- published: 12 Jan 2017
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Osney Abbey or Oseney Abbey, later Osney Cathedral, was a house of Augustinian canons at Osney in Oxfordshire. The site is south of the modern Botley Road, down Mill Street by Osney Cemetery, next to the railway line just south of Oxford station. It was founded as a priory in 1129, becoming an abbey around 1154. It was dissolved in 1539 but was created a cathedral, the last abbot Robert King becoming the first Bishop of Oxford. The see was transferred to the new foundation of Christ Church in 1545 and the building fell into ruin. It was one of the four renowned monastic houses of medieval Oxford, along with St Frideswide's Priory, Rewley and Godstow.
The house was founded by Robert D'Oyly the younger, Norman governor of Oxford, prompted by his wife, Edith Forne, who, to expiate the sins of her former life as the mistress of Henry I, solicited her husband to this pious work with a story of the chattering of magpies interpreted by a friar as souls in purgatory who needed a church in which to rest.
Coordinates: 51°45′07″N 1°16′26″W / 51.752°N 1.274°W / 51.752; -1.274
Osney or Osney Island (/ˈoʊzni/; an earlier spelling of the name is Oseney) is a riverside community in the west of the city of Oxford, England. In modern times the name is applied to a community also known as Osney Town, located off the Botley Road, just west of the city's main railway station, on an island surrounded by the River Thames, Osney Ditch and another backwater connecting the Thames to Osney Ditch. Osney is part of the city council ward of Jericho and Osney.
Until the early twentieth century, the name was applied to a different island, between Castle Mill Stream and the main stream of the Thames, on which Osney Abbey and Osney Mill were established during the Middle Ages. The place plays a minor but significant role in The Miller's Tale in Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales.
The name "Osney" is Old English, and means either "island in the Ouse" (possibly an old name for the Thames) or "Osa's Island". Until the early twentieth century the name was applied to the island formed by two streams of the River Thames immediately west of the centre of Oxford, Castle Mill Stream and the stream which is now the main channel of the river. To the north the island is bounded by a short channel between the River Thames and the Castle Mill Stream, the Sheepwash Channel, which separates it from Fiddler's Island.
Christ Church may refer to:
Oxford (/ˈɒksfərd/) is a city in the South East region of England and the county town of Oxfordshire. With a population of 159,994 it is the 52nd largest city in the United Kingdom, and one of the fastest growing and most ethnically diverse. Oxford has a broad economic base. Its industries include motor manufacturing, education, publishing and a large number of information technology and science-based businesses, some being academic offshoots. The city is known worldwide as the home of the University of Oxford, the oldest university in the English-speaking world. Buildings in Oxford demonstrate notable examples of every English architectural period since the late Saxon period. Oxford is known as the "city of dreaming spires", a term coined by poet Matthew Arnold.
Oxford was first settled in Saxon times and was initially known as "Oxenaforda", meaning "Ford of the Oxen" (according to the English Place-Name Society, who base their result on a passing reference in Florence of Worcester's work "Chronicon ex chronicis"); fords were more common than bridges at that time. It began with the establishment of a river crossing for oxen around AD 900. In the 10th century, Oxford became an important military frontier town between the kingdoms of Mercia and Wessex and was on several occasions raided by Danes.
Christ Church Cathedral Oxford
EXIT - directo Abbey Road studios - Santa Juana
Aldsworth St Bartholomew
Christ Church, Oxford
A Boat trip up the River Thames/Isis at Oxford 2016
Wadebridge Model Railway Exhibition 2010 - Osney Town
Oxford to Bablockhythe,Thames Path,Michael Parkinson
Macgillivray
St Marnoc 0 Gauge
Macgillivray
A video tour of the Cathedral, Christ Church Oxford. Most of the cathedral was constructed at the end of the 1100s as the church for the Augustinian Canons who lived there. The church has been through a lot of changes since then; most importantly, the inside was remodelled in the 1800s by the architect, Sir George Gilbert Scott. Christ Church was founded during the religious reformation of Henry VIII’s reign and while he was re-inventing the college as Christ Church in 1546, he was also creating a new diocese in Oxford. Beforehand, he had made the church of Osney Abbey Oxford’s cathedral, but in freeing up the investment for Christ Church, he decided to save money by converting its chapel to a new function - as a cathedral. This relationship between the two facets of Christ Chur...
Places to visit in and around Stratford: Aldsworth Follow-if you take the narrow and winding road from Northleach, the tower of Northleach's famous wool church dominates the horizon as you climb the steep, wooded escarpment towards Aldsworth. Soon after this beacon falls from view the steeple of St. Bartholomew's appears straight ahead, only to disappear as you follow a stream into the heart of the village. The church is reached by climbing a narrow lane up to the brow of the hill. You are greeted by a curious sight, the early 16th century north facade of the church has a row of huge carved heads that owe more to the work of Tolkien or a maker garden gnomes than the usual collection of bears, bats and gurning faces. Similar carvings can be seen at Fairford and Lechlade though they seem m...
1 1952 Mears & Stainbank 2 1952 Mears & Stainbank 3 1698 Abraham I Rudhall 4 1698 Abraham I Rudhall 5 1747 Abel Rudhall 6 1741 Abel Rudhall 7 1640 Ellis I Knight 8 1897 Mears & Stainbank 9 c1410 John Bird 10 c1410 John Bird 11 1740 Abel Rudhall 12 1589 Unidentified (weight 31 - 0 - 23 or 1585kg) in D This interesting twelve hang in a monumental wooden structure above a great stairwell. They hung in the central tower of the Cathedral until 1872 when they were moved here. The ringing chamber is formed by wooden panelling and the belfry protrudes through the roof of this chamber, and is hidden from view outside by a curtain wall with louvres in it. They go mostly OK, though some bells are difficult because of frame movement. The rope circl...
We travel through the city past famous landmarks including Christchurch College and Meadows, the University boathouses and regatta course, the Head of the River and Folly Bridge . From the river we take in a side of Oxford's heritage rarely seen by visitors to the city. Quaint Osney Island, well-loved allotments and gardens and majestic and ancient Port Meadow are off the tourist trail but represent some of Oxford's most beautiful and intriguing scenery. Port Meadow, a vast area of common land, has remained little changed since prehistoric times and supports plants and bird-life in abundance. At the top of Port Meadow is Godstow. Godstow was the ultimate destination of Alice Liddell and Lewis Carroll when they followed an identical route to our trip while composing 'Alice's Adventures in W...
A superb 0 Gauge diorama depicting the station of that name
On 6 July 2016 I walked along the Thames Path from Osney Bridge, Oxford to the Ferryman Inn at Bablockhythe near Northmoor. This was another section of my walk in a westerly direction from Blackfriars Bridge, London. Michael Parkinson
(Facchinetti-Negrini)
Dietro di me
terre di uomini
sopra di me
mondi di nuvole.
Infinito e vento ormai
dentro gli occhi affondano
nella vela tesa io
voglio solo esistere.
Nelle città
devi nasconderti
finché l'età
pian piano porti via
consumati sogni che
troppo sole chiedono
ma i vent'anni e l'anima
li ho tenuti stretti io.
È il regalo più importante
al figlio che mi dona lei
nuove stelle e spiagge bianche
e orizzonti solo miei.
Che mai dirà
lei quando in casa mia
gente verrà
per farle dire se
sono un pazzo o se l'idea
di quest'avventura mia
io l'avevo in mente già
nei tranquilli giorni là.
Terra non c'è
ombre nel sole mai
l 'immensità
voci sommerse ha.
L'alba esausta e lucida
non riscalda l'anima
ma il cammino tracciano
ali bianche e rapide.
In quel punto c'è il mio mondo
la mia gente tu ci sei
ora esisto fino in fondo