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Items in Oxford taken from Old England: A Pictorial Museum (1845) (results page 1)


Oxford, the county town of Oxfordshire, seat of one of the great English universities and of a bishopric; is on the left bank of the Thames, 52 m. W. of London; it is a city of great beauty, its many collegiate buildings and chapels and other institutions making it the richest of English cities in architectural interest; naturally historical associations abound; here the Mad Parliament met and adopted the Provisions of Oxford in 1258; Latimer and Ridley in 1555, and Cranmer in 1556, were burned in Broad Street; Charles I. made it his head-quarters after the first year of the Civil War; it was the refuge of Parliament during the plague of 1665.

Population (1907) 46,000

From Nuttall Encylopædia, 1907

[1]
396.—Tower of Oxford Castle
397.—Oxford Castle
733.—Oxford Cathedral.
2271.—Oxford from the Abingdon Road.
Hall of Christ Church College  Oxford
[1]

Places Shown

Oxford; Oxfordshire; England