Showing 1148 results
Authority record- Person
- 1912 - 2001
Typographer and inscriptional letter-cutter in wood, slate and stone, working in Cambridge from 1934, and founder of the Rampant Lions Press.
Made an Honorary Fellow in 1977. He produced many inscriptions and brasses for the College, beginning with the 1939 - 1945 War Memorial designed by Reynolds Stone. Described by Brooke Crutchley, University Printer, as having produced some of the ‘most handsome products of the printing press in this century’, his letter-cutting was perhaps of more variable quality, and not given to virtuoso displays.
In the College Magazine
Article: 'Will Carter and The Rampant Lions Press' by Brooke Crutchley, College Magazine, vol. 26 (1981-82) pp. 41-45
Obituary by R. Hyam and R. Luckett, College Magazine, vol. 45 (2000-01) pp.14-18
Carrier-Belleuse, Albert-Ernest (1824–1887), sculptor
- Person
- 12 June 1824 – 4 June 1887
A French sculptor. He was one of the founding members of the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, and was made an officer of the Legion of Honour. His work encompassed all manner of sculptural subjects and materials, and his naturalism incorporated a breadth of styles: unembellished Realism, neo-Baroque exuberance, and Rococo elegance
Carr, Henry (1894–1970), artist
- Person
- 16 August 1894 – 16 March 1970
A successful British landscape and portrait painter who served as a war artist during World War II. Carr was born in Leeds and trained at Leeds College of Art and the Royal College of Art, under William Rothenstein. During World War I, he served in France with the Royal Field Artillery. After the war his work was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1921, in other British galleries and in Paris. He painted portraits of, among others, Aldous Huxley and Olivia Davis and landscapes of the English south coast.
Carlyle, Thomas (1795–1881), author, biographer and historian
- Person
- 4 December 1795 - 4 February 1881
Scottish author, biographer and historian.
Carleton, George (1557/8–1628), Bishop of Chichester
- Person
- 1557/8–1628
Caraglio, Jacopo (c.1500-1565), engraver of copper and hardstones
- Person
- c.1500-1565
- Person
- 13 November 1757 - 23 April 1839
Canning [née Stuart], Charlotte Elizabeth (1817–1861), countess Canning and vicereine of India
- Person
- 3 March 1817 – 18 November 1861
Courtier and vicereine of India.
Campbell, Thomas (1777–1844), poet
- Person
- 27 July 1777 – 15 June 1844
Callcott, Sir Augustus Wall (1779–1844), painter
- Person
- 20 February 1779 – 25 November 1844
Calcutt, Sir David (1930-2004), lawyer and Master of Magdalene College, Cambridge
- Person
- 2 November 1930 - 11 August 2004
Master of Magdalene College, 1986-1994
Educated at King's College Cambridge. Lawyer of the Middle Temple (Bencher, 1981; Master-Treasurer, 1998); QC, 1972; chairman of the Bar, 1984-1985; knighted, 1991.
Member and chairman of numerous legal bodies and committees of inquiry, and author of government papers, eg. Report of the Committee on Privacy (1990) and Review of press self-regulation (1993).
Fellow-Commoner, 1980-1985
Master, 1986-1985
Made an Honorary Fellow on his retirement from the Mastership in 1994.
Married Barbara Walker, 1969; she was a JP and a Freeman of the City of London. Lady Calcutt was a particular supporter of the Magdalene Boat Club.
College Magazine
Article by R.W.M. Dias, College Magazine, No. 29 (1984-85) pp. 3-6
Article, College Magazine, No. 38 (1993-94) p. 4
Article, College Magazine, No. 48 (2003-04) pp. 8-15 (A.D. Rawley, D.J.H. Murphy, Sir D. Oulton)
Cadell, Thomas, the younger (1773–1836), bookseller
- Person
- 1773-1836
Cadell, Thomas, the elder (1742–1802), bookseller
- Person
- 12 November 1742 - 27 December 1802
Bussy, Albert Simon Aimé (1870-1954), French painter
- Person
- 30 June 1870 - 22 May 1954
Albert Simon Aimé Bussy was a French painter who married the English novelist Dorothy Strachey Bussy. He knew and painted many members of the Bloomsbury circle and was friends with George Mallory.
Bussy was born in Dole and came from a family of shoemakers. He went from the drawing school in Dole to Gustave Moreau's studio in the École des beaux-arts de Paris, where he met and became friends with Henri Matisse. He received an honorable mention in 1894 at the Salon des artistes français for his Le Joueur de clarinette and Saint Georges terrassant le dragon. He showed a Portrait of Albert Machado in 1896. In 1897 he had his first solo exhibition at the Durand-Ruel gallery in Paris.
In 1901 Bussy visited London, where he came into contact with members of some English artistic circles, especially the Bloomsbury Group, and where he met Dorothy Strachey, who he married in 1903. Shortly after the wedding Simon and Dorothy moved to Roquebrune Cap Martin, in the south of France, where they bought a small house that soon became a meeting point for both French and English artists, writers and intellectuals. In addition to Dorothy's brother, the historian Lytton Strachey, and his cousin, the painter Duncan Grant, others included Rudyard Kipling, André Gide, Roger Fry, Vanessa Bell, Mark Gertler, Paul Valéry, Virginia Woolf, and Bernard Berenson. The painters Henri Matisse and Georges Rouault also visited.
Bussy was successful in the 1920s and 1930s, but his appreciation by both the public and critics declined after this time. He died in London in 1954, at the age of 88.
Busby, Thomas (1754-1838), composer and music critic
- Person
- 1754 - 1838
Composer and music critic. Pupil of Battishill. Organist of St Mary Woolnoth, Lombard St, 1798.
Entered Magdalene as a sizar in 1800. MusD, 1801, for a thanksgiving ode on British naval victories.
Composer of various stage-works and oratorios, beginning with The Prophecy (after A. Pope, The Messiah), first performed in 1799. Author of A Complete and Comprehensive Dictionary of Music (1805) and A General History of Music, from the earliest times to the present (1819).
He would appear to have been more successful in writing about music than composing it. Was said to have had ‘loose notions on religious subjects’.
Bus de Gisignies, Vicomte Bernard du (1808-1874), ornithologist, paleontologist and politician
- Person
- 21 June 1808 - 6 July 1874
Member of the Belgian Chamber of Representatives.
First director of the Natural History Museum of Belgium.
Burton, Hezekiah (1632-1681), Anglican cleric and Fellow of Magdalene College, Cambridge
- Person
- 1632-1681
Admitted to Magdalene as a sizar in 1647, aged 15.
Made a Fellow in 1654 on Parliamentary authority, in place of the ejected John Dacres. He was respected and well liked and his contemporaries considered him an 'eminent tutor' [Cunich, P., Hoyle, D., Duffy, E., Hyam, R., *A History of Magdalene College Cambridge8, 1428-1988, pp. 128-129]
Chaplain to Lord Keeper Bridgeman; Canon of Norwich; Rector of St George’s Southwark, 1668-1680; Vicar of Barnes, 1680.
He died aged 49. Archbishop Tillotson described Burton as of ‘incomparable sweetness of temper’ (Preface to Discourses, 1684).
Burnet, John Forbes (1910-1989), Bursar of Magdalene College, Cambridge
- Person
- 1910-1989
Educated at Christ’s College. Bursar of St George’s Choir School, Windsor.
Fellow, 1949-1989; Bursar, 1949-1977.
Director of A & C Black, publishers. For forty years editor of the Public and Preparatory Schools Yearbook/Independent Schools Yearbook. A bibliophile who was well read in the history of the Victorian church. The University Fives Courts are named after him.
Obituary by R. Hyam in the College Magazine vol. 34 (1989-90) pp 2-6
Burgh, Ulick John de (1802–1874), 1st Marquess of Clanricarde and politician
- Person
- 20 December 1802 - 16 August 1874
Burgess, William Oakley (1818–1844), printmaker
- Person
- 1818-1844
Burdett, Sir Francis (1770-1844), 5th Baronet and politician
- Person
- 25 January 1770 – 23 January 1844
British politician.
- Person
- c.1873-1971
Mentioned by George Mallory.
Pamela Frances Audrey Bulwer-Lytton (née Chichele-Plowden), Countess of Lytton, (1873 or 1874-1971), Society beauty; wife of 2nd Earl of Lytton; daughter of Sir Trevor John Chichele-Plowden.
Bulwer, Earle Henry Lytton (1801–1872), Baron Dalling and Bulwer, and diplomatist
- Person
- 13 February 1801 – 23 May 1872
Bullock, Guy Henry (1887-1956), diplomat and mountaineer
- Person
- 23 July 1887 - 12 April 1956
Guy Bullock was a member of the 1921 British Mount Everest Expedition.
As expedition mountaineers, Guy Bullock and George Mallory found a northern access route to Everest by climbing the 6,849-metre (22,470 ft) Lhakpa La col above the East Rongbuk Glacier and by going on to reach the North Col at 7,020 metres (23,030 ft). They did not, however, reach the summit of Mount Everest.
Shortly before the 1921 Everest expedition was due to embark, one of the climbing team was asked to drop out (Finch) and Mallory suggested Bullock as a replacement. The Foreign Office rejected Younghusband's request to grant leave to Bullock, who was in Lima at the time, to join the expedition but he gained a special dispensation from the British Foreign Secretary, Lord Curzon, so he could have leave on half pay until the end of 1921 but with no chance of this being renewed. Bullock and his wife sailed for Bombay on the SS Naldera, arriving on 30 April 1921. The expedition had a climbing team of four but, of the two most experienced members, one died doing the march-in (Kellas) and the other was taken ill (Raeburn). This left only two main climbers, Mallory and Bullock. Bullock was a well-organised person, able to get on well with almost everybody. He was steady and cheerful, and so was a very good companion for Mallory (the better climber). Bullock was reunited with his wife at Lachen in the Teesta valley in Sikkim on 8 October and they eventually sailed home from Bombay.
Bullock's diary of the expedition was published in 1962 in the Alpine Journal. Bullock had previously declined to lend the diary to Mallory who had been wanting to make use of it for his lectures after the expedition.
He died in a London hospital in 1956.
Buller, Sir Arthur William (1808–1869)
- Person
- 1808-1869
Buller, Charles (1806–1848), politician and wit
- Person
- 6 August 1806 - 29 November 1848
Bulla, Francois (active 1814-1855), engraver, printmaker, lithographer and printer
- Person
- active 1814-1855
French engraver, printmaker, lithographer and printer.