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The Godless Students of London University

historytoday.com

20 points by samclemens 24 days ago · 8 comments

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rorylawless 19 days ago

https://web.archive.org/web/20260215115717/https://www.histo...

rorylawless 19 days ago

Thanks for sharing this. I attended UCL a decade ago so it is fascinating to read about its founding, 200 years ago.

  • ianhell 19 days ago

    Back in my day, 50 years ago, UCL was very keen on making sure its students knew the story and "The Godless Students of Gower Street" was a well known alternative name for UCL and JB's body was star material. Wonder why it changed?

8bitsrule 19 days ago

Astonishing how late London was getting into the University game. (Last major European city to do so? Paris was 1150 ...)

  • jpfromlondon 19 days ago

    Hardly, it was known for vocational guilds, and two of the worlds oldest universities are geographically next door.

  • Lio 19 days ago

    I imagine that proximity to Oxford and Cambridge affected that.

  • pyuser583 19 days ago

    Wasn’t London a hot bed of plague?

    • carstout 19 days ago

      No more so than anywhere else. The primary reason was Oxbridge blocked the attempts at forming universities elsewhere and the early centralisation of state authority aided them in this. There were several other universities in England in the middle ages but none survive. Stamford is one. Northampton founded in 1261 but was banned in 1265 due to a mix of its patron having become an enemy of the King and Oxford supporters taking advantage of it. When the local polytechnic wanted to become a uni in the early 2000s they had to specifically request it be repealed.

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