Balliol College | ||||||||||||||||||
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University of Oxford | ||||||||||||||||||
Location | Broad Street, Oxford, OX1 3BJ | |||||||||||||||||
Coordinates | 51°45′17″N 1°15′28″W / 51.7547°N 1.2578°W | |||||||||||||||||
Full name | The Master and Scholars of Balliol College in the University of Oxford | |||||||||||||||||
Latin name | Collegium Balliolensis | |||||||||||||||||
Established | 1263 | |||||||||||||||||
Named for | John I de Balliol | |||||||||||||||||
Sister college | St John's College, Cambridge | |||||||||||||||||
Master | Dame Helen Ghosh | |||||||||||||||||
Undergraduates | c.395 (2023)[2] | |||||||||||||||||
Postgraduates | c.405 (2023)[2] | |||||||||||||||||
Endowment | £146m (2023)[3] | |||||||||||||||||
Website | www | |||||||||||||||||
Boat club | Balliol College Boat Club | |||||||||||||||||
Map | ||||||||||||||||||
Balliol College (/ˈbeɪliəl/)[4] is a constituent college of the University of Oxford.[5] Founded in 1263 by John I de Balliol,[6] it has a claim to be the oldest college in Oxford and the English-speaking world.[7]
Members of Balliol have been awarded 13 Nobel Prizes with 12 Laureates (the most of any Oxford college).[8][9] Balliol has educated four prime ministers of the United Kingdom (the second highest of any Oxford college), Harald V of Norway,[10] Empress Masako of Japan, President Richard von Weizsäcker of Germany, and Seretse Khama of Botswana. Balliol alumni also include the astronomer James Bradley, legal figures Lord Bingham and John Marshall Harlan II, geneticist Baruch Samuel Blumberg, writers Robert Southey, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Matthew Arnold, Graham Greene and Algernon Swinburne, historians R. H. Tawney, Christopher Hill and James H. Billington and philosophers J. L. Austin, T. H. Green, Derek Parfit, W. D. Ross, Charles Taylor, and Bernard Williams. Among the most famous students are economist Adam Smith,[11][12] the Guardian of the Bahá'í Faith Shoghi Effendi, the biologist Julian Huxley and his brother Aldous Huxley, the author of Brave New World.[13]