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St Edmund Hall
St Edmund Hall, Oxford.JPG
St Edmund Hall College Crest, 2013.jpg
Blazon: Or, a cross patonce gules cantoned by four Cornish choughs proper.
University Oxford
Location The High / Queen's Lane
Coordinates 51°45′11″N 1°15′00″W / 51.753°N 1.25°W / 51.753; -1.25Coordinates: 51°45′11″N 1°15′00″W / 51.753°N 1.25°W / 51.753; -1.25
Full name The Principal, Fellows and Scholars of St Edmund Hall in the University of Oxford
Latin name Aula Sancti Edmundi
Established c. 1278
Named for St Edmund of Abingdon
Sister college Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge
Principal Keith Gull
Undergraduates 405
Postgraduates 257
Website www.seh.ox.ac.uk
Map
St Edmund Hall, Oxford is located in Oxford city centre
St Edmund Hall, Oxford
Location in Oxford city centre

St Edmund Hall (sometimes known as The Hall or affectionately as Teddy Hall) is a constituent college of the University of Oxford in England. The college has a claim to be "the oldest academical society for the education of undergraduates in any university" and is the last surviving medieval hall at the University.

The college is located just off Queen's Lane, near the High Street, in central Oxford.

As of 2016, the college had a financial endowment of roughly £42 million.

Similar to the University of Oxford itself, the precise date of establishment of St Edmund Hall is not certain; it is usually estimated at 1236, before any other college was formally established, though the founder from which The Hall takes it's name St Edmund of Abingdon, Oxfordshire, the first known Oxford Master of Arts and the first Oxford-educated Archbishop of Canterbury, lived and taught on the college site as early as the 1190s. The name St Edmund Hall (Aula Sancti Edmundi) first appears in a 1317 rental agreement.

St Edmund Hall began life as one of Oxford's ancient Aularian houses, the medieval halls that laid the foundation of the University, preceding the creation of the first colleges. As the only surviving medieval hall, its members are known as "Aularians".

The college has a history of independent thought, which brought it into frequent conflict with both Church and State. During the late 14th and early 15th centuries it was a bastion of John Wycliffe's supporters, for which college principal William Taylor was ultimately burnt at the stake, and principal Peter Payne fled the country. In the late 17th century, St Edmund Hall incurred the wrath of the Crown for fostering non-jurors, men who remained loyal to the Scottish House of Stuart and who refused to take the oath to the German House of Hanover, whom they regarded as having usurped the British throne.


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