What wonders lie behind our walls?

Winchester’s libraries, archives and collections are of international significance, preserve the history of the school, and provide a unique learning resource. Artefacts acquired over the past six centuries often form the basis of a Div discussion, or are incorporated in to everyday lessons. 

Winchester College Treasury

Treasury is the school’s museum of art and archaeology. Its displays include artefacts from Egypt, Greece and Rome, medieval art and early English silver, and Chinese ceramics from the Tang to Qing dynasties. They are exhibited across four galleries in the medieval Warden’s stables, converted into a museum in 2016. More detail about many of our objects is available online here.

The Treasury is open to the public free of charge every day from 2-4pm. Find out more here .

A virtual tour of the museum is available here.

Group and school visits are also welcome and enquiries should be directed to the Museum Manager

Exhibitions

The school’s Treasury has a programme of temporary exhibitions, many of the them curated by pupils, and often including objects on loan from elsewhere. Entry is free.

WAR CLOISTER: A CENTENARY EXHIBITION
22 January to 31 July 2024

This exhibition explores the development of War Cloister, Winchester’s memorial to the dead of the First World War, and is part of a series of events to mark the centenary of its opening.

War Cloister was conceived by Montague Rendall, Headmaster of Winchester 1911-1924. He was deeply affected by the experience of leading the school through the First World War and devoted much of his energy to planning a memorial to the 514 Wykehamists killed in the conflict. The exhibition includes two important works of art from his collection, both of which reflect his experience of the war.

Poetry and Illustration
20 May to 20 December

This exhibition explores the relationship between printed words and images.

Through a selection of books from the Fellows’ Library, the exhibition looks at ways in which poetry collections have been illustrated from the seventeenth century to the twenty-first.

The work on display includes striking engravings of Paradise Lost from the 1688 edition of that poem to the anonymous, handmade silhouettes in a copy of the third edition of Lyrical Ballads, as well as contemporary experiments in typesetting and binding. It has been put together by two current fourth-year pupils and two members of the English department.

The Fellows' Library

The Fellows’ Library contains over 10,000 rare books and manuscripts. It was established at the beginning of the 15th century, and is one of a small number of ancient libraries to have survived with part of its medieval collection in situ. The library has a particularly strong collection in Biblical scholarship, English literature, cartography, and the history of science. Pupils have access to the library throughout their time at Winchester: Mathematicians, for example, are shown a first edition of Newton's Principia. Students of English have the opportunity to study the First Folio of Shakespeare’s plays. Musicians are able to see song books that once belonged to Elizabeth I.

Watch a short film on the Rare Books of the Fellows' Library

Winchester College Archives

The College Archives record the history of the school, its estates, buildings and pupils from its foundation. Uniquely, the archives are housed in the same rooms built for their storage in the 1390s, and due to the quality of that provision, remain remarkably well preserved. We welcome enquiries about all aspects of the school’s history.  

Some resources can now be seen online. These include registers of pupils, the school magazine (published since 1866), and a published catalogue of the archives. For more information, to make an appointment to visit or to send an enquiry, please contact the College Archivist, Suzanne Foster.

The archives also include details of all pupils who served in the First and Second World War and a dedicated website provides information on all the pupils who fell in these two conflicts.

Moberly library

Moberly Library occupies a beautifully beamed 14th century building which formerly housed the school brewery and the Headmaster’s ballroom. This now forms the school’s main library, with a stock of around 30,000 items. In addition, the library subscribes to numerous online databases, as well as an extensive list of periodicals and their digital archives.

Moberly Library is supplemented by the school’s separate Science and Art School Libraries. Science Library covers all aspects of Science but mainly focuses on Physics, Chemistry, Biology, Medicine and Engineering and is the home of the Natural History Society (NHS) book collection. The Art School Library covers all aspects of the fine and decorative arts, architecture and also offers a variety of film and photography equipment for pupils to borrow.

For more information, please contact the Moberly librarians.

Teaching Treasures

Learning through objects

The school's extensive collections act as the springboard for discussion or to inspire more in-depth study. 

These short films highlight some of the ways objects can be explored with pupils of all ages.

James Hallinan, Head of History, explores the impact of the Mongol invasions on Chinese culture through a group of ceramics from the Song (960-1279) and Yuan (1279-1368) dynasties.

Edmund Lewis, Head of Classics, discusses Greek vase imagery, with Sixth Form pupil, James.

Teaching Treasures

Sharing Expertise

The collections are a valuable resource that can be used extensively through our educational partnerships with Primary and Secondary Schools in the region. 

In these short films, Dominic Rowland, Head of Maths Outreach, explains the continuing relevance of Euclid to modern mathemeticians, whilst History don, Nick Townson, uncovers the hidden meanings of the ‘misericords’ of Winchester College Chapel, which are amongst the finest woodcarvings to survive from medieval England.

Read more about Educational Partnerships

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