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  1. Each year, Trinity admits around 200 students, usually about 90 in Arts and Humanities subjects and 110 in the Sciences. There are no fixed quotas for individual subjects except for Medical Sciences. Normally we receive four to five applications for each place, and you can see the numbers admitted each year on the individual subjects pages and ...

  2. 19 de dez. de 2022 · Trinity College Cambridge Remembrance 14 November 2021 Professor John Lonsdale (1964) Good morning: As an historian, I believe our pasts and futures test each other here and now, in our present day.

  3. Fondé en 1546 à Cambridge par Henri VIII, Trinity College constitue le plus grand des 31 colleges de l'université de Cambridge. C'est aussi le college le plus riche du Royaume-Uni, tout patrimoine des colleges d'Oxford et Cambridge confondu. Trinity College possède un effectif d'un millier d'étudiants par an. Parmi ses anciens membres, le college compte 33 prix Nobel, une performance ...

  4. In its third year running, the Trinity College Humanities Residential Programme will take place from 30th to 31st July, with additional online mentoring and webinar sessions before and after. This is an entirely free programme for school students, aimed at those who are passionate about their subject and want the chance to challenge themselves with the teaching style of Cambridge.

  5. Trinity College, Cambridge, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire. 19,677 likes · 290 talking about this · 35,314 were here. This is the official page of Trinity College, Cambridge.

  6. Welcome to the website of Trinity College, University of Cambridge. Trinity was founded by Henry VIII in 1546, when he combined two existing colleges (King’s Hall and Michaelhouse) and seven hostels (Catherine’s, Garratt, Gregory’s, Ovyng’s, Physwick, St Margaret’s, and Tyler’s). Since then Trinity has flourished and grown, and is ...

  7. Trinity College Chapel, Cambridge. / 52.2074; 0.1175. Trinity College Chapel is the chapel of Trinity College, Cambridge, a constituent college of the University of Cambridge. Part of a complex of Grade I listed buildings at Trinity, it dates from the mid 16th century. [2] [3] It is an Anglican church in the Anglo-Catholic tradition.