. A history of the University of Oxford : from the earliest times to the year 1530. SECESSION TO STAMFORD. survived there for about four hundred years, in the name andsign of a building which some of them had inhabited, and onwhich they had bestowed the familiar appellation of Brase-nose Hall.^ At Oxford the memory of the secession of 1334was preserved even longer in an oath that was administeredto all candidates for a degree : You shall swear that youwill not give or attend lectures at Stamford, as in a university,seat of learning, or general college.^ This antiquated formulahas been used wit
. A history of the University of Oxford : from the earliest times to the year 1530. SECESSION TO STAMFORD. survived there for about four hundred years, in the name andsign of a building which some of them had inhabited, and onwhich they had bestowed the familiar appellation of Brase-nose Hall.^ At Oxford the memory of the secession of 1334was preserved even longer in an oath that was administeredto all candidates for a degree : You shall swear that youwill not give or attend lectures at Stamford, as in a university,seat of learning, or general college.^ This antiquated formulahas been used within the memory of men who are still been retained in the Laudian code of 1636, it receivedfresh sanction in 1800, and it was not expunged from thestatute-book of the University until * Pecks Amtals of Stamford,book xi. pp. 23—27. ^ Mun. Acad. p. 375. 3 Wards Oxford University Sta-tutes, vol. i. p. Ill; vol. ii. pp. 43, 140. Brasenose Hall at Oxford ismentioned by that name in docu-ments of the thirteenth Lives of Smyth andSiitto7i, p. CHAPTER V.
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