Bentham Project
- Home
- Who Was Jeremy Bentham?
- Bentham and UCL
- Auto-Icon
- Panopticon
- Representations
- Quotations
- About the Bentham Project
- Publications
- Bentham Texts Online
- Journals
- Transcribe Bentham
- Research Tools
- International Society for Utilitarian Studies
- News, Events, & Benthamiana
- Videos, Podcasts, & More
- Bentham Project Blog
- Contact
Bentham and UCL
Bentham is often credited with being one of the founders of the
University of London, the forerunner of today's University College
London. This is not, in fact, true. Bentham was eighty years of age
when the new University opened its doors in 1828, and took no part in
the campaign to bring it into being. However, the myth of his
participation has been perpetuated in a mural by Henry Tonks
(1862-1937), in the dome above the Flaxman gallery in the main UCL
library. It shows William Wilkins (1778-1839), the architect of the
main building, submitting the plans to Bentham for his approval while
the portico is under construction in the background. Needless to say,
it is pure fantasy.
Yet although Bentham played no direct part in the establishment of UCL, he still deserves to be considered as its spiritual father. Many of the founders, particularly James Mill (1773-1836) and Henry Brougham (1778-1868), held him in high esteem, and their project embodied many of his ideas on education and society. He strongly believed that education should be made more widely available, and not only to those who were wealthy and members of the established church, as was the case at the traditional universities, Oxford and Cambridge. As the first English University to open its doors to all, regardless of race, creed or political belief (provided they could afford reasonable fees!), UCL went a long way to fulfilling Bentham's vision of what a University should be. He took a great interest in the new institution, and was instrumental in securing the appointment of his pupil John Austin (1790-1859) as the first Professor of Jurisprudence at UCL in 1829.
Thus it was only right that UCL should provide a home both for Bentham's voluminous manuscripts, now in the library, and for his other tangible memorial, his famous (or perhaps notorious) "Auto-Icon".
Watch a film by the Bentham Project on Bentham's connection to UCL:
Page last modified on 07 dec 10 11:10
Disclaimer | Accessibility | Privacy | Advanced Search | Help

