Lincoln College
(14) Lincoln College stands on the E. side of Turl
Street, between Brasenose Lane and All Saints Church.
The walls are of local Oxfordshire stone and the roofs
are slate-covered. The college of St. Mary and All
Saints was founded by Richard Fleming, Bishop of
Lincoln in 1427. The S. part of the W. range with
the Gatehouse may have been built before the founder's
death in 1431. John Forest, Dean of Wells, contributed largely to the building and by 1437 it is stated
that he had constructed the chapel, library, Hall,
kitchen and upper and lower chambers; these occupied
the N. and most of the E. and W. Ranges. The
Old Rector's Lodging, S. of the hall, was built from a
legacy of Thomas Beckington, Bishop of Bath and
Wells, who died in 1465 and the S. Range was built,
or at any rate completed, by Thomas Scott of Rotherham, then Bishop of Lincoln, in 1479; this bishop
reconstituted and re-endowed the college in 1478.
The college consisted only of the Front Quadrangle till
1608–9 when the W. Range of the Chapel Quadrangle
was built largely from a gift by Thomas Rotherham,
fellow; the Chapel and the E. Range were built in
1629–31, largely at the expense of John Williams,
Bishop of Lincoln (1621–41). In 1640 a new Cellar
was excavated under the hall and c. 1655 the original
chapel, on the first floor of the N. range, was transformed into a library. In 1686 repairs were done
to the chapel and S. buttresses were added probably
at this date. A new range was added on the E. side
of the hall in 1739 but this was replaced in 1880–2 by
the existing range. In 1824 the front to Turl Street
was refaced and the battlements added; similar battlements were added to the quadrangle from a bequest
of John Radford, Rector, 1851; in 1884–5 a new wing
was added to the Rector's Lodging (now chambers)
and in 1889 and 1891 the hall was restored and the
former plaster ceiling removed. The new Library
was built in 1906 and in 1929–30 the new Rector's
Lodging was built facing Turl Street. A considerable
amount of restoration of decayed masonry was done
in 1927.

Lincoln College Arms
The Hall retains some interesting mediæval features
including the roof, and the 17th-century chapel has
remarkable glass and woodwork.
Architectural Description—The Front Quadrangle
(Plate 121) (76 ft. by 72 ft.) is entered by the Gatehouse in
the middle of the W. Range. The whole W. front of this
range was refaced and largely remodelled in 1824 and the
parapet and windows are modern; the gatehouse is
of three storeys and the rest of the range of two with
attics. The outer archway of the gatehouse has been
re-built as has the window above, but the small window
flanked by modern niches on the second floor represents the original arrangement. On the E. or court-yard side of the range, the inner archway has moulded
jambs and four-centred arch; above it is a window
fitted with modern sashes; the second floor of the
gate-tower has been largely refaced and has a window
of one cinque-foiled light in a square head. The
other windows of this front have hollow-chamfered
or moulded reveals, but have been fitted with sashes;
the two restored doorways have moulded jambs and
four-centred arches in square heads with traceried
spandrels and labels. The gate-hall has two bays of
ribbed vaulting, probably of the 19th century, with the
possible exception of the shafts. The room above is
entered by a doorway in the N.W. angle with a four-centred head and across this angle of the room is a
15th-century segmental-pointed arch carrying the
inner side of the turret-staircase above. In the rest
of the range, the S. staircase retains its original timber-framed enclosing walls. On the first floor, the room
N. of the tower is lined with 18th-century panelling
and that S. of the tower, for part of its height, with
late 16th or early 17th-century panelling; in the room
S. of the staircase is one of the original tie-beams of
the roof, with curved brackets. As seen in the attics,
the trusses have collar-beams and curved wind-braces.
The N. Range is of two storeys with attics. The
N. front, to Brasenose Lane, has a gabled return to the
W. front, refaced in 1824 and again partly in 1925.
On the rest of the front the windows on the ground
floor are modern externally except the westernmost
which is partly of the 15th century and of two foiled
lights in a square head. On the first floor the four
large windows with sashes are probably of the 18th
century and there are the blockings of two further
windows of similar form; further W. and lighting
the former chapel-staircase is a 15th-century window of
one cinque-foiled light, but the head has been blocked
and is not visible externally; further W. again are the
labels of three blocked windows. The S. front of this
range, towards the quadrangle has a modern parapet
and two ranges of restored square-headed windows
with labels and fitted with sashes; the doorway to the
former chapel-staircase has been partly renewed
externally; it has moulded jambs, four-centred arch
and label and retains its 15th-century rear-arch with
a double band of trefoil-headed panels. The bell-turret on the roof is a mid 19th-century addition.
Inside the range, the bursary at the W. end of the
ground floor is lined with 18th-century panelling. In
the W. wall of the vestibule is a doorway with restored
jambs and a square head, from which the four-centred
arch has been cut away; in the E. wall is a doorway
with restored jambs and 15th or early 16th-century
four-centred head with a moulded label; it opens
into the Senior Common Room which is lined with
panelling executed by Arthur Frogley in 1684; it has a
moulded dado-rail and entablature; the fireplace has
a moulded black marble surround and, above the shelf,
is an overmantel with an enriched central panel, flanked
by drops of flowers and foliage and surmounted by
drapery-swags replacing the frieze of the main entablature; fixed on the shelf are three modern cartouches-of-arms; on the E. wall is a central feature
with carved drapery-swags; over the W. doorway is
a cartouche-of-arms of the college, flanked by cornucopiæ. The Smoking-Room, to the E., has some
late 16th or early 17th-century panelling (brought
from a room adjoining the Buttery) incorporated in
modern work and including an enriched arcaded panel
over the fireplace; the E. ceiling-beam rests on a
12th-century voussoir, re-used as a corbel; a similar
voussoir is re-set in the vestibule and both may have
come from the former church of St. Mildred which stood
on the N.W. part of the site; they, with other fragments
in the Library, were found under the staircase. The staircase has early 18th-century twisted balusters and on the
first floor is a late 16th-century partition; the upper part
forms an open arcade with round arches and symmetrically turned balusters. The E. part of the first floor
formed the old chapel and has now no ancient features;
the W. part formed the old library and is now the Subrector's Lodging; one room is lined with early 17th-century panelling with an entablature; the fireplace (Plate
22) is flanked by pilasters supporting an entablature and
overmantel; the latter has enriched diminishing
pilasters and a raised panel; the fireplace itself has an
early 18th-century moulded surround of stone.

Lincoln College
The S. Range was built in the second half of the 15th
century and is of two storeys with attics; it has a
modern parapet on both faces. On the N. front most
of the windows have been fitted with modern sashes;
they have moulded reveals and labels and seem to
have had the cusped heads of the lights removed when
the sashes were inserted; two windows at the W. end
are of original form and are each of one cinque-foiled
light. The central and western doorways have each
moulded jambs and four-centred arches in square heads
with labels and traceried spandrels. Between the upper
windows are two panels with the rebus of Bishop
Beckington and further W. are three half-angels holding
shields of the arms of Bishop Rotherham. The S.
front of the range has a completely restored doorway
from the central passage, set in the blocking of a 15th-century opening; the windows are either modern or
of the 17th century and have square heads; on the
upper floor, towards the E. is a restored panel with the
Beckington rebus. Inside the range the entrance-hall
at the N. end has two refixed 18th-century cartouches-of-arms of Robert Sanderson, Bishop of Lincoln and
John Potter, Archbishop of Canterbury and a carved
swag. The middle room on the first floor, called the
Wesley Room, has been lined with early 16th-century
linen-fold panelling, brought from elsewhere; the
adjoining room is lined with refixed late 16th-century
panelling.
The E. Range consists of the Hall (Plate 119) (49¾ ft.
by 25¾ ft.) with the Buttery to the N. and the original
Rector's Lodging to the S. The first two are c. 1436–7
and the last an addition of c. 1465–70. The front (Plate
121) to the quadrangle is of five bays divided by restored
buttresses and finished with a modern parapet; the four
N. bays belong to the hall and the northernmost has an
original doorway with moulded jambs, two-centred arch
and label; the other bays of the hall have each a partly
restored window of two cinque-foiled and transomed
lights with tracery in a square head with a moulded
label; the traceried heads have been restored to accord
with an original head remaining in the E. wall. The E.
wall of the hall is partly covered by a modern range;
the 15th-century doorway to the screens has moulded
and shafted jambs and two-centred arch with a label;
the fourth bay of the hall has a window similar to those
in the W. wall; in the second and third bays there
were similar windows, now blocked but visible
internally and that over the modern fireplace retaining
its original traceried head. The 15th-century roof is
of four bays with double collar-beam trusses, plain
braces forming four-centred arches under the upper
collar-beams and moulded braces, with traceried
spandrels, forming arches of similar form under the
lower collar-beams; the wall-posts have moulded bases
and stand on moulded corbels; the purlins have
curved wind-braces, Over the S. end of the roof is an
original octagonal louvre, with a trefoiled ogee and
traceried light in each face and an ogee-shaped capping.
The walls up to the top of the windows are lined with
panelling of 1699–1700, with bolection-mouldings and
an entablature; at the S. end there is a central feature
with a curved pediment and a cartouche of the arms of
the college. The screen, at the N. end, is of five bays
and of similar panelling with an entablature and two
doorways; the central bay has two fluted Ionic columns
and a curved pediment, with a cartouche-of-arms of
Nathaniel Lord Crewe, Bishop of Durham (1674–1721);
the N. face of the screen has pilasters in place of
columns. In the N. wall, at the back of the screens,
are two 15th-century doorways, with moulded jambs
and four-centred heads; one is fitted with a panelled
door of c. 1700. The cellar, below the hall, was formed
in 1640–1, when the floor was raised. It was formerly
of six bays with pilasters against the side walls and a
row of columns, with moulded capitals and bases,
down the middle. The cellar has been much restored
and partitions inserted, but three of the responds and
two of the columns remain in situ; a third column has
been re-erected near the E. wall. The Buttery, at the
N. end of the hall, has a three-light window in the E.
wall, probably partly of the 15th century but with one
modern mullion. The storey above seems to have
once been open to the roof; this roof is of the 15th
century and of three bays with curved braces under the
tie-beams and collar-beams above; it is only partly
visible and the upper part now forms attics. The
Old Rector's Lodging was built by Bishop Beckington
and forms the S. end of the range, to the S. of the hall;
it is of two storeys with attics and basement and has,
on the W. face, a much restored 15th-century doorway
with moulded jambs and four-centred arch in a square
head with traceried spandrels and a moulded label;
the two windows above replace a former oriel-window;
between them is a panel with the Beckington rebus,
presumably re-set or modern. On the E. face, the two
bays of this building retain some original windows
with square heads and labels but with the mullions etc.
replaced with sashes; on the two southern buttresses
are panels with carvings of the Beckington rebus—the
initial T and a beacon on a tun; in the S. bay is a shield-of-arms of Beckington. Inside the building, the Dining
Room on the ground floor is lined with late 17th-century panelling, with dado-rail and cornice; the
fireplace has an enriched and moulded surround and
above it is an enriched panel with an architectural
painting on canvas and carved swags and festoons of
leaves and flowers; the ceiling is divided into six
panels by panelled trabeations, with rosettes; the
doorways have enriched architraves. The lobby, immediately to the N., has some re-set 18th-century
woodwork including two late 18th-century cartouches-of-arms of Edmund Audley, Bishop of Salisbury, and
Geoffrey Plantagenet, Bishop-elect of Lincoln; the ceiling has 15th-century moulded beams. At the top of the
staircase is a cartouche-of-arms of Nathaniel Lord
Crewe, Bishop of Durham, and various fragments of
carved woodwork; forming a frieze are other fragments and four shields-of-arms. The room on the
first floor is lined with late 17th or early 18th-century
panelling, with dado-rail and entablature; flanking the
fireplace are carved pendants of oak-leaves and the
overmantel has an enriched panel and carved pendants
of fruit and flowers. The cellar below this end of the
range has a central stone pier, of octagonal form with a
chamfered capping and base and probably of the 17th
century.
The Kitchen, to the N.E. of the hall, was built
c. 1436–7; the short range connecting it with the
buttery was built probably in the 17th century. The
kitchen is a square ashlar-faced building, gabled
towards the E. and W. In the W. wall are two original
doorways with four-centred heads and in this and the
N. and S. walls are square-headed windows, some of
which are probably original but altered in the 17th
century. Against the W. wall is a short pentise probably of the 17th century. The roof of the kitchen is
original and of three bays with curved wind-braces
and collar-beam trusses; the curved braces below the
collar-beams form four-centred arches. The original
fireplaces have all three been altered but that in the E.
wall retains its segmental-pointed arch; it is now
pierced by a doorway. The connecting range W. of
the kitchen is of two storeys and has modern additions
on the S. side. The range retains some square-headed
17th-century windows and some 17th-century panelling
in a room on the first floor.
The Chapel Quadrangle (66½ ft. by 64½ ft.) has W. and
E. ranges of two storeys with attics, the former was
built in 1608–9 and the latter in 1629–31. The W.
Range has been entirely refaced on the W. front and at
the S. end. The E. front is largely original and is finished with a double cornice; it has square-headed windows of one, two or four lights with moulded labels; the
archway from the street at the N. end has chamfered
jambs and four-centred arch, with moulded imposts
and a square moulded label; the two doorways have
chamfered jambs and four-centred heads. At the S.
end of the range is a modern bay-window. Inside the
range, the greater part of the ground floor now forms
the Junior Common Room. The S. room on the first
floor is lined with 18th-century panelling with a
cornice; this is perhaps the room recorded to have
been panelled in 1705. Two other rooms have remains
of painted wall-decoration. The E. Range has a modern
addition on the N.E. The W. front is generally
similar to the E. face of the W. range; the windows
are of one, two, three, four and seven lights, the last
being a modern alteration. An original two-light
window remains in the S. end of the range. The E.
front is generally similar to the W. front, but the
windows are of one, two and three lights. Inside the
range, the N. room on the ground floor has three
shields-of-arms in painted glass, one of Fleming of the
17th and two of the 16th century of Wyborn and
Audley (?) and a re-set 18th-century wood-carving.
Further S. in the range are some 17th-century moulded
ceiling-beams. A room on the first floor is lined with
panelling with a dado-rail and cornice, put in in 1706.
Under the range is a basement of five bays.
The Chapel (Plates 121, 125) (57¼ ft. by 22¼ ft.) was
built in 1629–31 and forms the S. range of the Chapel
quadrangle. The walls are ashlar-faced and finished with
a plain parapet. The partly restored E. window is of six
cinque-foiled lights with vertical tracery in a two-centred
head with a label. The N. and S. walls have each four
windows, each of three cinque-foiled lights with vertical
tracery in a two-centred head with moulded reveals and
label; the S. windows have been largely restored; below
the W. window on the N. is a doorway with moulded
jambs and three-centred arch in a square head with a
label. To the W. of the chapel is a passage entered by a
restored N. doorway with a four-centred head and by a
S. doorway with moulded jambs and four-centred arch
in a square head with traceried spandrels and a label;
above the N. doorway is a square-headed window and
above the S. doorway a window with a cinque-foiled
head. The Roof of the chapel is ceiled in wood,
carved, painted and gilt; the ceiling is canted and
divided by double ribs into nine panels from N. to S.
and twelve from E. to W.; each panel, except the
vertical panels against the walls, has a carved enrichment
including palms, swags, cherub-heads, cartouches-of-arms of Bishops Rotherham, Fleming, Williams,
Beaufort, Corbet, Lord Crewe, Smith, Beckington and
Audley, of Francis Babington, Rector (1560–63) and
others and the Beckington rebus; below the ceiling
and carried across the W. wall is an enriched cornice.
There is a central feature with swags and pendant on
both side-walls and scrolled ends with cherub-heads
and pendants, flanking the E. window.
Fittings—All of c. 1630 unless otherwise described.
Communion Rails (Plate 18): Of five bays and of cedar
with panelled and carved standards with moulded top
and enriched bottom rails, each bay with one large panel
filled with carved and pierced scroll-work, late 17th-century. Communion Table: Of cedar, with square
enriched legs on pedestals with stretchers, on each face
a rusticated arch, flat-topped on the long sides, and
springing from pilasters. Door: In N. doorway, of
oak with moulded styles and rails forming five rows
of vertical panelling. Glass: In E. window (Plate 124)
—simple architectural motives in tracery; in main
lights a series of figure-subjects from the New and Old
Testaments of types and anti-types with appropriate
texts beneath each; they represent (a) the creation of
Adam and Eve and the Nativity, (b) the crossing of the
Red Sea and the Baptism, (c) the feast of the Passover
and the Last Supper, (d) the brazen serpent and the
Crucifixion, (e) Jonah and the whale and the Resurrection, (f) the ascent of Elijah in a chariot of fire and the
Ascension; glass probably of Flemish or at any rate
foreign origin. In side windows a series of Prophets on
the N. and Apostles on the S. each standing under an
elaborate Gothic canopy, with panels below bearing the
names and appropriate verses relating to the prophets
and the passages from the Creed ascribed to the individual apostles, all as follows, N. side—first window
(Plate 122), David, Daniel and Elijah; second window,
Isaiah, Jeremiah and Ezekiel; third window, Amos,
Zachariah and Malachi; fourth window (Plate 122),
Elisha, Jonah and Obadiah; S. side, first window, St.
Peter, St. Andrew and St. James the Great; second
window (Plate 123), St. John, St. Philip and St. Bartholomew; third window (Plate 123), St. Matthew,
St. Thomas and St. James the Less; fourth window,
St. Jude, St. Simon and St. Matthias; in tracery
of each window on both sides, four seated angels
holding shields-of-arms of John Williams, Bishop of
Lincoln, (a) Williams, (b) Lincoln impaling the
quartered arms of Williams, (c) tierced in pale Lincoln,
Williams and the College of Westminster, (d) fully
quartered arms of Williams; in first S. window is the
date 1629 and in the other three S. windows the date
1630; glass, undoubtedly by Bernard van Linge as
some of the prophets are identical in design with similar
figures, by that artist, in Lincoln's Inn Chapel, London.
Organ-case: Modern but incorporating two carved
figures of St. Luke and St. Matthew and two late
17th-century fluted Corinthian columns, brought from
elsewhere. Panelling (Plate 47): Round E. end of
chapel, oak panelling divided into bays by fluted Ionic
pilasters standing on arcaded pedestals and supporting
an entablature, in bays, two ranges of panels, the lower
with simple enrichment, the upper with applied scrolled
tablets with cornices and pediments; middle bay on
E. wall with curved pediment with acanthus-brackets
and swags of grapes, corn and flowers, and forming
reredos. In ante-chapel—on N., S. and W. walls,
below window-sills, bolection-moulded panelling with
cornice and benches along S. and W. walls, late 17th-century. Paving: of black and white marble squares,
set diagonally with borders. Pulpit (Plate 44): In antechapel—of cedar, four-sided with moulded base and
cornice, Ionic pilasters at angles, three sides panelled
with applied tablets similar to upper panels at E. end of
chapel, plain legs with claw-feet. Screen (Plate 125):
Between chapel and ante-chapel—of cedar and of three
bays, divided and flanked by fluted Corinthian pilasters,
supporting an entablature with a broken pediment
over the middle bay with swags and a large standing
figure, in middle bay panelled doors of two leaves with
carved and pierced fanlight, round arch with cherub-heads and cartouche-of-arms of Lincoln See, Williams
and Westminster College, tierced in pale, side-bays
each with square-headed opening with pediment and
cartouche-of-arms of Lincoln See and Westminster
College, opening filled in upper and lower part with
pierced arabesque work and having a central strapped
oval panel with pierced spandrels; W. face of screen
similar to E. face but with free Corinthian columns, the
same arms in the middle and two variations of the arms
of Williams in the side bays. Stalls: of oak, fifteen
on each side and two on each return, set against a
panelled backing continued from the upper part of the
panelling round the E. end, stalls divided by shaped
arms and fronts panelled similarly to the lower panels
round the E. end, desk-ends (Plate 43) and doors with
shaped tops carved with cartouches, misericordes (Plate
138) carved with simple foliage. Added row of late
17th-century stalls on each side with seats fixed on
fronts of earlier stalls, later fronts in cedar with bolection-moulded panels, inlay-work and carved pendants,
desk-ends each with shaped top supporting a carved
figure—Aaron, Moses, the four Evangelists, St. Peter
and St. Paul (Plate 126).
Condition—Good.