Wednesday, March 28, 2018

BLOG VIEWS: 250K, Top 10 in March

This blog has just passed the 250,000-views mark. Thank you for reading. The views of all of the blogs I maintain is over two million.

The most-read post over the lifetime of the blog is the second one below, on Hitler's not having bombed Oxford.

That was a reason that the late Stephen Hawking (see memorial comments below) advanced, at the opening of his book of essays (Black Holes and Baby Universes, 1994), for his parents' having moved from London to Oxford just before he was born. He said:  
I was born in Oxford, even though my parents were living in London. This was because Oxford was a good place to be born during World War II: The Germans had an agreement that they would not bomb Oxford and Cambridge, in return for the British not bombing Heidelberg and Göttingen.
Here are the ten most-read posts in this blog during the past month.

Entry
ARMS: Lincoln College, Oxford (Updated March 28, 2018)
Apr 9, 2017
HITLER: Why Didn't He Bomb Oxford? (25K Views, Mar...
Jun 8, 2013, 3 comments
OXFORD IN FICTION: Top Six Fictional Colleges (Upd...
Jul 2, 2016
NEWARK BOYS CHORUS | Will Sing on April 5, 2018
Mar 18, 2018
HERALDRY: OXFORD SUPERLINK
Nov 22, 2015
OXFORD-CAMBRIDGE DINNER | New York City's 85th, April 5, 2018
Mar 15, 2018
BIRTHDAYS | Oxonians, April 2018
Mar 17, 2018
STEPHEN HAWKING, R.I.P. | Selected Obituaries, Lin...
Mar 15, 2018
COLLEGE ARMS: Oxford Shop (Updated Sept. 24, 2016)...
May 13, 2016
COATS OF ARMS | Talk to OUS London on Monday, April 5, 2018
Mar 20, 2018

Tuesday, March 20, 2018

COATS OF ARMS | Talk to OUS London on April 16, 2018


THE OXFORD UNIVERSITY SOCIETY

LONDON BRANCH

Coats of Arms of the Oxford Colleges
by
John Tepper Marlin
on
Monday 16th April 2018
at
The Oxford and Cambridge Club, Pall Mall
--------
Postscript: Report on the talk is here

--------
Dear OUS-London member,   
  
JT Marlin’s fascination with coats of arms started when he was sent to Ampleforth College and took his meals in a Yorkshire castle dining room surrounded by marvellous stained-glass windows featuring these curious shields with stylized symbols and fantastical creatures. It has remained a life-long interest.

John has been in the business of writing since a student at Harvard, where in 1961 he wrote and edited the first edition of The Let's Go Guide to Europe. He read PPE at Trinity, Oxford, and whilst earning a Ph.D. in economics in the US, he served as a Federal Government economist in Washington, D.C. and then was appointed Chief Economist for the New York City Comptroller. Heading the Council on Municipal Performance for 20 years, he wrote eight books comparing U.S. and international cities. He is now a full-time writer on historical subjects.

In 2015, John wrote an article on coats of arms for the alumni publication Oxford Today which attracted valuable comment and insight from readers. Based on the feedback and further research, he commenced work on a new book investigating, explaining and illustrating college coats of arms. 

This evening John will delve into the coats of arms of our Oxford colleges, drawing comparisons between paired coats of arms, highlighting examples of shared heritage, some interesting curiosities and the key to understanding their symbolism and conventions.  

We very much hope that you will be able to join us in the suitably august and stately surrounds of the Oxford and Cambridge Club. Following the talk, drinks and canapés will be served providing the customary OUS-London opportunity to meet with fellow alumni and guests. Your non-Oxonian friends and family are welcome.
Coats of Arms of the Oxford Colleges
Monday 16th April 2018
Tickets : £35      6:30pm : Arrival  7:00pm : Talk followed by Reception  Dress : Lounge Suit

PLEASE NOTE    1) In the event that your application is unsuccessful, please enclose a S.A.E. IF YOU REQUIRE NOTIFICATION that you will NOT be receiving tickets, and for return of your cheque (otherwise cheques will be destroyed).
2) Sorry, refunds cannot be made after the closing date (April 9).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PLEASE COMPLETE  &  RETURN THE BELOW APPLICATION FORM c/o Cheryl-Lisa Hearne-McGuiness,  PO Box 44137, London,  SW6 4WH. ( Tel : 07976 706152 )
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PLEASE NOTE : E-TICKETS will be E-mailed by the 10th April 2018
** CLOSING DATE for APPLICATIONS  -  MONDAY 9th April  **
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Name   ________________________   College ______________________Year _________
E-mail  ___________________________________________________________  
Address  _________________________________________________________________________
Telephone No  ___________________________  (please provide in case of ticket emergencies!)
Please send me …………….…. tickets at £35 each for Oxford Colleges - Coats of Arms on 16th April 2018
I enclose a cheque for £……, made payable to   “Oxford University Society – London Branch”.
My guest(s) will be : (use below/ separate sheet for additional guest details)

First Name …………… Last Name ……...….........…..  [College …….……..… Year …..…... ]                

First Name …………..... Last Name …….….....…...… [College …….……...... Year …..….... ] 

For a taste of the issues: Heraldry, Oxford Superlink.     

Sunday, March 18, 2018

NEWARK BOYS CHORUS | Will Sing on April 5

Newark Boys Chorus, 2018
The Newark Boys Chorus (NBC) will sing at the Oxford-Cambridge Boat Race Dinner in New York City on April 5.

Here is a YouTube sample of their singing back in 2009. The Chorus is trained at its School (NBCS).

The tradition of starting a Boat Race Dinner with the American and British national anthems was begun at the Washington, D.C. dinner (the only one that competes in size with that of the New York City dinner), and is now a fixture. 

The NBC team will sing one other song besides the two anthems.

More details on the dinner, including a link to registration, are here.

Saturday, March 17, 2018

BIRTHDAYS | Oxonians, March 2018


85th New York City Boat Race Dinner, April 5, 2018.

01 John Tepper Marlin (Trinity), 1942 😉
02 Dr Seuss (Lincoln), 1904
11 Rupert Murdoch, 1931
14 Stephen Hawking (Univ), death, 2018 (born in April)
24 William Morris (Exeter), 1834
26 Robert Frost, 1926
26 A. E. Housman, 1859
31 Rachel Maddow (Lincoln), 1973

Other Months: February . January
Year's worth of birthdays (in process of being compiled)
To add a name, write to the compiler – jtmarlin@post.harvard.edu.

BIRTHDAYS | Oxonians, April 2018



03 Jane Goodall, 1934
05 NYC Boat Race Dinner, University Club
13 Frederick Lord North (Trinity), 1732
13 Christopher Hitchens, 1949
14 Michael Maclagan (Ch.Ch. and Trinity), 1914
April 23. St George's
Day
15 Emma Watson, 1990
15 Joseph Lister, 1827
19 Dudley Moore, 1935
23 St George's Day
28 Harper Lee, 1926
28 Elena Kagan, 1960

March .  February . January
Year's Worth of Birthdays
To add a name, write to the compiler – jtmarlin@post.harvard.edu.
Heraldry, Oxford index.


Thursday, March 15, 2018

OXFORD-CAMBRIDGE DINNER | New York City's 85th, April 5

The late Stephen Hawking as an Oxford
undergraduate, coxing the Univ 2nd Eight.
The 2018 Boat Race will be on March 24. 

Both men's and women's boat races will be held that day.

A festive dinner to celebrate the event will be held at the University Club in New York on Thursday, April 5. It will be the 85th consecutive uninterrupted boat race dinner in New York City. As usual, the dress code for men is black tie or boat club blazer. (The dinner program and some remarks are posted.)

The Newark Boys Chorus will sing the American and British national anthems and their own song.


For further details and to reserve a place or two, go to the Cambridge University website.

Information on the 2017 NYC Boat Race Dinner and the 83 previous boat race dinners in New York may be found here. The outcome of the Boat Race in 2017 may be found here.


More information on the 2018 Boat Race may be found on the Oxford-Cambridge NYC Boat Race Dinner site or on the official boat race site.

A brief history of the boat race says that the boats use "much the same equipment as in 1829." Well, yes, if you don't consider significant the improving outrigger of the earliest years, the move from a wherry to a flat shell, the offset oarlocks, and above all the sliding seats starting in 1869 and the composite shells in the 20th century. See my review of boat innovations for more details.

On April 16, I will be giving a presentation on the Oxford colleges' coats of arms to the Oxford University Society in London (at the Oxford-Cambridge Club).  I will be posting details shortly here.

The next evening, I will be talking to the Oxford-Cambridge Club membership about the coats of arms of the Oxford and Cambridge colleges. This event is nearly sold out, one month in advance.

STEPHEN HAWKING, R.I.P. | Selected Obituaries, Links

Stephen Hawking (Univ, Oxon),
1942-2018
Stephen W. Hawking (Univ, Oxon) was born on January 8, 1942 and died on March 14, 2018.

Prof. Neil Comins, an astronomer at the  University of Maine, 

remembers presenting a paper to Hawking and others. (Comins is a cousin of my wife Alice, whose mother was born Grace Comins.) With his permission, I quote his recollection:

I first met Stephen in the late 1970s. I was working on my Ph.D. thesis in Cardiff, Wales. I shared some results with my thesis advisor, Bernard F. Schutz [now director of the Max Planck Institute at Cambridge]. The next day Bernard came to see me, saying, "I've arranged for you to present your results to Stephen Hawking and his group at Cambridge." It would be the first talk I ever gave about my research.
A few weeks later, I took the train to Cambridge and presented my work. Stephen was smiling through the talk. There was some debate about the results, but he ended it by saying that he believed they were correct. He was right and five years later, S. Chandrasekhar cited that work in his 1983 Nobel prize lecture. 
Back then, Stephen was able to control his motorized wheel chair and he zoomed around Cambridge. Everyone just had to get out of his way! I had dinner that evening with Hawking and his family. I have a vague recollection that someone said the home they lived in was also where Isaac Newton once lived. 
My nephew Chris Oakley earned his BA-MA and DPhil in Physics from Oxford and took the Physics Tripos at Cambridge. He remembers seeing Hawking in Cambridge and at a seminar in Oxford. Chris says (I quote by permission): 
Hawking only really got into his stride at Cambridge. I used to see him in his wheelchair in the street in Cambridge when I was there in 1980-1981, but the first time I went to a seminar of his was about a year later at the Rutherford-Appleton laboratory near Oxford. He still had his voice then, but it was near-incomprehensible and a graduate student was translating for us.
-New York Times Obituary
-BBC Obituary
-Why did his family move from London to Oxford just before he was born?
-
Hawking as coxswain for University College's Second Eight.

Wednesday, March 14, 2018

OXFORD UNIVERSITY | Heraldry Society~

Oxonian Michael
Maclagan, Richmond Herald.
I just discovered that the Oxford University Heraldry Society was founded in 1835. The story is sketchily put together on the website of the Cambridge University Heraldry Society.

That the record is incomplete is admitted by the author of the article.

I can add a little bit to the story. Although the O.U. Heraldry Society may have been inactive at some times in the second half of the 20th century, Michael Maclagan, history tutor at Trinity College, Oxford was active through the 1980s as Richmond Herald.


HERALDRY: Oxford Superlink

RICHMOND HERALD | Michael Maclagan, 1980-89~

Michael Maclagan (1914-2003),
Richmond Herald (1980-1989)
Michael Maclagan was a major heraldic presence in Oxford as Richmond Herald during the years 1980-89, and was active in this role after his retirement from Trinity College in 1981.

He was previously, from 1948, Slains Poursuivant and, from 1970, Portcullis Poursuivant.

During this time he was consulted frequently on matters of college arms and gave advice to, for example, St Antony's College (https://bit.ly/2muBl8C) and St Hilda's on their arms.

I knew him both as senior tutor at Trinity and as Librarian of the Oxford Union. He chaired the Library Committee, on which I served for a couple of terms.  

remember having the temerity to oppose purchase of a restaurant guidebook, because it had no entries for Oxford itself. (There were entries for nearby locations.) Maclagan's response was: "I was the consultant for the selection of the Oxford area restaurants. We considered them, on their merits." In the presence of such authority, I withdrew my objection.

Having read some novels where aristocrats were identified as having certain vocations, I once asked Maclagan what the acceptable jobs were for aristocrats, expecting him to say: "architect, barrister, physician..."  Instead, he peered down at me and said: "There are no acceptable jobs for aristocrats." It was clear that he then considered the conversation terminated. He was, of course, enjoying himself immensely.

He once was sent a book to review entitled "The MacLagan Family." He gave it a one-sentence review: "The name Maclagan is spelled with a lower-case L."

Richmond Heralds Since World War II
1943–1961 Sir Anthony Richard Wagner, KCB, KCVO, DLitt, FSA. Author of "Heraldry in England (Penguin, 1946).
1962–1967 Robin Ian Evelyn Milne Stuart de la Lanne-Mirrlees, Esq.
1967–1980 John Philip Brooke Brooke-Little, Esq., CVO, FSA. Author of a two-part series in 1951 on the coats of arms of the Oxford colleges.
1980–1989 Michael Maclagan, Esq., CVO, FSA, FRHistS
1989–2010 Patric Dickinson, Esq., LVO
2010–present Clive Edwin Alexander Cheesman, Esq., PhD.

From the Telegraph: Sep 16, 2003

Michael Maclagan, who has died aged 89, was a historian of early medieval England and Byzantium, an eminent authority on genealogy and heraldry, and for more than 40 years a tutor in Modern History at Trinity College, Oxford, where he is remembered for the formidable range of his interests and his elegance and precision.

In the late 1970s, when he gave a series of lectures at Trinity on the Crusades, Maclagan would arrive, punctually, in his gown and mortar board, get out his gold pocket watch, open it and place it carefully – and slightly shakily – on the high lectern, then lecture for the precise time allotted.

He was also a long-serving member of the College of Arms. When taking the train to London for a day at the college, he would often kit himself out in a dark three-piece suit, a shirt with an unusually long 1930s turned-down collar, tie, bowler hat, umbrella and, occasionally, spats. Yet he never looked affected, just very old-fashioned, like a retired Guards officer of an earlier era who had simply never thought to change the way he dressed.

Michael Maclagan was born in London on April 14 1914 into a remarkable Anglo-Scots family which had produced doctors, scholars, clergymen, soldiers and colonial administrators. His father, Sir Eric Maclagan, was for many years director of the Victoria and Albert Museum. His paternal grandfather, William Maclagan, Archbishop of York, had crowned Queen Alexandra in 1902.

From Winchester, Maclagan went up, in 1932, to Christ Church, Oxford, where he became president of the Archaeological Society, dabbled in Conservative politics and took a First in History in 1935. It was noted of him at the time: "With equal ease will he discourse to you on Tariff Reform or trace your genealogy from Adam." After two years as a lecturer at Christ Church, he was elected a Fellow of Trinity in 1939.

Commissioned into the TA in 1938, Maclagan served during the war in the 16th/5th Lancers. In the later years of the war, he served in Military Operations in the War Office, where his fluency in Italian and Serbo-Croat helped him plot the course of the Trieste motorised division in the Balkans. He was also able to employ his genealogical talents in compiling a pedigree of the Abyssinian royal houses when planning their Order of Battle.

In 1946 he resumed his duties at Trinity where he filled a succession of offices - dean, librarian, senior tutor, vice-president and wine steward. Although he had a slightly detached, distant air, his students found a kind, courtly man who enjoyed the company of young people and had a keen, dry sense of humour. The travel writer Gavin Young, a former pupil of Maclagan's at Trinity, mentions him with (somewhat uncharacteristic) generosity in his book Slow Boat to China.

Away from college life, Maclagan was a stalwart of the Oxford Union for around 60 years, serving as Senior Librarian and Trustee. He occasionally took part in Union debates, a task he undertook with his customary wit and panache. In 1950, for example, speaking on a motion deploring the fall of the House of Stuart, he suggested that the Stuarts and the Hanoverians were equally immoral and the real question was which of the two royal houses was immoral in a more agreeable way. In 1973, he was to be found debating Women's Liberation with Mary Warnock.

Maclagan's imposing figure – he was 6ft 3in tall and held himself ramrod straight – is immortalised in an oil portrait painted of him in his full regalia as Richmond Herald which now hangs in the entrance to Trinity College dining hall. ...

[T]he fine book which he produced with the Czech armorist, Jiri Louda, Lines of Succession (1981), for which he contributed the narrative passages on the various European monarchies, proved to be his last.

Maclagan was sustained by his long and happy second marriage to Jean Garnett, whom he had met during his time at the War Office and married in 1949. At their house in Northmoor Road, north Oxford, the former home of J R R Tolkien, the Maclagans entertained generations of Trinity undergraduate historians with unstinting generosity. …

From The Independent:

The ideal retirement job awaited him at the College of Arms. Heraldry had been an abiding interest from childhood. He was a walking encyclopaedia of armorial knowledge and had an allied taste for state ceremonial. The Princess Royal (married to the Earl of Harewood, his mother's cousin) procured a seat for him at the 1937 Coronation. Later, he acted as a staff officer at the 1953 Coronation and the Investiture of the Prince of Wales in 1969.

Meanwhile, in 1948, he had been made Slains Pursuivant, personal herald to the Countess of Erroll, Lord High Constable of Scotland, an honorific position that he held until his appointment as Portcullis Pursuivant in 1970. Thereafter he regularly donned the colourful garb of a royal herald for ceremonies at Westminster and Windsor.

Promoted to Richmond Herald in 1980, he did not go into professional practice as a herald until his retirement from Trinity the following year. The College of Arms benefited from his scholarship, and for Maclagan it was an agreeable postlude to his academic career.

Saturday, March 10, 2018

OXFORD ALUMNI | Oxford Today Magazine

The last Trinity 2017 Issue
An article on Oxford Today appears in Wikipedia. It deserves a wider distribution. It is a pity that the print magazine has disappeared.

At Harvard the alumni magazine is kept alive. It is somewhat independent of the university because of alumni contributions.

The Oxford Today website is still up. It had four news posts in August 2017, and since then has had about one per month since then. 

I am reposting here the Wikipedia entry, unedited except for dropping the many footnotes:

Oxford Today: The University Magazine was a magazine for the alumni of Oxford University. Oxford Today was a magazine distributed free to around 160,000 alumni around the world. It appeared three times a year, with the issues coinciding with the three Oxford academic terms of Michaelmas, Hilary, and Trinity. The editor was Dr Richard Lofthouse, and it was published by Future plc on behalf of the University of Oxford.

Articles covered subjects such as current affairs, history, literature, as well as the University itself. Contributors and interviewees had included many Oxford alumni from different walks of life, such as the politician Michael Heseltine, the author and playwright Alan Bennett and the comedian Terry Jones of Monty Python fame.

The magazine was previously published by Wiley-Blackwell. In April 2010, it was reported that a new publisher would be taking over the magazine, resulting in the job of then-current editor Greg Neale being placed under review; this caused concern among members of the publication's editorial review board, some of whom expressed the view that the Oxford administration was seeking to reduce the magazine's independence.

The magazine was published by FuturePlus, a division of Future Publishing Limited, on behalf of the University of Oxford. After a review of the magazine and its mounting costs, Oxford University took the decision to close the publication with its last issue published in Trinity 2017.