You may be able to find additional high-quality and interesting images relating to the university, its colleges and people at
commons:Category:University of Oxford (and its sub-categories). If you have taken an image that you are prepared to release under
a free license or into the
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Old book bindings in the
college library of Merton College. The college dates from the 1260s and is one of the contenders (along with
University College and
Balliol College) for the title of the first-established college. The oldest part of the library dates from 1373. The library holds approximately 70,000 volumes and 300 medieval manuscripts.
The sundial pillar in the quadrangle of Corpus Christi College. The college, one of the smallest in terms of student numbers, was founded by
Richard Foxe, the
Bishop of Winchester, in 1517. The sundial pillar was added in 1581.
Magdalen College on
May Morning. By tradition, revellers gather outside the college at 6am on 1 May (many having attended all-night
balls and parties) and the college choir sings
madrigals from the top of
Magdalen Tower.
The contemporary approach to the "dreaming spire" taken by the Saïd Business School. The School was established at the University of Oxford in 1996, and the buildings were completed in 2001.
Part of the ceiling of the Divinity School. Built between 1427 and 1483 in the
Perpendicular style, the Divinity School is Oxford's oldest surviving purpose-built building for university use.
A men's crew from
Keble College training for
Eights Week (the main inter-college rowing races). Rowing is a popular student sport at Oxford, even though most students will not have rowed before starting at Oxford.
Part of the Inorganic Chemistry building in the Science Area on
South Parks Road. Oxford has the biggest school of inorganic chemistry in the UK and one of the biggest in the world.
The interior of the
college chapel of Merton College. The chapel replaced an earlier church on the site, with construction beginning in about 1290 and continuing into the 15th century.
Tyrannosaurus rex, one of the exhibits on display at the Pitt Rivers Museum. Founded in 1884 by
Augustus Pitt Rivers, the museum holds about 500,000 items donated to the University relating to archaeology and anthropology.
The course of the Boat Race on the
River Thames in London; Oxford and Cambridge first rowed against each other in 1829, and the Boat Race has been held annually since 1856 apart from the two World Wars.
Unlike most other colleges at Oxford, the dining hall at Wolfson College does not have a separate
High Table for the college's Fellows. Instead, they dine alongside the students, who are all carrying out postgraduate work.
Construction of the chapel of Wadham College began soon after the college was founded in 1610 and it was consecrated on 29 April 1613. The stained glass of the east window was added in 1622.
You may be able to find additional high-quality and interesting images relating to the university, its colleges and people at
commons:Category:University of Oxford (and its sub-categories). If you have taken an image that you are prepared to release under
a free license or into the
public domain, please
upload it at Commons; please do the same with other freely licensed or public domain images. Files that can only be used on Wikipedia under a
claim of fair use cannot be used on portals.
If you wish to add a photograph for rotation within this portal, and it has already been uploaded, please follow these steps:
Add the image in to a subpage of this portal, such as Portal:University of Oxford/Selected picture/#, replacing the "#" with the number above the current highest. For example, if 30 images are in rotation, you would make the number of the page you are creating 31.
Use the following format, to match the other images used:
{{Portal:University of Oxford/Selected picture/Layout
|image=NAME OF IMAGE (without "Image" or "File")
|text=CAPTION, with appropriate wikilinks and a link to the most closely associated article in '''[[bold]]'''
|credit=Photographer's name, with wikilink to userpage (on the English Wikipedia or on Commons, as appropriate) or as an external link to the photographer's Flickr page etc
}}
Update the picture maximum parameter on the
main Portal
Old book bindings in the
college library of Merton College. The college dates from the 1260s and is one of the contenders (along with
University College and
Balliol College) for the title of the first-established college. The oldest part of the library dates from 1373. The library holds approximately 70,000 volumes and 300 medieval manuscripts.
The sundial pillar in the quadrangle of Corpus Christi College. The college, one of the smallest in terms of student numbers, was founded by
Richard Foxe, the
Bishop of Winchester, in 1517. The sundial pillar was added in 1581.
Magdalen College on
May Morning. By tradition, revellers gather outside the college at 6am on 1 May (many having attended all-night
balls and parties) and the college choir sings
madrigals from the top of
Magdalen Tower.
The contemporary approach to the "dreaming spire" taken by the Saïd Business School. The School was established at the University of Oxford in 1996, and the buildings were completed in 2001.
Part of the ceiling of the Divinity School. Built between 1427 and 1483 in the
Perpendicular style, the Divinity School is Oxford's oldest surviving purpose-built building for university use.
A men's crew from
Keble College training for
Eights Week (the main inter-college rowing races). Rowing is a popular student sport at Oxford, even though most students will not have rowed before starting at Oxford.
Part of the Inorganic Chemistry building in the Science Area on
South Parks Road. Oxford has the biggest school of inorganic chemistry in the UK and one of the biggest in the world.
The interior of the
college chapel of Merton College. The chapel replaced an earlier church on the site, with construction beginning in about 1290 and continuing into the 15th century.
Tyrannosaurus rex, one of the exhibits on display at the Pitt Rivers Museum. Founded in 1884 by
Augustus Pitt Rivers, the museum holds about 500,000 items donated to the University relating to archaeology and anthropology.
The course of the Boat Race on the
River Thames in London; Oxford and Cambridge first rowed against each other in 1829, and the Boat Race has been held annually since 1856 apart from the two World Wars.
Unlike most other colleges at Oxford, the dining hall at Wolfson College does not have a separate
High Table for the college's Fellows. Instead, they dine alongside the students, who are all carrying out postgraduate work.
Construction of the chapel of Wadham College began soon after the college was founded in 1610 and it was consecrated on 29 April 1613. The stained glass of the east window was added in 1622.