In 1525, at the height of his power,
Cardinal Thomas Wolsey,
Lord Chancellor of England and
Archbishop of York, suppressed
St Frideswide's Priory in Oxford and founded Cardinal College on its lands, using funds from the dissolution of
Bayham Old Abbey,
Wallingford Priory and
other minor priories. He planned the establishment on a magnificent scale, but fell from grace in 1529, with the buildings only three-quarters complete, as they were to remain for 140 years. In 1531 the college was itself suppressed, but it was refounded in 1532 as King Henry VIII's College by
Henry VIII, to whom Wolsey's property had
escheated. Then in 1546 the King, who had broken from the
Church of Rome and acquired great wealth through the dissolution of the monasteries in England, refounded the college as Christ Church as part of the reorganisation of the
Church of England, making the partially demolished priory church the cathedral of the recently created Diocese of Oxford. Christ Church's
sister college in the University of Cambridge is
Trinity College, Cambridge, founded the same year by Henry VIII. Since the time of
Queen Elizabeth I the college has also been associated with
Westminster School. The dean remains to this day an
ex officio member of the school's governing body. Major additions have been made to the buildings through the centuries, and Wolsey's Great Quadrangle was crowned with the famous
gate-tower designed by
Christopher Wren. To this day, the bell in the tower,
Great Tom, is rung 101 times at 9 pm measured by
Oxford time, meaning at 9:05 pm
GMT/
BST every night, once for each of the 100 original scholars of the college, plus one more stroke added in 1664. In former times this was done at midnight, signalling the close of all college gates throughout Oxford. Since it took 20 minutes to ring the 101, the Christ Church gates, unlike those of other colleges, did not close until 12:20 am. When the ringing was moved back to 9:00 pm, Christ Church gates still remained open until 12.20, 20 minutes later than any other college. Although the clock itself now shows GMT/BST, Christ Church still follows Oxford time in the timings of services in the cathedral.
King Charles I made the Deanery his palace and held his Parliament in the Great Hall during the
English Civil War. In the evening of 29 May 1645, during the second
siege of Oxford, a "bullet of IX lb. weight" shot from the
Parliamentarians' warning-piece at
Marston fell against the wall of the north side of the Hall. Several of Christ Church's deans achieved high academic distinction, notably
Owen under the
Commonwealth,
Aldrich and
Fell in the
Restoration period,
Jackson and
Gaisford in the early 19th century and
Liddell in the high Victorian era. For more than four centuries Christ Church admitted men only; the first female students at Christ Church matriculated in 1980. ==Organisation==