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Gonville and Caius College, often referred to simply as Caius ( KEEZ), is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge in Cambridge, England. Founded in 1348 by Edmund Gonville, it is the fourth-oldest of the University of Cambridge's 31 colleges and one of the wealthiest. In 1557, it was refounded by alumnus John Caius. The college has been attended by many students who have gone on to significant accomplishment, including fifteen Nobel Prize winners, the second-highest of any Oxbridge college after Trinity College, Cambridge.Several streets in the city, including Harvey Road, Glisson Road, and Gresham Road, are named after Gonville and Caius alumni. The college and its masters have been influential in the development of the university, including in the founding of other colleges, including Trinity Hall and Darwin College and providing land on Sidgwick Site on which Faculty of Law was built. Source: Wikipedia (en)
Works about Gonville and Caius College
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Authors educated at Gonville and Caius College 36
- Alain de Botton
- Max Born
- Thomas Shadwell
- Richard K. Guy
- G. A. Henty
- Alastair Campbell
- Jeremy Taylor
- Harold James
- Charles Montagu Doughty
- Robert Batty
- Richard Overy
- Gerald Heard
- Quentin Skinner
- Orlando Figes
- Jaclyn Moriarty
- Allen Mawer
- Eugenia Cheng
- Ben Schott
- Richard Henry Yapp
- Francis Crick
- Tom Kempinski
- Ronald Fisher
- Simon Sebag Montefiore
- Ralph Alger Bagnold
- Andrew Roberts, Baron Roberts of Belgravia
- Christopher N. L. Brooke
- Max Pemberton
- Jonathan Sacks
- Edward Frederick Knight
- Paul Connerton
- Henry Ainsworth
- David T.-D. Clarke
- Paul Bahn
- Robert Willis
- John Day
- N. G. L. Hammond
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