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  1. 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. The initial stimulus for this was the abundance of neurosurgical and ...

  2. Radcliffe Infirmary SP 5107 SW 3/868 II GV 2. 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.

  3. Sanders of Oxford is one of the largest print sellers in Britain, and features a varied and wide-ranging stock of more than 30,000 items. Our shop has long been a landmark on the High Street, continuing a tradition established in the middle of the 19th century of trading in antique prints, antique maps and drawings.

  4. 26 de mar. de 2013 · The Radcliffe Infirmary opened in 1770 and remained in use as a hospital until 2007 when its services were relocated to the John Radcliffe and Churchill. The University of Oxford sought to convert the old hospital into an academic building which would house the Humanities divisional offices, the Philosophy Faculty and the Philosophy/Theology Library.

  5. 25 de feb. de 2016 · Desarrollo de la antigua Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford, 1770–1900. Las excavaciones arqueológicas en el lugar del primer hospital ‘moderno’ de Oxford, el Radcliffe Infirmary, ha descubierto evidencia de su funcionamiento tras su construcción en 1770 y durante varias ampliaciones posteriores del siglo XIX.

  6. Redcliffe Infirmary, Oxford, c1950-1970. Named after the physician John Radcliffe, the Radcliffe Infirmary was Oxford's first hospital, opening in... Picture shows a scene in Wootton Bassett high street as crowds gather at a repatriation ceremony.

  7. 1 de ago. de 2017 · Together, Cairns and Pennybacker established neurosurgery at the Radcliffe Infirmary, and after World War II the work was shared almost equally between the 2 men. 5 After Cairns' death in 1952, Pennybacker became director of the new separate Department of Neurological Surgery at the Radcliffe Infirmary, a post he held for 19 years until retirement. 12 He was made a Fellow of Wolfson College at ...