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  1. Died. ( 1355-01-06) 6 January 1355. Denomination. Roman Catholic. Arms of Bateman: Sable, a crescent ermine a bordure (engrailed) of the last. These were adopted as the arms of Trinity Hall, Cambridge, founded by him [1] William Bateman ( c. 1298 – 6 January 1355) was a medieval Bishop of Norwich .

    • History
    • Buildings
    • Student Life
    • Gallery
    • People Associated with Trinity Hall
    • Bibliography
    • External Links

    The devastation caused by the Black Death in England of the 1340s included the loss of perhaps half of the population; Bishop Bateman himself lost nearly 700 of his parish priests, and so his decision to found a college was probably centred on a need to rebuild the priesthood. The site that Bateman chose was the original site of Gonville Hall, whic...

    The College site on the Cam was originally obtained from Bateman's purchase of a house from John de Crauden, Prior of Ely, to house the monks during their study, with Front Court being built within the college's first few decades. The medieval structures remain unaltered, but with their façade altered to a more baroque style during the Mastership o...

    Combination Rooms

    Trinity Hall has active Junior, Middle and Senior Combination Rooms for undergraduate, postgraduate and senior members of the college community respectively. The Middle Combination Room is located in Front Court, while the Junior Combination Room is adjacent to the college bar in North Court. Both the MCR and JCR have highly active committees and organize popular socials for their members across the term.

    Trinity Hall in 1690
    The original entrance
    The demolition of the original entrance
    Front Court

    Masters

    On 31 May 2022, Mary Hockaday was announced as the next Master.

    Deans

    The current Dean is the Revd Dr Stephen Plant. The role of Dean incorporates that of Chaplain in other colleges.

    Notable alumni

    1. Charles Howard, 1st Earl of Nottingham, Lord High Admiral 2. Stanley Bruce, 1st Viscount of Melbourne, Prime Minister of Australia 3. Sir Khawaja Nazimuddin, Prime Minister of Pakistan 4. J. B. Priestley, novelist, playwright and broadcaster 5. Marshall McLuhan, Canadian philosopher 6. Geoffrey Howe, Baron Howe of Aberavon, Deputy Prime Minister 7. Hans Blix, Swedish Minister for Foreign Affairs 8. David Johnston, Governor General of Canada 9. Stephen Hawking, Lucasian Professor of Mathema...

    The Hidden Hall: Portrait of a Cambridge College, Peter Pagnamenta, ISBN 1-903942-31-4
    Trinity Hall: The History of a Cambridge College, 1350-1975, Charles Crawley, ISBN 0-9505122-0-6
    Warren's Book(Ed. 1911 by A.W.W.Dale)
    Trinity Hall or, The college of scholars of the Holy Trinity of Norwich, in the University of Cambridge, Henry Elliot Malden. (1902). London: F.E. Robinson.
  2. 57.0. Died. Bishop of Norwich, England, Great Britain. Note (s): ¹ Year Uncertain. MicroData Summary for William Bateman. ( VIAF: 27228013; WikiData: Q8005183 ) Bishop William Bateman (born 1298, died 6 Jan 1355 ) Bishop of Norwich. Event.

  3. The Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Division of Art, Prints and Photographs: Print Collection, The New York Public Library. "William Bateman, bishop of Norwich, founder of Trinity Hall, Cambridge, A.D. 1350." New York Public Library Digital Collections. Accessed March 29, 2024. https://digitalcollections.nypl.

  4. 26 mar 2020 · Bishop Batemans assertion of his authority over the exempt abbey of Bury St Edmunds in 1345 brought him into conflict with a house closely linked to both papacy and Crown, and came at a time of Anglo-papal tensions.

  5. Dr Pobst's introduction demonstrates the unusual character of the early Norwich registers, and traces the rise of Bateman to prominence in the Anglo-French negotations in the opening years of the Hundred Years War.