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  1. 牛津大学耶稣学院. 牛津大学耶稣学院 (Jesus College,全称Jesus College in the University of Oxford of Queen Elizabeth's Foundation)是 牛津大学 的一个学院,位于英国 牛津 中心,特尔街、船街、 谷物市场街 和市场街之间。. 学院由 伊丽莎白一世 创建于1571年6月27日,以培养神 ...

  2. Jesus College was founded in June 1571 by a group of Welshmen led by Hugh Price, a lawyer, clergyman and Treasurer of St. David’s Cathedral. In approving the new foundation however, Queen Elizabeth I appointed herself its Foundress, and Jesus became the first and only Oxford College to be founded during the monarch’s reign.

  3. Postgraduate. It is a well-accepted opinion in Cambridge that Jesus College is the best college and no other college even comes a distant second. Its sports grounds are enormous, its buildings are mesmerising, its libraries are rich, its chapel is the oldest, its accommodation is the best value for money, its international community is diverse ...

  4. Welcome to the Jesus College MCR. The Middle Common Room (MCR) is the community of graduate students at Jesus College, Oxford. We have a membership of over 300 graduate students representing a diverse range of cultures and backgrounds. Our members study a wide variety of disciplines including English, Law, Economics, Education, Physics ...

  5. Founded in 1571, the College retains many of its original features – including our beautiful Elizabethan dining hall (below), Chapel, and Principal’s Lodgings. Jesus College was one of the first men’s colleges to admit women, in 1974, but nowadays, our student intake is evenly balanced between men and women.

  6. Das West Court at Jesus College (Teil der University of Cambridge) bietet zeitgenössische und traditionelle Zimmer im Zentrum von Cambridge. Die Zimmer in der 2017 eröffneten Unterkunft sind ansprechend eingerichtet und verfügen über raumhohe Fenster.

    • (3,5K)
    • Jesus Lane, Cambridge, CB5 8BL, Großbritannien, Jesus Lane, GB CB5 8BL
  7. Today Jesus College is one of the larger colleges in Cambridge, but until the late 19th century it was one of the smallest and poorest. Its origins lie 400 years earlier, when John Alcock, Bishop of Ely, decided to convert a derelict nunnery on the eastern edge of Cambridge into a community for graduate priests studying in the University.