The founding of New College came as a result of a religious conflict that emerged from the
Disruption of 1843 in which clergy and laity left the established
Church of Scotland to form the
Free Church of Scotland – free from state connections and submitting only to the authority of Christ. New College was established as an institution for the Free Church of Scotland to educate future ministers and the Scottish leadership, who would in turn guide the moral and religious lives of the Scottish people. New College opened its doors to 168 students in November 1843 and, under the guidance of its first principal
Thomas Chalmers, oversaw the construction of the current building. A competition for design of the Free High Church and Free Church College was held in 1844 and, though not one of the winners, the design by
William Henry Playfair was chosen and built 1845–1850. At the formation of the
United Free Church, the United Free Church was
granted the buildings, and the continuing
Free Church operated from new premises in 1907. This Free Church College was renamed
Edinburgh Theological Seminary in 2014. Prior to the 1929 reunion of the Church of Scotland, candidates for the ministry in the United Free Church studied at New College, whilst candidates for the old Church of Scotland studied in the Divinity Faculty of the University of Edinburgh. During the 1930s the two institutions came together, sharing the New College site on The Mound. "New College" can designate the site itself, or the legal entity that continues to function in an official relationship with the Church of Scotland, the Principal of New College appointed by the
General Assembly of the Church of Scotland and responsible particularly for Church of Scotland candidates for ministry. The current principal is
the Reverend Professor Alison Jack. As the "School of Divinity," however, it is a unit in the University of Edinburgh with a much wider remit, and is led by the Head of the School of Divinity (currently Professor
Helen Bond), who is appointed by the university, and who oversees the larger academic and financial operation. The Chair of Divinity at the School of Divinity is the oldest one at the University of Edinburgh, which can be dated back in 1620. Professor Rachel Muers took up the chair in August 2022 as the first woman who holds the post. Over the years, a number of notable figures have been among its academic staff, including
Robert Rainy,
Thomas Chalmers,
Hugh Ross Mackintosh,
James Barr,
Thomas F. Torrance,
James S. Stewart,
John Baillie,
John McIntyre,
Ruth Page,
Norman Porteous,
Marcella Althaus-Reid,
Andrew F. Walls,
David Fergusson and others. As part of the celebration of the 175th anniversary of New College, the School of Divinity adopted the motto "Quaerite et Invenietis" (Seek and You Shall Find), voted for by the staff and students of the college, and was granted a Coat of Arms by
Joseph Morrow, the current
Lord Lyon King of Arms and an alumnus of New College. in the New College quadrangle == Academics ==