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  1. Regarded as the jewel in the crown of Magdalene College, the Pepys Library is a rare example of a 17th-century private library. The Library is open to the public and visiting scholars and houses Samuel Pepys’s original diaries. It is one of the most significant collections of books, manuscripts, documents and prints acquired by any private ...

  2. Here are just a few of the reasons why many students choose to apply to Magdalene: Our size. Each year we admit just over 100 undergraduates, and are home to about 350 undergraduates and 200 postgraduates. This is big enough for everyone to find their niche, but small enough to remain personal and for most members of College to know one another.

  3. Find out what it is like to study at Magdalene College and how to apply. Magdalene admits about 105 undergraduates each year for all courses offered by the University of Cambridge, as well as approximately 70 postgraduate students. Our small annual intake helps to foster a family atmosphere and sense of close knit community.

  4. Sister College. Magdalene College Cambridge’s sister college is its namesake, Magdalen College, Oxford. Despite the differences in spelling, both colleges pronounce their names as Mawdlin. Magdalen was founded in 1458 and is the 4th wealthiest of the Oxford colleges. This seems a little ironic given Magdalene College’s financial woes.

  5. Magdalene College, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire. 9,193 likes · 130 talking about this · 3,427 were here. Magdalene College, Cambridge A vibrant and supportive academic community founded in 1542! Magdalene College | Cambridge

  6. This is a list of alumni of Magdalene College, Cambridge . Charles Kingsley. Michael Redgrave. M.H. Abrams, literary theorist and critic. J.R. Ackerley, writer and poet. Simon Ambrose, winner of The Apprentice (UK series three) Richard Atkinson, Bishop of Bedford. Giles Baring, cricketer.

  7. These had been held in the Old Library of the college and their origin was something of a mystery; for there was no other holding of the library with which they could positively be linked. They were deposited by the Master of the college in the Fitzwilliam Museum where they remained until they were returned to the Old Library in 1969.