The Prebendal School is a private preparatory school in Chichester, situated adjacent to the Chichester Cathedral precinct. It is a boarding and day school educating the cathedral choristers. The school has ancient origins as the medieval cathedral song school at the thirteenth-century school house in West Street.[2]

The Prebendal School
Location
Map

England
Information
TypePreparatory
Private
MottoLatin: Fons Sapientiae Verbum Dei
The Word of God is the Fountain of Wisdom
Religious affiliation(s)Church of England
Established1497; 527 years ago (1497)
FounderBishop Edward Story
Chair of GovernorsDean Stephen Waine
HeadAlison Napier
GenderMixed
Age3 to 13
Enrolment≈120[1]
Houses4
Colour(s)  Red
PublicationThe Prebendalian
Former pupilsOld Prebendalians
Websitehttp://prebendalschool.org.uk/

In 2020, The Telegraph named The Prebendal School as one of the best-value independent schools in the country.[3] In January 2023, the school announced that its recent ISI inspection in November had found the school to be Excellent in all areas.[4]

History

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The Prebendal is the oldest school in Sussex and probably dates back to the foundation of Chichester Cathedral in the eleventh century when it was a 'song school', teaching and housing the choristers. It was later extended to admitting other boys from the city and neighbouring areas.[5] In 1497, it was re-founded as a grammar school by the Bishop of Chichester, Edward Story, who also attached it to the Prebend of Highleigh in Chichester Cathedral, hence the name of the school.[6]

The thirteenth-century school house with its narrow tower still stands in West Street.

Girls were introduced into the school in 1972. The school is now a co-educational, day and boarding preparatory school for children between 3 and 13 years of age.

Due to its financial position, exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic, the school confirmed in April 2021 that it was seeking external financial support.[7] In July 2021 it confirmed that it had been acquired by the Alpha Schools Group.[8][9]

Structure

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The school consists of the Pre-Prep (Nursery to Year 2) and the Prep (Years 3–8). Each pupil is a member of a school house, which are named after former Bishops of Chichester. There is also a boarding house that accommodate up to 46 boarders. The school remains open for Choristers in the weeks prior to Christmas, Easter and the Southern Cathedrals Festival. The Nursery, Pelicans, is open throughout the normal school holidays.

Academia

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The Memorial Garden

Pupils are taught the Common Entrance or Common Academic Scholarship examination to senior independent schools, offered by the Independent Schools Examinations Board.

Heads

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The following list includes Heads of the school prior to its re-founding in 1497:[10]

  • 1121 John
  • 1145 Peter
  • 1148 Joseph
  • 1180 John d'Aquila
  • 1192 Galfridus Aquillon
  • 1214 Hugh de Tournay
  • 1222 Ralph de Neville
  • 1227 Eustace de Leveland
  • 1229 Thomas de Lichfield
  • 12?? John Clymping
  • 1248 John de Arundel
  • 1256 William de Bracklesham
  • 1280 William de Pagham
  • 1288 John de Lacy
  • 1330 Henry de Garland
  • 1332 John Bishopstone
  • 1362 Walter Bracklesham
  • 1362 Henry Cookham
  • 1367 Robert de Walton
  • 1371 John de Kepston
  • 13?? Thomas Romsey
  • 1386 John Shillingford
  • 1388 Lambert Threkingham
  • 13?? Simon Russell
  • 1396 Walter Meetford
  • 1396 John Yernemouthe
  • 1399 William Reed
  • 1407 Robert Neel
  • 1430 John Stopydon
  • 143? John Morton
  • 1439 John Faukes
  • 14?? Thomas Gyldesburgh
  • 1478 Edmund Lichfield
  • 1483 John Brackenburgh
  • 1496 Thomas Burwell
  • 1497 John Wykley
  • 1500 John Holt
  • 1502 William Hone
  • 1504 Nicholas Bradbridge
  • 1521 John Goldyff
  • 1523 William Freynd
  • 1531 John Tychenor
  • 1538 Anthony Clarke
  • 1550 Thomas Garbard
  • 1554 Augustine Curteys
  • 1556 Robert Oking
  • 1561 Matthew Myeres
  • 1570 Henry Blackstone
  • 1571 John Penven
  • 1572 John Beeching
  • 1578 George Buck
  • 1582 John Sandford
  • 1582 Edward Bragg
  • 1591 William Sale
  • 1594 Hugh Barker
  • 1604 George Elgar
  • 1642 George Collins
  • 1660 Thomas Barter
  • 1665 John Baguley
  • 1669 Francis Bacon
  • 1685 Robert Tupp
  • 1701 Thomas Baker
  • 1730 William Wade
  • 1768 Richard Tireman
  • 1776 John Atkinson
  • 1784 David David
  • 1797 John Stevens
  • 1802 Moses Dodd
  • 1808 George Bliss
  • 1824 Charles Webber
  • 1840 Thomas Brown
  • 1879 Frederick G. Bennett
  • 1912 William F. Pearce
  • 1931 Arthur S. Duncan-Jones
  • 1935 Philip C. Manwaring
  • 1945 Philip E. Ellard-Handley
  • 1951 Charles H. Sinclair
  • 1953 Guy F. Hepburn
  • 1969 Neville F. Ollerenshaw
  • 1982 Godfrey C. Hall
  • 2005 Timothy R. Cannell
  • 2017 Louise Salmond Smith
  • 2023 Alison Napier

Old Prebendalians

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Alumni are known as Old Prebendalians. Notable Old Prebendalians include:

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Independent Schools Council profile". ISC. Retrieved 12 September 2017.
  2. ^ Ollerenshaw, Neville (28 September 1984). A History of the Prebendal School. Phillimore. ISBN 9780850335521.
  3. ^ Hunt, Marianna (15 January 2020). "Missed the state primary school deadline? These are the best value private junior schools still accepting applications". The Telegraph.
  4. ^ "The Prebendal School's Excellent ISI Report 2022". www.prebendalschool.org.uk. 27 January 2023. Archived from the original on 23 March 2023. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  5. ^ "History of Chichester cathedral choir school". Of Choristers - ancient and modern. Archived from the original on 10 February 2015. Retrieved 13 June 2015.
  6. ^ Miner, John Nelson (1990). The Grammar Schools of Medieval England. McGill-Queen's Press. pp. 277–278. ISBN 0-7735-0634-9.
  7. ^ "Chinese investors eye the Prebendal School in Chichester". www.churchtimes.co.uk. Retrieved 29 August 2021.
  8. ^ "Chichester school joins leading education group". Retrieved 29 August 2021.
  9. ^ "Chichester Prebendal School announces its new owner". Retrieved 31 January 2022.
  10. ^ Bromfeld, Tom (September 2016). "The Prebendal School's Quest for Remembrance" (PDF). Chichester in the Great War.
  11. ^ "The River of God". The Lamp Magazine. 17 June 2024. Retrieved 19 August 2024.
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50°50′11″N 0°46′57″W / 50.83639°N 0.78250°W / 50.83639; -0.78250