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  1. Hace 3 días · Gonville & Caius College Fellow Dr Vedran Sulovsky explores the rise of the Holy Roman Empire in his first book. In Making the Holy Roman Empire Holy: Frederick Barbarossa, Saint Charlemagne and the sacrum imperium (Cambridge University Press 2024) Dr Sulovsky explores the reign of Frederick Barbarossa (1152–1190). The book “offers a new ...

  2. Hace 5 días · His Caius College (1901, repr. 1923) in the series of College Histories, and his Biographical Hist. of Gonville and Caius Coll. (3 vols. 1897–1901, with supplementary 4th and 5th vols. 1911 and 1949, by E. S. Roberts, E. J. Gross, and F. E. A. Trayes) form a complete and accurate guide to its history, various aspects of which are also dealt with in his Early Collegiate Life (1913).

  3. Hace 2 días · Gonville & Caius and Trinity Hall also feature prominently, with assets of £323.7 million and £276.2 million. Clare College, Emmanuel, and Corpus Christi complete the list of the top ten richest colleges, holding £262.2 million, £253.7 million, and £227.4 million in assets.

  4. Hace 1 día · In March 2024, The Choir of Gonville & Caius College headed to South London for the final of the ‘South London Choral award’, a new competition which grew out of outreach work with the college’s link areas. The final of the South London Choral Award featured three primary and three secondar

  5. Hace 5 días · Gonville and Caius College, University of Cambridge. Citation: Na Chang, review of Marco Polo Was in China: New Evidence from Currencies, Salts and Revenues, (review no. 1667) DOI: 10.14296/RiH/2014/1667. Date accessed: 25 May, 2024.

  6. Hace 2 días · Siberch had printed a Greek textbook for Croke in Cologne, and through his influence received an advance of £20 to set up a press at Cambridge in a 'space between the gate of humility and the gate of virtue' of Gonville and Caius College.

  7. Hace 5 días · Sir Roger Townshend, who had bought the Dengaine estate from Woodhouse in 1537 gave it by exchange in 1538 to Gonville Hall (Cambridge), later Caius College. The college, which still asserted its Teversham estate's manorial status at inclosure c. 1810-15, retained that lordship in 1933.