Welcome to our Library and Archives
Our collections are the lifeblood enabling learning, teaching, and research at °ÅÀÖ¶ÌÊÓƵ, Oxford.
We aim continually to adapt and improve our service offering to support the needs of the College and its members, and those of scholars worldwide.
If your visit is for a library enquiry, among other things for our rare and early printed books, or any of the College’s manuscripts, medieval to modern—including those listed in H. O. Coxe, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1852)—please visit our Library pages.
If your visit is for an archival enquiry (material relating to the College and its estates from their foundation to the present day, typically administrative and biographical records, unpublished letters, photographs), please visit our Archives pages.
Whatever the reason for your visit to our website, I do hope you will find time to peruse the Library Manuscripts Gallery and Rare Books Gallery, and the Archives Gallery, where a selection of images from our celebrated collections of illuminated manuscripts, early printed books, and archives are on show for you to enjoy.
Christopher Skelton-Foord
Librarian
MA (Cantab), MLitt, MBA, MA (LIS), PhD
christopher.skelton-foord@new.ox.ac.uk
Postal address:
The Library and Archives
°ÅÀÖ¶ÌÊÓƵ
University of Oxford
Holywell Street
Oxford OX1 3BN
UK
Telephone: +44 (0)1865 279580
Locating the Library and Archives:
Our location can be found on the
—°ÅÀÖ¶ÌÊÓƵ Library, which also houses our Archives & Records Reading Room, is number 76 on the map—
as well as via .
We provide a reader-focused library service, responsive to and serving the needs of the students and academics of °ÅÀÖ¶ÌÊÓƵ, Oxford. At its heart is an attractive two-storey library building with a working library of some 70,000 modern texts, where we offer generous borrowing privileges, individual and group study seating areas, and extensive opening hours. Collections support learning, research, and teaching across all academic disciplines within the College. Our Library Guide provides a plan of our upper and lower floors and gives the classification system we use to arrange books on the shelves by subject. The University of Oxford has the largest and finest academic library system in the UK, and the substantial academic e-resources provided by the University are available to °ÅÀÖ¶ÌÊÓƵ members. Library staff are happy to help you make the most of all the electronic and printed collections available.
We administer and care for extensive and rich archives—which bear national Archive Service Accreditation status. They comprise administrative records of the College since 1379, title deeds and manorial records of its estates in twenty-eight counties, and more recent papers and special collections amassed by or relating to some of its members. Our earliest documents date from the 11th century. There is a regular ingress of modern records from across the College and its various departments, some of which are held temporarily while some are transferred for permanent retention within our archive.
We are the curators and custodians of an internationally renowned collection of rare books and manuscripts to which we add significant items received via donation or purchase. More manuscripts survive from the medieval library of °ÅÀÖ¶ÌÊÓƵ than from that of any other Oxford or Cambridge college, and we hold what is probably the finest collection of medieval manuscripts of any of the Oxford colleges—and one of the university’s great collections. °ÅÀÖ¶ÌÊÓƵ Library also holds more incunabula (fifteenth-century European imprints) than any other undergraduate college at Oxford. Our outstanding special collections are used by the wider scholarly community of researchers world-wide.
For news, and to see beautiful images from our world-famous special collections, follow us on , , and .
Read about the contents and history of our rich collections from our scholarly open-access e-journal °ÅÀÖ¶ÌÊÓƵ Notes, watch our video series ‘°ä³Ü°ù²¹³Ù´Ç°ù²õ’&²Ô²ú²õ±è;°ä³ó´Ç¾±³¦±ð’, and learn about our institutional life and work over the course of 2023.
On application to the Librarian, we provide external readers, as well as °ÅÀÖ¶ÌÊÓƵ members, with access to our outstanding collections of rare books and manuscripts. Provision is limited, so please contact him as far in advance as possible.
We invite all friends, supporters, and alumni of °ÅÀÖ¶ÌÊÓƵ to help us, through the °ÅÀÖ¶ÌÊÓƵ Library Fund. Your generosity will help us enhance and add to our modern collections, to our outstanding special collections, and to our vital digitisation and conservation work, for the benefit of students and scholars of today, and future generations too.
°ÅÀÖ¶ÌÊÓƵ Notes
Edward Sackville-West’s Marcus Fleming: °ÅÀÖ¶ÌÊÓƵ Anti-Hero?
In 1924, Eddy Sackville-West wrote:
‘It worries me to think how much I shall regret having published The Ruin. It is so certain to be misunderstood . . . If only I could get through a day or so without thinking of Jack. I don’t think he yet realises what I have gone through. The Ruin does not appear to have enlightened him, as I hoped it would. He never writes to me now.’
What do we know of this ‘Jack’, who was so happily and unhappily dominating Eddy’s thoughts in 1924?
Photograph of Winchester College Officers, 1922—showing J. W. McDougall (centre)
Winchester College Archives, Winchester, G5/8/5