Christ Church's sister college in the University…
1546 CE
Christ Church's sister college in the University of Cambridge is Trinity College, Cambridge, founded in 1546 also by Henry VIII, who has been wiping out and seizing church lands from abbeys and monasteries.
The universities of Oxford and Cambridge, being both religious institutions and quite rich, expected to be next in line.
The king had duly passed an Act of Parliament that allowed him to suppress (and confiscate the property of) any college he wished.
The universities have used their contacts to plead with his sixth wife, Catherine Parr.
The queen has persuaded her husband not to close them down, but to create a new college.
The king does not want to use royal funds, so he instead combines two colleges (King’s Hall and Michaelhouse) and seven hostels (Physwick (formerly part of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge), Gregory’s, Ovyng’s, Catherine’s, Garratt, Margaret’s, and Tyler’s) to form Trinity.