Schools(1350), the Senate House (1722-30), The Pitt Press (1833),
and the University Library (1934). The Fitzwilliam Museum (started in
1834) is only the grandest and most renowned of several excellent University
museums.
And the wheel of change continues to turn: Cambridge is no longer a sleepy
university cum market town.
It is a bustling city of over 109,000 people in the vanguard of the high-technology
revolution. It is a city with many good shops ( the extraordinary variety
and quality of the bookshops is a debt undoubtedly owed to the University),
international conferences, and exciting festivals each summer.
Cambridge is a place to be enjoyed for itself. It is also a centre for
visits: to the cathedrals of Ely and Peterborough; to villages with peaceful
churches and riverside pubs; to the strange flat Fens with the greatest
skies in all England; and to the spectacular wool churches of Lavenham,
Long Melford and Stoke-by-Nayland in the rolling wooded countryside of
Suffolk.
Cambridge is a city to be enjoyed at any time - a City for all Seasons.
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