Wykeham Journal 2014 | Page 18

Revolutionary. That is the word that most sums up Winchester for me. Revolutionary, with a strong undercurrent of radical. Arriving at Winchester in 1984, fired up on adolescence, loud guitar music, and the Cold War, I was amazed to be confronted by gothic evidence that revolution had not been invented in the twentieth century. Winchester College, I quickly realised, was built on radicalism. William of Wykeham, its Founder, looked around at fourteenth-century education, and concluded it was not fit for purpose. Like King Alfred before him, he resolved to increase the learning in the land. But instead of giving his money to the country’s abbeys and cathedrals to enlarge their schools, he decided to reinvent the system. He founded an independent grammar school. Winchester was therefore revolutionary from the start. And it was part of a bold programme to train scholars for his new college at Oxford, which was equally radical in its admission of undergraduates, its formalized tutorial system, and its quadrangular architecture, all of which became standard across Oxford and Cambridge. Time has vindicated Wykeham’s extrao