The Cathedral Church of Oxford is one of the smallest in the country and it is uniquely also the College chapel of Christ Church College. The site spans 1200 years of Christian history beginning with St Frideswide’s nunnery in the 9th century.
Christ Church was originally founded by Cardinal Wolsey as Cardinal’s College in 1524. The college buildings took over the site of St. Frideswide’s Monastery, which was suppressed by Wolsey to fund his college.
The monastery dated back to the earliest days of Oxford as a settlement in the 9th Century AD. When Wolsey fell from power in 1529 the College became property of King Henry VIII. Henry re-founded the College in 1546 and appointed the old monastery church as cathedral of the new diocese of Oxford. The new institution of cathedral and university college was named Aedes Christi, which is rendered in English as Christ Church.
Christ Church Cathedral and College photostream
Christ Church Cathedral and College photostream: