Oxford – streets and riverside meadow
Start at the Carfax, where four streets converge – Carfax comes from the Latin quadrifurcus, for ‘four-forked’. Carfax Tower is where Charles II was proclaimed King in 1660. Walk ahead into St Aldates and head for the visitor entrance to Christ Church, Oxford’s largest college, founded in 1525 by Cardinal Wolsey. When he was disgraced it was refounded as King Henry VIII’s College. It became known as Christ Church when the college and the cathedral became one. Christ Church has had many notable students, including thirteen Prime Ministers and others including John Wesley, Lewis Carroll and W H Auden. Go left through the gates and walk down the tree-lined walk. On the left is the visitor entrance to Christ Church, or keep ahead to the green expanse of Christ Church Meadow.
On reaching the Thames towpath, swing left and follow the riverbank. Keep ahead until you reach the confluence of the Thames and the River Cherwell. There is a steeply arched footbridge here. Avoid it and keep alongside the Cherwell. The river meanders between the meadows and sports fields. Leave the river bank and pass through wrought-iron gates to walk up Rose Lane.
With Magdalen Bridge and Magdalen College bell tower on your right, turn left at the High Street or ‘the High’, as it is known in Oxford. Cross Longwall Street and turn right into Queen’s Lane. The high perimeter wall of Queen’s College is on the left and on the right are St Edmund Hall and the former parish church of St Peter-in-the-East. Continue into New College Lane and on the right, beyond the arch, is the entrance to New College. Keep along New College Lane to the Bridge of Sighs, a 1913 replica of its Venice namesake, and in front of you is the Sheldonian Theatre.
Designed by Sir Christopher Wren and completed in 1669, the theatre was built to hold important university meetings and ceremonies. Turn left here for the Radcliffe Camera and cross Radcliffe Square towards Brasenose College, which probably took its name from a brazen door-knocker in the shape of a nose. Turn right into Brasenose Lane, then right again into Turl Street, cutting between Jesus College and Exeter College. Make for Broad Street and on the right is St Giles, where Charles I drilled his men during the Civil War. Turn left into Cornmarket Street, passing the Church of St Michael at the North Gate. Its Saxon tower is the oldest building in Oxford and originally linked the city wall and the North Gate. Return to the Carfax Tower.
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