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  1. As well as being Cambridge University’s oldest surviving college, Peterhouse is also its smallest. It was founded by the then Bishop of Ely; Hugo de Balsh. It is most well known for History but also has a good reputation for Maths and Economics. It has a post graduate population of approximately 120 and an undergraduate population of around 250.

  2. Visiting the College is the best way to find out about Peterhouse - you can talk to the Admissions Team, teaching staff and, perhaps most importantly, current undergraduates. You can also see some of the facilities and resources available to our students. If you are interested in applying to Peterhouse, we would be delighted to meet you.

  3. The Chapel. The Chapel sits at the centre of the oldest part of College, and is the building you are most likely to see pictured in connection with Peterhouse. It stands for a living tradition in the College's life - in particular, the 700-year-old tradition of the College as a place of prayer, enquiry, creativity and community.

  4. Explore 360. Explore 360. A virtual tour experience for the University of Cambridge.

  5. 11 de mai. de 2024 · She also did pro-bono work for charities working in sub-Saharan Africa, Malawi and Eritrea. She was a school-govern or for two Cambridge schools. Also here in Cambridge she was a Proctor, on behalf of Newnham College, for the years 2003-06, and was Senior Proctor for 2004/05. Petrean Tim Milner was that year Junior Proctor, for Peterhouse.

  6. www.meet-cambridge.com › listing › peterhousePeterhouse - Meet Cambridge

    Peterhouse is the oldest of the Cambridge colleges, founded by Hugo de Balsham, Bishop of Ely in 1284 and granted its charter by King Edward I. It remains the smallest college in terms of number of Fellows and students, but as the late Noel Annan put it in his 1999 survey of the universities and society, The Dons, this small College has always ...

  7. I previously completed an MPhil in Political Thought and Intellectual History (2019) and a BA in History (2018) at Peterhouse, Cambridge. Research projects included the influence of Petrus Cunaeus on discourses of agrarian law in the English Civil War and Interregnum, as well as early-modern English utopias and political Hebraism.