In June 1881, plans were submitted to the University of Oxford's
Hebdomadal Council to build an Indian Institute. The original site was occupied by four old buildings. The building was designed by
Basil Champneys and the first section opened in 1884. Originally there was a low shop to the south, but neighbouring
Hertford College has now encroached on the Institute with a much taller building. The Institute was built of
Taynton stone in the style of the
English Renaissance, with different oriental details to the designs of Champneys. In 1974
Nikolaus Pevsner observed that the rounded corner cupola made an excellent
point de vue at the east end of Broad Street. Along with the
library (see below), the institute contained
lecture rooms and a
museum. Some contents of the museum are now present in the
Ashmolean and
Pitt Rivers Museums. The original Indian Institute building is now the
Oxford Martin School of the University of Oxford, the History Faculty having moved to the old
City of Oxford School building on
George Street and its library to the Bodleian site. ==Indian Institute Library==