Philip Pullman, Carnegie Award-winning author of The Northern Lights, Oxford resident, and much-loved middle school English teacher of one of the College staff, opened The Greenland Library, the third and final library on Oxford’s Radcliffe Square to be named after a benefactor.
“I am particularly delighted to open this Library as it represents many things I hold to be important, most obviously literature, however this ‘King’s Door’, unusually for the time, allowed the public direct access to an Oxford College: so it is both Town and Gown… like me.”
Brasenose College library was previously too small for the number of students and academics wishing to use it countering the modern assumption that libraries are a thing of the past. As part of this project, a considerable extension was undertaken which cost around £4million – this was completely funded by donations from alumni.
Guests at the ceremony included the University’s Chancellor, Lord Chris Patten, and local city dignitaries including the Leaders of the city and county councils, and the High Sheriff of Oxford.

The Greenland Library was originally built by a bequest from Samuel Radcliffe (Principal of Brasenose College 1614-1648) who left money in his will to build:
‘a Chappel’ and ‘a buildinge upon Pillars . . . which will make a walke under it, the greate want of Brasennose Colledge’ (sic.)
The ‘building on pillars’ was the Library, constructed after his death, between 1657 and 1664 with open Cloisters underneath to provide a sheltered place for exercise and a burial ground.
Following the royalist defeat, in defiance of Cromwell and the Commonwealth, the College commissioned an unusually ornate chapel and its adjacent library building, featuring the rebelliously-named door. The Greenland Library is one of the very few buildings of significance built during the commonwealth period. The College, like many in Oxford at the time, was clearly royalist, and constructed its very own ‘King’s Door’ complete with a royal crown above the door as a veritable two fingers to the new protector.
The Greenland Library is open to students and faculty 24 hours a day and contains over 60,000 books and periodicals.
The library works were funded by three College alumni, Duncan Greenland CBE, James Del Favero and Gerald Smith. Two reading rooms will be named in honour of Del Favero and Smith respectively with the overall library taking Greenland’s name.
John Bowers QC, Brasenose College Principal, said: “We are delighted to officially open The Greenland Library at Brasenose College. The library is at the centre of College life and we are incredibly grateful that our alumni and friends Duncan, James and Gerald have all made substantial contributions to ensure it remains fit for twenty-first century learning and research. The whole Brasenose community – current and future – thanks them for their tremendous generosity.”