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  1. 18 de ene. de 2007 · The Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford’s first hospital opened in 1770. It had 277 beds and provided specialist healthcare services across the Thames Valley and beyond.

  2. Neurosurgery started in Oxford in 1938. In this article, we commence the story of Oxford neurosurgery with Thomas Willis and trace the historical thread through William Osler, Charles Sherrington, John Fulton, and Harvey Cushing to Hugh Cairns. The department in Oxford is renowned for the training of neurosurgeons.

  3. Andrew Moss, The Radcliffe Infirmary, History Press, 2007 (ISBN 978-0752442488) A.H.T. Robb-Smith, A Short History of the Radcliffe Infirmary, Church Army Press/United Oxford Hospitals, 1970 (ISBN 978-0950167404) Jenny Selby-Green, History of the Radcliffe Infirmary, Image Publications, 1991 (ISBN 978-1873241059)

  4. Chapel. 1865. By A.W. Blomfield. Coursed rubble, stone tracery and red tile steeply pitched roof with bell turret. Early English Gothic chapel to the Radcliffe Infirmary to which it is connected by a pitched-roof corridor. Chapel forms one side of the courtyard in front of the Infirmary. PLAN: Rectangular plan of 5 bays plus chancel.

  5. 11 de jun. de 2020 · A plaque has been unveiled on the old Radcliffe Infirmary building to honour the generations of doctors, nurses and all those who cared for local people there - an unexpectedly topical subject amid today's global pandemic. Now part of the University of Oxford as the Radcliffe Humanities Building, until recently this was a bustling city-centre ...

  6. 17 de nov. de 2023 · SON ET LUMIÈRE – LIGHT PROJECTION AT THE RADCLIFFE HUMANITIES BUILDING.Join us after dark for an extraordinary light and sound artwork projected onto the original three-storey Radcliffe Infirmary in Oxford.‘Temenos’ is based on the human history and archaeology of the land under the old Radcliffe Infirmary, Observatory, and the future Schwarzman Centre for the

  7. 29 de may. de 2022 · May 29, 2022. Excavations at a 200-year-old cemetery associated with Dr John Radcliffe’s Infirmary on Walton Street in Oxford have unearthed some 400 burials, providing new insights into the practice of medicine in an era before anaesthesia and sterile operating theatres. The cemetery – in use from 1770 (the year the hospital opened) until ...