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Events open to the public from the University of Cambridge

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Exhibitions

Partly gilded cartonnage mask, 380–30 BCE, cartonnage (linen and paste), gold and paint.

Made in Ancient Egypt

From elaborately decorated coffins to the Books of the Dead, ancient Egyptians produced objects which remain iconic today. But who were the makers behind them and how were they made?

Arthur Christopher Benson, Diarist: A Centenary Exhibition

Wed 12 March 2025 - Fri 21 March 2025

The Robert Cripps Gallery

Arthur Christopher Benson, son of Archbishop Edward White Benson and his remarkable wife Mary (Minnie) Sidgwick, was Fellow of Magdalene from 1904, President from 1912, and the College’s greatest and most generous Master from 1915 till his death in June 1925. From 1897 onwards, he kept a diary which at the time of his death had swelled to 180 volumes and almost 5 million words: for comparison, the complete diary of Samuel Pepys is just over one million words, the Authorised Version of the Bible a mere 783,137.

Benson’s published works are now mostly forgotten: if he is remembered at all, it is as the lyricist of “Land of Hope and Glory”. A brilliant conversationalist, he himself admitted that “In my books I am solemn, sweet, refined; in real life I am rather vehement, sharp, contemptuous, a busy mocker.” In his diary Benson gave free rein to his sharp observation and conversational talent, with all the “flippancy & brutality” lacking in his published works. It vividly evokes the life of the Edwardian social, literary and academic elites, to all of which Benson had privileged entreé, and an England still criss-crossed with railway branch lines and dusty unmetalled roads, where “my brother the bicycle” was the favoured means of travel. It gives a fascinating picture of Cambridge before and during World War 1, when it was effectively taken over by the military, and when Benson on a walking holiday was mistaken for a German spy. It has a fascinating and harrowing treatment of Benson’s bi-polar disorder and five-year breakdown. And it provides an unrivalled window into early 20th century Cambridge, and the life of Magdalene in a crucial period of transition, from a tiny and obscure late Victorian backwater to a thriving institution attracting staff and students of the calibre of the scientist David Keilin, the literary critic I A Richards, and the linguist and philosopher C K Ogden.

The exhibition, which will be inaugurated with a lecture by Professor Eamon Duffy, co-editor of a new annotated edition of Benson’s diary, illuminates Benson’s remarkable family background, the Edwardian literary scene in which he was a significant figure, and the academic world before, during and in the aftermath of the First World War.

Enquiries and booking

No need to book.

Timing

In person

2:00pm-4:00pm on weekdays from Wednesday 12 March until Friday 21 March

2:00pm-4:00pm on Saturday 15 March

All times

Wed 12 March 2025 2:00PM - 4:00PM
Thu 13 March 2025 2:00PM - 4:00PM
Fri 14 March 2025 2:00PM - 4:00PM
Sat 15 March 2025 2:00PM - 4:00PM
Mon 17 March 2025 2:00PM - 4:00PM
Tue 18 March 2025 2:00PM - 4:00PM
Wed 19 March 2025 2:00PM - 4:00PM
Thu 20 March 2025 2:00PM - 4:00PM
Fri 21 March 2025 2:00PM - 4:00PM

Venue

to access the exhibition please call in to the Porters’ Lodge on Magdalene Street.
Address: The Robert Cripps Gallery
Magdalene College
Magdalene St
Cambridge
Cambridgeshire
CB3 0AG
Website