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  1. ブレーズノーズ・カレッジ ( 英語: Brasenose College, BNC) [2] は、 イギリス ( イングランド )にある オックスフォード大学 の 構成カレッジ ( 英語版 ) の一つ。. 13世紀にブレーズノーズ・ホール (Brasenose Hall) として始まり、1509年にカレッジとして設立された ...

  2. A concise history of Brasenose. The College coat of arms. 'The oddest name in Oxford'. From Ale Verses to a visit from the Devil, browse some of our quirky traditions and legends. A concise history, with detail on our coat of arms and our name. An architectural history of our buildings. Click here for more information about the Archives.

  3. Brasenose College Virtual Tour. Have a look around! Here’s how the tours work: Each tour starts in the Porter’s lodge which is at the entrance to the college. From there you can navigate through the college and its grounds by clicking on the arrow button . In the top left corner of the screen you’ll see a menu icon with a list of all the ...

  4. College Life Alongside rigorous academic study, an important element of life at Brasenose is enjoying the wealth of facilities on offer and meeting new people - some of whom will probably become lifelong friends.

  5. Dr Alan Strathern. Tutor and Fellow in History at Brasenose, and Lecturer at St. John's. I studied Ancient and Modern History at Oxford (1996), and then History and Anthropology at University College London before returning to Oxford for my DPhil in History (2002). I then moved to Cambridge, first to a Research Fellowship at Clare Hall, and ...

  6. Brasenose College was founded in 1509 by Sir Richard Sutton, a Lawyer and William Smyth, Bishop of Lincoln. A Royal Charter, dated 1512, created the body of Principal and Fellows and established a College to be called 'The King's Hall and College of Brasenose'. The College's unusual name refers to a twelfth century 'brazen' (brass or bronze ...

  7. Brasenose College was founded in 1509 by William Smyth, Bishop of Lincoln, and Sir Richard Sutton, a lawyer and the first lay founder of a college in Oxford or Cambridge. Before the foundation of the College part of the site was occupied by one of the medieval Oxford halls, Brasenose Hall. The name is thought to originate from a 'brazen nose ...