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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  



1.1  Founding and early years  





1.2  Gresham College today  







2 Professors  





3 Gresham Special Lecture series  





4 Excerpts from the Last Will of Sir Thomas Gresham (1575)  





5 See also  





6 Notes  





7 References  





8 External links  














Gresham College: Difference between revisions






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Coordinates: 51°3103N 0°0635W / 51.5175°N 0.1098°W / 51.5175; -0.1098

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==Professors==

==Professors==

[[File:Gresham College, 1740.jpg|thumb|upright=1.9|Gresham College, engraving by [[George Vertue]], 1740|right]]


[[File:Barnard's Inn Hall (Gresham College).jpg|thumb|upright=1.2|[[Barnard's Inn]] Hall, the current home of Gresham College]]The seven original Gresham College professorships that date back to the origins of the college are as follows:

[[File:Barnard's Inn Hall (Gresham College).jpg|thumb|upright=1.2|[[Barnard's Inn]] Hall, the current home of Gresham College]]The seven original Gresham College professorships that date back to the origins of the college are as follows:



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* [[Gresham Professor of Rhetoric|Rhetoric]]

* [[Gresham Professor of Rhetoric|Rhetoric]]



These original endowed chairs reflect the curriculum of the medieval [[university]] (the [[trivium (education)|trivium]] and [[quadrivium]]); but as a place for the public and frequent voicing of new ideas, the college played an important role in the [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]] and in the formation of the [[Royal Society]]. Early distinguished Gresham College professors included [[Christopher Wren]], who lectured on astronomy in the 17th century and [[Robert Hooke]], who was Professor of Geometry from 1665 until 1704.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.gresham.ac.uk/gresham-professor-of-geometry|title=Gresham Professor of Geometry|work=gresham.ac.uk}}</ref>[[File:Gresham College, 1740.jpg|thumb|upright=1.9|Gresham College, engraving by [[George Vertue]], 1740|left]]The professors received £50 a year, and the terms of their position were very precise, for example:

These original endowed chairs reflect the curriculum of the medieval [[university]] (the [[trivium (education)|trivium]] and [[quadrivium]]); but as a place for the public and frequent voicing of new ideas, the college played an important role in the [[Age of Enlightenment|Enlightenment]] and in the formation of the [[Royal Society]]. Early distinguished Gresham College professors included [[Christopher Wren]], who lectured on astronomy in the 17th century and [[Robert Hooke]], who was Professor of Geometry from 1665 until 1704.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.gresham.ac.uk/gresham-professor-of-geometry|title=Gresham Professor of Geometry|work=gresham.ac.uk}}</ref>

{{quote|''The geometrician is to read as followeth, every Trinity term arithmetique, in [[Michaelmas term|Michaelmas]] and [[Hilary term]]s theoretical geometry, in Easter term practical geometry. The astronomy reader is to read in his solemn lectures, first the principles of the sphere, and the theory of the planets, and the use of the [[astrolabe]] and the staff, and other common instruments for the capacity of mariners.''<ref name="Will">[http://www.gresham.ac.uk/event.asp?PageId=4&EventId=385 "Who invented the calculus? – and other 17th century topics"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928035913/http://www.gresham.ac.uk/event.asp?PageId=4&EventId=385 |date=28 September 2007 }} Gresham lecture by Robin Wilson, 16 November 2005. Retrieved 16 February 2006.</ref>}} The professors received £50 a year, and the duties of their positions were specified tightly.



{{quote|''The geometrician is to read as followeth, every Trinity term arithmetique, in [[Michaelmas term|Michaelmas]] and [[Hilary term]]s theoretical geometry, in Easter term practical geometry. The astronomy reader is to read in his solemn lectures, first the principles of the sphere, and the theory of the planets, and the use of the [[astrolabe]] and the staff, and other common instruments for the capacity of mariners.''<ref name="Will">[http://www.gresham.ac.uk/event.asp?PageId=4&EventId=385 "Who invented the calculus? – and other 17th century topics"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928035913/http://www.gresham.ac.uk/event.asp?PageId=4&EventId=385 |date=28 September 2007 }} Gresham lecture by Robin Wilson, 16 November 2005. Retrieved 16 February 2006.</ref>}}



Today three further professorships have been added to take account of areas not otherwise covered by the original Professorships:

Today three further professorships have been added to take account of areas not otherwise covered by the original Professorships:


Revision as of 06:22, 28 June 2023

Gresham College
Established1597; 427 years ago (1597)[a]
Location , ,
WebsiteOfficial website Edit this at Wikidata

Gresham College is an institution of higher learning located at Barnard's Inn Hall off HolborninCentral London, England. It does not enrol students or award degrees. It was founded in 1597[a] under the will of Sir Thomas Gresham, and hosts over 140 free public lectures every year. Since 2001, all lectures have also been made available online. The current Provost is Professor Martin Elliott.[1]

History

Founding and early years

Sir Thomas Gresham, founder of the Royal Exchange, left his estate jointly to the City of London Corporation and to the Mercers' Company, which today support the college through the Joint Grand Gresham Committee under the presidency of the Lord Mayor of London. Gresham's will provided for the setting up of the college – in Gresham's mansion in Bishopsgate, on the site now occupied by Tower 42, the former NatWest Tower – and endowed it with the rental income from shops sited around the Royal Exchange, which Gresham had established.

The early success of the college led to the incorporation of the Royal Society in 1660,[2] which pursued its activities at the college in Bishopsgate before moving to its own premises in Crane Court in 1710. The college remained in Gresham's mansion in Bishopsgate until 1768, and moved about London thereafter until the construction in 1842 of its own buildings in Gresham Street EC2. Gresham College did not become part of the University of London on the founding of the university in the 19th century, although a close association between the college and the university persisted for many years. Since 1991, the college has operated at Barnard's Inn Hall, Holborn EC1.

Gresham College today

Since 2000, the college regularly welcomes visiting speakers who deliver lectures on topics outside its usual range, and it also hosts occasional seminars and conferences. Today the college provides over 140 lectures a year, all of which are free and open to the public.

Since 2001, the college has been recording its lectures and releasing them online in what is now an archive of over 2,000 lectures. Since 2007, lectures have also been available through YouTube with 30,891,433 views as of February 2021.[3][4]

Annual lectures series of particular note hosted by the college include: the Gresham Special Lecture, the Annual Lord Mayor's Event, and the Gray's Inn Reading.

The college is a registered charity under English law.[5]

Professors

Gresham College, engraving by George Vertue, 1740
Barnard's Inn Hall, the current home of Gresham College

The seven original Gresham College professorships that date back to the origins of the college are as follows:

These original endowed chairs reflect the curriculum of the medieval university (the trivium and quadrivium); but as a place for the public and frequent voicing of new ideas, the college played an important role in the Enlightenment and in the formation of the Royal Society. Early distinguished Gresham College professors included Christopher Wren, who lectured on astronomy in the 17th century and Robert Hooke, who was Professor of Geometry from 1665 until 1704.[6]

The geometrician is to read as followeth, every Trinity term arithmetique, in Michaelmas and Hilary terms theoretical geometry, in Easter term practical geometry. The astronomy reader is to read in his solemn lectures, first the principles of the sphere, and the theory of the planets, and the use of the astrolabe and the staff, and other common instruments for the capacity of mariners.[7]

The professors received £50 a year, and the duties of their positions were specified tightly.


Today three further professorships have been added to take account of areas not otherwise covered by the original Professorships:

The professors currently hold their positions for three years,[11] extendable for a fourth year, and give six lectures a year. There are also regular visiting professors appointed to give series of lectures at the College, and a large number of single-lecture speakers.

Gresham Special Lecture series

The Gresham Special Lecture – now called The Sir Thomas Gresham Annual Lecture – originated in 1983 as a free public lecture delivered by a prominent speaker. It was devised as a focus-point among the many free public lectures offered every year.

Excerpts from the Last Will of Sir Thomas Gresham (1575)

Frontage of Barnard's Inn Buildings

THIS IS THE LASTE WILL WRITTEN and disposition of me Sir Thomas Gresham of the cittye of London knighte, concerninge all my mannors, landes, tenementes, and hereditamentes, mentioned and conteyned in one quadripartite indenture, made betweene me the said Sir Thomas Gresham and dame Anne my wife on the one partye, and Phillippe Scudamore gent. and Thomas Celey on thother partie, dated the 20 day of May, in the seaventeenth yere of the raigne of our soveraigne lady queene Elizabeth....

AND I will and dispose, that ... the said maior and corporation of the said cittye [London] ... shall give and distribute to and for the sustentation, mayntenaunce, and findinge foure persons from tyme to tyme to be chosen, nominated, and appointed by the said maior and cominalty and cittezens and theire successors, mete to read the lectures of divynitye, astronomy, musicke, and geometry, within myne owne dwellinge house in the parishe of St. Hellynes in Bishopsgate streete and St. Peeters the pore in the cittye of London ... the somme of two hundred pounds of lawfull money of England, in manner and forme followinge, viz. to every of the said readers for the tyme beinge the somme of fifty pounds of lawfull money of England yerely, for theire sallaries and stipendes, mete for foure sufficiently learned to read the said lectures; the same stipendes and sallaries, and every of them, to be paid at two usuall tearmes in the yere yerely, that is to say, at the feastes of thannunciation of St. Mary the Virgin and of St. Mighell tharchangell, by even portions to be paid....

AND ... that they and theire successors every yere yerely shall give, and pay, and distribute to and for the findinge, sustentation and maynetenaunce of three persons, by them the said wardeins and cominalty and theire successors from tyme to tyme to be chossen and appointed, meete to reade the lectures of law, phissicke, and rethoricke, within myne nowe dwellinge house in the parrishe of St. Hellyns in Bishopesgate streete and St. Peters the pore, in the said cittye of London ... the somme of one hundred and fifty poundes of lawfull money of England, in manner and forme followinge, viz. to every of the said readers for the tyme beinge the somme of fiftye poundes, for theire sallaries and stipendes, mete for three sufficiently learned to reade the said lectures, at two usuall tearmes in the yere, that is to say, at the feast of thannunciation of the blessed Virgin Marye and of St. Mighell the Archangell, by even portions to be paid....

AND ... shall permitte and suffer seaven persons, by them from tyme to tyme to be elected and appointed in manner and forme aforesaid, meete and sufficiently learned to reade the said seaven lectures, to have the occupation of all my said mansion house, gardeins, and of all other thappurtenaunces, for them and every of them there to inhabite, study, and daylie to reade the said severall lectures. And my will is, that none shall be chossen to reade any of the said lectures, so longe as he shall be married, nor be suffered to reade any of the said lectures after that he shalbe married, neither shall receave any fee or stipend appointed for the readinge of the said lectures....

Sir Thomas Gresham's grasshopper crest, used as a symbol of the College

IN WITNES whereof I the said Sir Thomas Gresham have written this will all with myne owne hand, and to each of the eight leaves have subscribed my name ; and to a labell fixed there unto all the eight leaves have setto my seal with the grasshopper, the 5 day of July, in the seventeenth yere of the raigne of our soveraigne lady queene Elizabeth, and in the yere of our Lord God, ann. 1575.

By me THOMAS GRESHAM

Witnesses to this last will and testament of the said Sir Thomas Gresham the persons whose names be subscribed,

PH. SCUDAMOR,
THOMAS BILLINGFORD,
HENRY NOWELL.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b 1596 Old Style in the Julian calendar used at the time, 1597 in the Gregorian calendar currently used.

References

  1. ^ "Governance | Gresham College". www.gresham.ac.uk. Retrieved 10 February 2023.
  • ^ "Gresham College and Arundel House - Royal Society".
  • ^ "Gresham College". YouTube.
  • ^ "GreshamCollege#s YouTube Stats". Retrieved 7 February 2021.
  • ^ "Gresham College, registered charity no. 1039962". Charity Commission for England and Wales.
  • ^ "Gresham Professor of Geometry". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Who invented the calculus? – and other 17th century topics" Archived 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine Gresham lecture by Robin Wilson, 16 November 2005. Retrieved 16 February 2006.
  • ^ "Gresham College". mercers.co.uk.
  • ^ "Gresham Professor of the Environment: Carolyn Roberts appointed to only the second new Professorship in 400 years" Archived 25 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine, Gresham College press release, 25 June 2014 (accessed 27/07/15)
  • ^ "Elizabethan "University" Appoints Professor of IT" Archived 25 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine, Gresham College press release, 26 June 2015 (accessed 27/07/15)
  • ^ "Profile of Gresham College". uk-universities.net.
  • ^ "Populism, Aristotle and Hope". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "The Journey from Black-Hole Singularities to a Cyclic Cosmology". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "The Barbican Centre at 40 – Past, Present and Future". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Sir Thomas Gresham 1519–2019". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Climate Change: A Defining Challenge for the 21st Century". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "A World Without News?". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Universities: Some Policy Dilemmas". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Women's Careers: From Oxfam to a Cambridge College". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Continuity and Development in Architecture". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "The UK and the New Face of Europe". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Parliament and the Public: Strangers or Friends?". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Reinventing the Wheel: The cost of neglecting international history". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "The Challenges of the New Supreme Court". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "The Ascent of Money: An evolutionary approach to financial history". gresham.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 2 July 2011.
  • ^ "Early Christianity & Today: some shared questions". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "The Beauty of Holiness and its Perils (or what is to happen to 10,000 parish churches?)". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Walking the Line: Preserving liberty in times of insecurity". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Should We Trust The Scientists?". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Science in a Complex World: Wonders, Prospects and Threats". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Towards Freedom from Hunger". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Commerce and Culture in the Late Twentieth Century". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "A Global Ethic – A Challenge for the New Millennium". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "The Future for Governance: The Rules of the Game". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Sir Thomas Gresham's London". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Banking Today". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "VE Day: Fifty Years After". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Science and Theology: Traffic Across the Frontier". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "The Decline of Socialism". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Russian Orthodox Church Life Today: The Second Millennium". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Popular and Unpopular Science". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "The Rise and Fall of the Entrepreneur". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Monarchy". gresham.ac.uk.
  • ^ "Human Rights and the Democratic Process". gresham.ac.uk.
  • External links

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