19 March 2015, The Tablet

St Benet’s prepares for women students


A BENEDICTINE permanent private hall that is currently the last male-only undergraduate body at Oxford University is seeking funds for new premises in preparation for the admission of female students for the first time.

St Benet’s Hall is hoping to buy a house in Oxford owned by the Society of the Sacred Heart, which is planning to withdraw from the city as part of a reorganisation of the order.

At the moment the property, which has space for 25 student rooms, is occupied by three sisters of the order and is being run as a hostel for postgraduates and mature students.

Last year St Benet’s, which is overseen by Ampleforth Abbey in North Yorkshire, voted to admit women students for the first time and decided to accept female post-graduates with immediate effect.

St Benet’s was unable, however, to accept women as undergraduates at its current premises due to canon law and the fact that Benedictine monks live there. Consequently extra accommodation was sought.

The Society of the Sacred Heart, which came to Oxford in 1929, would like to sell to St Benet’s as it would enable the continuation of the order’s original educational vision. Sr Jane Maltby, the provincial in England, said: “Although we are sad to be leaving Oxford after over 80 years of supporting women’s higher education there, the Benedictine spirit of community and commitment to education will further the aspirations we have always striven to achieve.” Professor Werner Jeanrond, master of St Benet’s, said the hall is looking to raise funds to purchase the building.

The master added that the new building would provide accommodation for both female and male students, offices for the hall and a flat for himself and his family.


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