Category:Old Shirburnians: Difference between revisions
(Created page with "Old Shirburnians is the name given to ex-pupils of Sherbourne School in Dorset. This category includes all characters, played and non-played, who went to Sherbourne School.") |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Old Shirburnians is the name given to ex-pupils of | {{Template:Infobox Educational Establishment | ||
|name = Sherborne School | |||
|image = [[File:Sherborne seal.png|250px]] | |||
|motto = Dieu Et Mon Droit | |||
|engmot = God and my Right | |||
|estab = 1550 | |||
|type = Grammar School | |||
|location = Sherborne, Dorset | |||
|colour = [[File:Sherborne colours.png]] Royal blue and gold | |||
}} | |||
Old Shirburnians is the name given to ex-pupils of Sherborne School in Dorset. This category includes all characters, played and non-played, who went to Sherborne School. | |||
==History== | |||
The school's origins date back to the eighth century, when a tradition of education in Sherborne was begun by St Aldhelm. According to legend, Alfred the Great was one of the school's early pupils. The school was then linked with Sherborne Abbey, formerly a Benedictine house. The earliest known Master was Thomas Copeland in 1437. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries, Edward VI re-founded the school in 1550 as King Edward's School, a free grammar school for local boys. The present-day school stands on land which once belonged to the abbey's monastery. The Library, Chapel, and Headmaster's rooms, which adjoin the Abbey Church, are modifications of its original monastic buildings. | |||
In the Beckett Room below the library there survives Anglo-Saxon masonry, a reminder that the school occupies all that remains of the site of Sherborne Abbey (AD 705, remodelled as a Benedictine abbey in 998). The Headmaster and the senior staff now have their offices, appropriately enough, in the Abbot's house, rather grandly refashioned, like the Abbey itself, in the 15th century; the library was, perhaps, the Abbot's "Guest Hall" (13th–15th century); the Chapel occupies another monastic refectory (12th–15th century, but much rebuilt and extended in the 19th century).<ref>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sherborne_School</ref> | |||
<references> | |||
[[Category:Educational Establishments]] [[Category:Lists]] |
Latest revision as of 12:23, 28 January 2017
Motto | Dieu Et Mon Droit |
---|---|
Motto in English | God and my Right |
Established | 1550 |
Type | Grammar School |
Location | Sherborne, Dorset |
Colours | Royal blue and gold |
Old Shirburnians is the name given to ex-pupils of Sherborne School in Dorset. This category includes all characters, played and non-played, who went to Sherborne School.
History
The school's origins date back to the eighth century, when a tradition of education in Sherborne was begun by St Aldhelm. According to legend, Alfred the Great was one of the school's early pupils. The school was then linked with Sherborne Abbey, formerly a Benedictine house. The earliest known Master was Thomas Copeland in 1437. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries, Edward VI re-founded the school in 1550 as King Edward's School, a free grammar school for local boys. The present-day school stands on land which once belonged to the abbey's monastery. The Library, Chapel, and Headmaster's rooms, which adjoin the Abbey Church, are modifications of its original monastic buildings.
In the Beckett Room below the library there survives Anglo-Saxon masonry, a reminder that the school occupies all that remains of the site of Sherborne Abbey (AD 705, remodelled as a Benedictine abbey in 998). The Headmaster and the senior staff now have their offices, appropriately enough, in the Abbot's house, rather grandly refashioned, like the Abbey itself, in the 15th century; the library was, perhaps, the Abbot's "Guest Hall" (13th–15th century); the Chapel occupies another monastic refectory (12th–15th century, but much rebuilt and extended in the 19th century).[1]
<references>
Pages in category "Old Shirburnians"
The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.