Oxford Almanack

The Oxford Almanack is an annual almanac published by the Oxford University Press for the University of Oxford since 1674.[1]

The Oxford University Press originally held a monopoly on publishing almanacs. The almanacs traditionally included engravings and information about Oxford University, including the Heads of Colleges and a university calendar. No almanack appeared in 1675, but it has been published annually since 1676.[1]

Engravers and artists have included James Basire, Michael Burghers, J. M. W. Turner, and John Piper.

List of almanacks since 1992

Petter's The Oxford Almanacks lists the scenes depicted and their illustrators up to 1973, and the list is continued to 1991 in Bradshaw's article in Oxoniensia (see Further Reading for both references).

Year Illustration Artist
1992Sir Geoffrey Arthur Building, Pembroke College
1993St Hilda's CollegeHugh Casson
1994Oxford University Press
1995St John's CollegeIlana Richardson
1996Tom Tower and the Radcliffe CameraJonathan Pike
1997Covered MarketMichele Tranquillini
1998North OxfordMatthew Cook
1999University CollegeRon Sandford
2000University ChurchSarah McMenemy
2001Oxford in summerDavid Mach
2002High StreetDavid Prentice
2003Folly BridgeOliver Warman
2004Harris Manchester CollegePhilip Atkins
2005Linacre CollegeBen Pritchard
2006Saïd Business SchoolChris Andrews
2007St Edmund HallJoseph Winkelman
2008Magdalen CollegeMichael Chaplin
2009Radcliffe ObservatoryJohn Walsom
2010Wadham CollegeFrancis Hammel
2011Oxford Canal & St Barnabas ChurchJohn Newberry
2012Botanic GardenJohn Lawrence
2013Balliol CollegeIvan Green
2014Exeter CollegeTim Steward
2015St Cross CollegeRobin Wilson
2016St Catherine's CollegeCathy Read
2017Corpus Christi CollegeCeri Allen
2018Oxford Centre for Islamic StudiesChris Fothergill
2019Oxford University PressWilliam Monk
gollark: 10%? I'm sure it's higher on SC. Unless you count really inactive ones.
gollark: Staff Discord? Of course there's a staff Discord.
gollark: You don't need a Discord bridge, just make an IRC bridge then bridge IRC to Discord.
gollark: I don't really like it, it just seems really unpolished and not very good.
gollark: Run a minetest server instead, disguise it as minecraft, and hope nobody notices?

References

  1. Hibbert, Christopher, ed. (1988). "Oxford Almanacks". The Encyclopaedia of Oxford. Macmillan. pp. 298–299. ISBN 0-333-39917-X.

Further reading


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.