Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Ridley Hall, Cambridge

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Location
  
Cambridge, England

Established
  
1881

Website
  
www.ridley.cam.ac.uk

Motto
  
Martyrii Mes (Latin)

Named for
  
Motto in English
  
Mindful of Martyrdom

Principal
  
Michael Volland

Phone
  
+44 1223 746580

Founded
  
1881

Sister college
  
Ridley Hall, Cambridge

Address
  
Ridley Hall Rd, Cambridge CB3 9HG, UK

Undergraduate tuition and fees
  
7,900 GBP (2011), International tuition: 10,000 GBP (2011)

Notable alumni
  
Similar
  
Westcott House - Cambridge, Wycliffe Hall - Oxford, Westminster College - Cambridge, Oak Hill College, Wesley House

Profiles

Ridley Hall is a theological college located in Sidgwick Avenue in Cambridge in the United Kingdom, which trains men and women intending to take Holy Orders, as deacon or priest of the Church of England and the ministry of other churches. It was founded in 1881 and named in memory of Nicholas Ridley, a leading Protestant theologian of the sixteenth century. The first principal was theologian Handley Moule, later Bishop of Durham.

Contents

Although not part of the University of Cambridge, Ridley Hall maintains close ties with the university and many of its students are awarded qualifications by the university Faculty of Divinity, and until the introduction of the Common Award degrees were also awarded by Anglia Ruskin University to ordinands who did not meet Cambridge's minimum grades (a high 2:1 or above). Along with all other training institutions Ridley Hall is now offering a significant number of Common Award qualifications, accredited by Durham University (college's on Oxford or Cambridge are still able to also offer degrees from the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge but institutions in other locations may onl offer the common award). Ridley Hall teaching tends towards an evangelical theology. It is one of four Church of England theological colleges (the others being St John's College, Nottingham, Trinity College, Bristol and Cranmer Hall in Durham) which self-identify as "Open Evangelical". The current principal of Ridley Hall is Michael Volland, succeeding Andrew Norman, who moved to become Direction of Ministry and Mission in the Diocese of Leeds.

It also is one of the five centres that host the Centre for Youth Ministry, a Christian youth Work training course, throughout the United Kingdom. The other four centres are situated in Oxford, Nottingham, Bristol and Belfast.

Ridley Hall forms part of the Cambridge Theological Federation along with Westcott House, Westminster College and the Institute for Orthodox Christian Studies (among others).

It publishes an academic journal Anvil.

Notable staff and alumni

  • Jonathan Bailey
  • Richard Bauckham
  • Jeremy Begbie
  • Andrew Briggs
  • Christopher John Cocksworth
  • Timothy Dudley-Smith
  • Michael Nazir-Ali
  • Gavin Peacock
  • John Sentamu
  • David Sheppard
  • John Stott
  • John Waine
  • David Watson
  • David Wenham
  • Andrew White
  • Jonathan Holmes
  • Peter Owen Jones
  • Mike Ovey
  • List of principals

    Thus far, all the principals have been ordained Anglican clergy.
  • 1881–1899 (res.): Handley Moule
  • 1889–1907 (res.): Thomas Drury
  • 1907–1927 (res.): Arthur Tait
  • 1927–1945 (res.): Paul Gibson
  • 1945–1950 (res.): Falkner Allison
  • 1951–1963 (res.): Cyril Bowles
  • 1963–1971 (res.): Michael Hennell
  • 1971–1972 (res.): Francis Palmer
  • 1973–1978 (res.): Keith Sutton
  • 1978–1991 (res.): Hugo de Waal
  • 1992–2001 (res.): Graham Cray
  • 2001–2008 (res.): Christopher Cocksworth
  • 2009–2016 (res.): Andrew Norman
  • 2016-Present : Michael Volland
  • References

    Ridley Hall, Cambridge Wikipedia


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