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  1. Magdalen College was founded in 1458 by William Waynflete, Bishop of Winchester, and Lord Chancellor. He wanted a college on the grandest scale, and his foundation was the largest in Oxford, with 40 Fellows, 30 scholars (known at Magdalen as Demies), and a large choir for his Chapel.

  2. Magdalen College was founded in 1458 by William of Waynflete, Bishop of Winchester and Lord Chancellor of England [6] and named after St Mary Magdalene. The college succeeded a university hall called Magdalen Hall, founded by Waynflete in 1448, and from which the college drew most of its earliest scholars. [9]

  3. SCROLL. Magdalen College was founded in 1458 by William Waynflete, Bishop of Winchester, and Lord Chancellor. It is one of the oldest, largest, and most beautiful colleges in Oxford. The Great Tower: an Oxford icon.

  4. He purchased “the Hospital of St John the Baptist, an institution for ‘the relief of poor scholars and other miserable persons,’ which had fallen into decay, pensioned off the master and brethren, bestowed the poor inmates elsewhere, and set to work upon the present Magdalen College” (100) in 1474 and the head of college (the President) and scholars moved in in 1480.

  5. El Magdalen College fue fundado como Magdalen Hall en 1448 por William de Waynflete, Obispo de Winchester. [3] Se convirtió en Magdalene College en 1458. Los estatutos de la fundación incluían provisiones para una fundación coral de hombres y chicos (una tradición que se mantiene hoy en día).

  6. History of the project. Magdalen College was founded in 1458. Magdalen’s past is intertwined with colonialism, leaving uncomfortable legacies for today that many historic British institutions share. It is seldom possible to pin down the impact of education on anyone’s views or actions.

  7. The College Register states that building began outside the college gates in August 1480, but from c. 1478 students were being taught grammar by a Master and Usher, and from Easter 1480 this took place ‘in a certain low hall to the south of the Chapel in the old building’.