Current Graduate Courses

Course Descriptions | Upcoming Language Exams | Past Language Exams

CMS Course Information

You can view the PDF icon2024-2025 CMS Timetable, check the preliminary CMS Course List below, and browse current course descriptions.

Check the School of Graduate Studies (SGS) website for the current sessional dates.

To enrol in a course on ROSI, provide the course code in a format without spaces, and with an additional Y (for full-year courses) or H (for half courses), following the examples below:

  • MST1000Y
  • MST1101H

In addition to those courses offered by the Centre for Medieval Studies, students may enroll in courses offered by other departments relating to the Middle Ages. Approved courses from other departments will be cross-listed below (but the list is not yet complete); other relevant courses not listed here may be taken in consultation with the Associate Director or the PhD Co-ordinator. NB: Course offerings are subject to change. All details concerning course offerings cross-listed from other departments should be checked with the relevant academic department as changes can occur which may not be reflected in our listing. 

  • Staff indicates that the course is team-taught, or rotates among various faculty members.
  • Y and L indicate full-year courses.
  • F and S indicate half-year courses taught, respectively, in the fall and spring terms.
  • H indicates half-year courses.

Please refer to the calendar of the School of Graduate Studies for information about regulations.

Course Instructor   Location Term
MST 1000Y.  Medieval Latin I C. O'Hogan M-F  1:00-2:00 pm LI 301 Full Year
MST 1001Y.  Medieval Latin II S. Ghosh M-F  1:00-2:00 pm LI 310 Full Year
MST 1002H.  Advanced Latin C. O'Hogan W  9:00-11:00 am LI 310 Spring
MST 1003H.  Professional Development for Medieval Studies PhDs K. Gaston F  11:00 am-1:00 pm LI 310 Full Year
MST 1104H.  Paleography I W. Robins T  11:00 am-1:00 pm PIMS Fall
MST 1105H.  Paleography II R. Macchioro T  11:00 am-1:00 pm PIMS Spring
MST 1107H.  Latin Textual Criticism J. Welsh M  11:00 am-1:00 pm LI 310 Spring
MST 1110H.  Diplomatics and Diplomatic Editing S. Ghosh T  2:00-4:00 pm LI 310 Fall
MST 1117H.  Medieval English Handwriting 1300-1500 S. Sobecki M  11:00 am-1:00 pm LI 310 Fall
MST 1373H.  English Language and Literature in Transition 1100-1250 S. Pelle T  9:00-11:00 am LI 310 Fall
MST 1388H.  The Junius Manuscript: Old Testament Narratives R. Trilling W  2:00-4:00 pm LI 301 Spring
MST 1422H.  Introduction to Study of Magic J. Haines R  9:00-11:00 am LI 301 Spring
MST 2029H.  Introduction to Old Irish B. Miles R  2:00-4:00 pm LI 310 Spring
MST 2037H.  Legendary History of Britain and Ireland from Celtic Sources B. Miles R  2:00-4:00 pm LI 310 Fall
MST 2041H.  Medieval Storyworlds: Topics in Medieval Languages and Literatures W. Robins T  2:00-4:00 pm LI 301 Spring
MST 3123H.  Medieval Medicine N. Everett W  11:00 am-1:00 pm LI 310 Fall
MST 3135H.  Digital Old English A. Bolintineanu W  2:00-4:00 pm LI 301 Fall
MST 3160H.  Introduction to Romance Philology D. Kullmann R  11:00 am-1:00 pm LI 301 Spring
MST 3163H.  French Historiography (“Wace, Roman de Brut”) D. Kullmann R  11:00 am-1:00 pm LI 301 Fall
MST 3231H.  Clio's Workshop: Introduction to Historical Methods S. Ghosh M  2:00-4:00 pm LI 301 Spring
MST 3253H.  Medieval Sicily N. Everett W  11:00 am-1:00 pm LI 310 Spring
MST 3301H.  Themes in Medieval Philosophy P. King M  9:00-11:00 am LI 301 Fall
MST 3346H.  Medieval Islamic Philosophy J. McGinnis T  9:00-11:00 am LI 310 Spring
MST 3501H.  Introduction to the Medieval Christian Liturgy J. Haines R  9:00-11:00 am LI 310 Fall
MST 3603H.  Society and Literature in Medieval Spain Y. Iglesias M  9:00-11:00 am LI 301 Spring
MST 5003H.  Fortuna: Topics in Medieval Languages and Literatures E. Brilli W  9:00-11:00 am LI 301 Fall

 

Current Course Descriptions

If you are not a CMS student and wish to enroll in CMS courses, please complete an SGS add/drop form and submit it to gradadm.medieval@utoronto.ca.

Other Courses and Training Opportunities

In view of the Centre’s interdisciplinary nature, some courses on the Middle Ages can be taken in other departments with the approval of the PhD Coordinator prior to enrollment.

Art History

Course Information

Course  Instructor Details

FAH 1127H

Early Medieval Art

A. Cohen

Wednesday, 10 am-1 pm

Early medieval art has long been viewed in the shadow of Romanesque and Gothic art and architecture, although the seven hundred years between c. 400 and 1100 produced a wealth of material culture that provides critical insights for understanding the formation of Europe. The seminar will focus in any given semester on one of the following four subdivisions with this period: Merovingian and Migratory, Carolingian, Ottonian, or Insular and Anglo-Saxon. The art and architecture in these periods can be understood in light of their relationship to the classical past, the development of political and ecclesiastical structures, the importance of the cult of saints, and the rise of monasticism. The focus in 2024 will be on the Carolingian Utrecht Psalter and there will likely be an important digital humanities component to the course.

Book History and Print Culture (Collaborative Program)

Course Information

Classical Studies

Course Information

Comparative Literature

Course Information

Course  Instructor Details

COL 5086HF

Literature, Culture and Contact in Medieval Iberia

J. Ross

Tuesday, 1-3 pm

This course will examine the dynamics of cultural exchange between Muslims, Jews and Christians in medieval Iberia as manifested in the literatures produced by each group. Beginning with an introduction to theories of alterity and postcolonialism and their relevance to the medieval past, the course, through readings of Hebrew (in translation), Arabic (in translation) and Castilian literary sources will consider the way ‘others’ are represented, as well as the ways in which cultures come into contact in these texts through adaptation or hybrid literary forms. The course will move from Islamic Spain where cultural cross-fertilization produced such innovative, hybrid forms of poetry as the muwashshahat in Arabic with their accompanying Romance jarchas, and Jewish poets like Todros Abulafia who struggled to define himself and his writing within the dominant Arabic literary culture, to Christian Spain where the complex models of literary translation and transmission placed Arabic models at the centre of European intellectual culture. The course will follow the trajectory of Spanish history as Muslims and Jews were assimilated, converted or expelled by exploring the dynamics of conversion in poetry written by converted Jews in the 15th century and the domestication of the ‘other’ in such 16th-century Castilian texts as the Abencerraje.

East Asian Studies

Course Information

Course  Instructor Details

EAS 1101Y1Y

Classical Chinese I (Limited spots)

G. Sanders Thursday, 9–11 am 

English

Course Information

Course Instructor Details
ENG 1001F

Old English I

R. Trilling

Monday, 2-4 pm / Thursday, 11 am-1 pm

An introduction for reading knowledge to the oldest literary form of English, with discussion of readings drawn from the surviving prose and verse literature.

NB: Students must attend both classes each week.

ENG 5100HF

Topics in Medieval Literature: Digital Humanities Practicum: Records of Early English Drama, 1325-1642

M. Sergi

Wednesday, 10 am-12 pm

The Records of Early English Drama (REED) project, headquartered on Floor 8 of the JHB, has been working for over four decades “to locate, transcribe, and edit historical documents containing evidence of drama, secular music, and other communal entertainment and ceremony from the Middle Ages until 1642.” Medieval and early modern drama studies generally focus on extant play texts, though these represent only a small fraction of performance culture in early England; REED fills in that gap, bearing witness to the ubiquitous existence of performance, though not always being able to reveal more about performances than that they did exist. The operative idea of REED has always been to know more — to compile all available archival evidence of early performance practices (far beyond simply contextualizing extant plays), a mass of information unprecedented in historical drama studies, at once comprehensive and tantalizingly incomplete — and to leave it to drama scholars to figure out what to do with it all. Of course, during those same four decades, new technologies have arisen that have shifted how scholars work with, and think through, masses of information. REED has, as a result, has gone digital: a process whose fundamental reorientation of the archives must provoke a rethinking of early drama historiography itself — and which reaffirms the necessity of digital humanities training for twenty-first-century medievalists and early modernists. In lieu of traditional essay writing, ENG5100H will give students real hands-on experience in the digital humanities, leading them step by step as they transcribe, format, edit, index, and tag entries in REED’s “York Protoype” (that is, in the digitization of REED material gathered from medieval and early modern York, only currently available in hard copy).

ENG5102HS

Reception of the Classics in Middle English Literature 

K. Gaston

Wednesday, 3-5 pm

This course traces the reception of Classical authors such as Virgil, Ovid, Lucan, and Statius in Medieval England. We will give special attention to the cultural, material, and institutional contexts within which these works circulated and which, in turn, shaped how they were taken up by vernacular English poets. We will consider how the adaption of Classical literature provides a site for exploring the writing and interpretation of history, identity and its performance, poetic form, and poetic truth. English poetry under consideration may include works by Chaucer, Gower, and Lydgate as well as the anonymous Sir Orfeo and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.

ENG5103HS

Writing the Self in Late-medieval England: Thomas Hoccleve and Margery 

S. Sobecki

Wednesday, 11 am-1 pm

What did it mean to be an “author” in late-medieval England? How do premodern writers compete for authority with scribes and readers? Are fifteenth-century autobiographical narrators literary fictions or biological selves? To answer these questions, we will explore how two of the most exciting and original fifteenth-century English writers, Thomas Hoccleve and Margery Kempe, establish their voices while writing under the conditions imposed by manuscript culture. We will read Thomas Hoccleve’s cycle of five poems, The Series, and his earlier Le Male Regle, as well as The Book of Margery Kempe, the first autobiography by an English writer. Both authors have produced some of the most personal works in medieval England. Hoccleve’s poems try to process his struggles with mental health and personal loss, while Kempe’s extravagant, larger-than-life personality breaks new ground in women’s literature and life-writing. We will discuss premodern concepts of authorship, (auto)biography, social identity, gender, and mental health, alongside exploring material culture. We will follow cutting-edge research and examine Hoccleve’s and Kempe’s works in surviving manuscripts, some of which were written in their author’s own hand.

French Language and Literature

Course Information

Course Instructor Details

FRE 1164F

Medieval French Language / Initiation à l'ancien français 

D. Kullmann

Monday, 4-6 pm

This course aims to introduce the basics of the medieval French language through examination of a selection of original text extracts. We will study the morphology and syntax of Old French, with a glimpse into the appearance of Old French in manuscripts. The selected texts will allow students to acquaint themselves with various dialects and offer a panorama of the main literary genres of the 11th, 12th, and 13th centuries; however, the emphasis will be on reading, and interpretative aspects will not be explored in depth.
This course is also available at the undergraduate level. The common components of the course will focus more on the synchronic dimension than on the diachronic; graduate students will additionally learn some fundamentals of historical phonetics and other aspects of French development since Latin.
The course will be taught in French. Students from departments outside the Department of French who are interested in taking this course but believe they have not achieved the required level in modern French should contact the instructor. Efforts will be made to accommodate these students with the aid of online resources.
 

FRE 1312S

Emancipation and Erudition: Christine de Pisan / Émancipation et érudition : Christine de Pisan

D. Kullmann

Monday, 4-6 pm

Introduction to Middle French literature and the cultural changes of the late Middle Ages in France through the in-depth study of Christine de Pisan. Often presented as the inventor of feminism and as a fighter for the economic autonomy and intellectual authority of women, she was a prolific writer in various genres and also directed a workshop producing manuscripts. The seminar will be divided into several units, each of which will combine the study of single texts of each genre with more general aspects of her work. Three units will be dedicated to: 1) her lyrical poems (familiarizing students with the language and existing tools), 2) the Cité des Dames (role of women, use of sources, ideology, etc.), and, 3) religious poetry (women and devotion, manuscript production, etc.). A fourth section will concentrate on two further texts (an allegorical-autobiographical text and a political or historical treatise), to be chosen by the students.

Germanic Languages and Literature

Course Information

Course Instructor Details
GER 6000S

Reading German for Graduate Students

TBA

Friday, 2–4 pm

In this course, German reading knowledge is taught following the grammar-translation method designed for graduate students from the Humanities. It is an intensive course that covers German grammar with focus on acquiring essential structures of the German language to develop translation skills. The course is conducted in English, and consequently participants do not learn how to speak or write in German, but rather the course focuses exclusively on reading and translating German. Prior knowledge of German not mandatory. By the end of the course, students should be able to handle a broad variety of texts in single modern Standard German. This course is not intended for MA or PhD students in German.

History

Course Information

Course Instructor Details

HIS 1213H S

Institutes of Perfection

I. Cochelin

Tuesday, 3-5 pm

Up until the twelfth century, a significant proportion of Western medieval sources originated from monasteries. At the same time, many considered monastic life to be the most perfect form of existence. During this seminar, we will try to understand why such was the case, as well as how the monastic ideal evolved from its origin to the twelfth century. We will explore with a critical eye some of the most important monastic primary sources, especially the intriguing hagiographic sources (Lives of saints) and the so-called “normative” sources (rules and customaries). These sources will be read in English translations but students who can read Latin will be encouraged to access the original texts. Thanks to these sources, we will discuss the daily life, internal structures, and interactions with the lay world of the most significant monastic communities of the Middle Ages. This is an introductory course for graduate students desirous to acquire sound bases in the history of medieval monasticism.

Institute for Christian Studies

Course Information

Institute for the History and Philosophy of Science

Course Information

Course Instructor Details

HPS4110H

Medicine, Science, and Mobility in the Mediterranean World 

L. Dacome

Tuesday, 11 am-1 pm

The Mediterranean world has historically been characterized as a fluid and permeable space of both human and non-human movement and interactions across Africa, Asia, and Europe. This course examines the role of Mediterranean entanglements in the histories of science and medicine, focusing on the premodern period. We will address topics such as the relationship between medicine, science, and religion; slavery, medicine, and natural inquiry; epidemics and public health; shifting views of disability; the movement of specimens and curiosities; travel and scientific exchange; orientalism and its legacies; and the making of human diversity. We will also critically reflect on the category of mobility, engaging in questions related to how movement participated in processes of knowledge production in medicine and natural inquiry and, conversely, how medical, and scientific pursuits encouraged mobility.

Italian Studies

Course Information

Course Instructor Details

ITA 1200HS

Dante

E. Brilli

Wednesday, 11am-1 pm

An examination of Dante’s works and criticism on them.

ITA 1553HF

Renaissance Crossroads: Tales of Exchange in Pre-modern Italy

L. Ingallinella

Tuesday, 10 am-12 pm

This course explores the culture of pre-modern Italy (1350-1600) from a global perspective. Focusing on a selected group of case studies, the course situates Renaissance Italy in the context of transregional patterns of contact, encounter, and exchange between different cultures. We will investigate how the development of networks of trade, religious proselitism, and colonization influenced premodern Italian culture. Students will learn how to unravel this influence by examining different cultural artifacts, from literature (short fiction, dramaturgy, and translation) to art, material culture, and documentary evidence. We will cover well-known authors such as Giovanni Boccaccio, Ludovico Ariosto and Matteo Bandello, but also less-known yet culturally significant case studies. The course will also feature a digital humanities module in which we will work together on manuscript studies, textual editing, and geospatial analysis.

Musicology (Faculty of Music)

Course Information

Near and Middle Eastern Civilization

Course Information

Course Instructor Details

NMC 2110HS

Al-Jahiz and His Debate Partners

J. Miller

Tuesday, 10 am-1 pm

One of the most complex figures in classical Arabic literature, al-Jahiz was a polymath who incorporated every field of intellectual inquiry into his own essayistic and compilatory literary form. He has been credited as a foundational prose stylist for the Arabic literary tradition, as well as the first contributor to Arabic literary theory and criticism. In this class, we will examine a variety of his works, from short epistles to excerpts of his longer works. Part of the analytic process will be to reconstruct the polemical context in which these works were written, and thus readings will be selected to illuminate his relationship to contemporary discourses, such as law, theology, Quran interpretation, logic, dialectic, and poetry.

Prerequisites: NML 310Y or NMC 412H or permission of the instructor

NMC 2081HS

Anthropology of the Middle East

N. Moumtaz

Wednesday, 3-5 pm

This course examines current theoretical and methodological trends in the anthropological study of the Middle East. The readings will offer students ethnographic insight into the region, introduce them to current research, and acquaint them with the kinds of questions anthropologists ask (and the ones they fail to ask). Possible topics include (post)colonialism, nationalism, gender, violence, history/memory, the politics of archeology, mass mediations, neoliberalism, and questions of ethnographic authority. A central goal of the course is to enable students to think in new, creative, and critical ways about their own research projects.

NMC2129HF

Islamicate Codicology 

J. Miller

Tuesday, 1-4 pm

An introduction to Islamicate codicology, this course centers around hands-on learning, drawing on the collections of the Fisher Library. Students will learn to write a codicological description of a manuscripts, while being exposed to debates in the field, reference sources, and the variety of research questions that can draw on the material aspects of manuscripts.

Prerequisites: Basic reading knowledge of classical Persian, classical Arabic, or Ottoman Turkish.

NMC2221HF  

Persian Mirrors for Princes

M. Subtelny

Thursday, 10 am-1 pm

The Persian literature of advice on kingship and kingly ethics constitutes an important source for understanding medieval Islamicate political philosophy and concepts of rule and social organization. These works are sometimes referred to as “mirrors for princes,” although they are not consistent in terms of their contents. Excerpts from selected texts dating from the 11th to the 17th centuries will be read and analyzed, including such classics as the Qabusnameh of Kay Ka’us, the Siyar al-muluk of Nizam al-Mulk, and Nasir al-Din Tusi’s Akhlaq-i nasiri.

NMC 2223HS

The Persian Manuscript Tradition

M. Subtelny

Tuesday, 1-4 pm

An introduction to medieval Persian codicology, including the technical terminology used in the study of manuscripts; paleographical issues, such as script styles and dating; textual criticism and editing techniques; and the use of manuscript catalogues. Some attention will also be paid to the arts of the book. Digital copies of selected Persian manuscripts will form the basis of study.

NMC2541Y

Medieval Middle Eastern Ceramics 

R. Mason

Wednesday, 2-4 pm (hybrid)

This course will use ceramics to study the material culture of the medieval Middle East and the central Islamic lands. As such, they will be running narrative, to which other materials will be referred, or in turn used to refer to other materials. The same motifs found on ceramics may be found in the contemporaneous buildings, textiles or woodwork; the same forms are found in metalwork and glass; illustrations on ceramics will survive better than manuscript paintings, and there are more illustrations of, for instance, medieval swords to be found on pottery than there are actual swords. The course will rely heavily on the collections of the ROM, and provide a thorough grounding on the technical production and typological variability of the various types of materials attested within their archaeological and cultural context. This course offers an excellent opportunity to study this important period of ceramic production, the period of occupation which covers most early sites in the Middle East. It provides essential understanding of the ceramic corpus for anyone seriously considering archaeological research in the Middle East and Mediterranean.

Philosophy

Course Information

Religious Studies (Department for the Study of Religion)

Course Information

Course Instructor Details

RLG3744HS

Hindu Epics (The Mahabharata) 

A. Dhand

Wednesday, 11 am-1 pm

Advanced study in specialized topics on Hinduism such as Ramayana in Literature: This course explores how this conception is the result of a historical process by examining documentable transformations in the reception of the Ramayana. Our focus will be on the shift in the classification of the Ramayana from the inaugural work of Sanskrit literary culture (adi-kavya) in Sanskrit aesthetics to a work of tradition (smrti) in theological commentaries, the differences between the Ramayanas ideal of divine kingship and medieval theistic approaches to Ramas identification with Visnu, the rise of Rama worship, and the use of Ramas divinity in contemporary political discourse.

Prerequisite: RLG205Y; Instructor’s permission required for admission to course.

Slavic Languages and Literatures

Course Information

Spanish and Portuguese

Course Information

St. Michael's College

Course Information

Toronto School of Theology

Course Information

Reminder: Level One Latin/MST 1000Y is the only language requirement for the MA program (see the MA requirements); and Medieval Latin (level I and II), modern French and German are the language requirements for the PhD program (see the PhD requirements). 

Beyond program requirements, advanced training in a variety of languages relevant to the field of Medieval Studies, broadly conceived, is available to CMS students. Please find below a non-exhaustive list of such languages and the Department & CMS faculty member contacts for each.

Language Department / Contact
Arabic

Department of Near & Middle Eastern Civilization
At CMS: prof. J. Miller, W. Saleh

Aramaic Department of Near & Middle Eastern Civilization
Chinese, Classical and Modern

Department of East Asian Studies
At CMS: prof. J. Purtle

English, Old

Department of English
At CMS: prof. R. Getz, F. Michelet, S. Pelle, A. Walton

English, Modern Department of English
French, Old

Department of French Studies
At CMS: prof. D. Kullmann

German, Middle High

Germanic Languages & Literatures
At CMS: prof. M. Stock and S. Ghosh

Ge’ez At CMS: prof. M. Gervers and R. Holmstedt
Greek, Byzantine At CMS: prof. D. Kullmann
Greek, Classical Department of Classics
Greek, Modern Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies (CERES)
Greek, New Testament Toronto School of Theology
Hebrew, Biblical

Department of Near & Middle Eastern Civilization
Toronto School of Theology

Hebrew, Modern

Department of Near & Middle Eastern Civilization
Department for the Study of Religion

Irish, Old and Middle At CMS: prof. B. Miles
Italian, Medieval and Modern

Department of Italian Studies
At CMS: prof. E. Brilli

Japanese, Classical and Modern Department of East Asian Studies
Latin, Classical Department of Classics
Mongolian, Preclassical and Modern At CMS: prof. J. Purtle
Norse, Old At CMS: prof. R. Getz, S. Ghosh
Occitan At CMS: prof. D. Kullmann
Ottoman Turkish Department of Near & Middle Eastern Civilization
Pali Department for the Study of Religion
Persian, Medieval and Modern

Department of Near & Middle Eastern Civilization
At CMS: prof. M. Subtelny

Portuguese, Medieval and Modern Department of Spanish & Portuguese
Sanskrit

Department for the Study of Religion
Department of Philosophy

Slavonic, Old Church Slavic Languages & Literatures
Spanish, Medieval and Modern

Department of Spanish & Portuguese
At CMS: prof. Y. Iglesias

Syriac Department of Near & Middle Eastern Civilization
Tibetan Department for the Study of Religion
Welsh, Middle At CMS: prof. B. Miles
Yiddish Germanic Languages & Literatures

 

Reminder: The School of Graduate Studies provides helpful resources, courses, boot camps, and workshops in various fields. While these activities do not count toward satisfying course requirements, they might prove crucial to a successful and comprehensive educational path. Please find below a non-exhaustive list of areas of interest and the Graduate Centres responsible for each. 

Training Centre
Advanced training in academic writing and speaking Graduate Centre for Academic Communication (GCAC)
Professional development, including developing research and communication skills, and refining professional goals Centre for Graduate Professional Development (CGPD)
Support to supervisory relationships Centre for Graduate Mentorship and Supervision (CGMS)

 

For additional info about SGS services, please consult the SGS website.

 

Location Key

View the University of Toronto interactive map.

Building Code Location
AH Alumni Hall, 121 St Joseph Street
BC Birge–Carnegie Library, 75a Queen’s Park
BF Bancroft Building, 4 Bancroft Avenue
BT Isabel Bader Theatre, 93 Charles Street West (3rd floor - Comparative Literature Seminar Room)
CR Carr Hall, 100 St Joseph Street
EJ Music Library, Edward Johnson Building, 80 Queen’s Park
IN Innis College, 2 Sussex Avenue
JH Jackman Humanities Building, 170 St George Street
KL PIMS Library, J.M. Kelly Library, 113 St Joseph Street, 4th floor
LA Gerald Larkin Building, 15 Devonshire Place
LI Lillian Massey Building, 125 Queen’s Park, 3rd floor (SE corner of Bloor Street & Queen’s Park)
MA Colin Friesen Room, Massey College, 4 Devonshire Place
NF Northrop Frye Hall, 73 Queen’s Park Crescent East
OH Odette Hall, 50 St Joseph Street
PI Pontifical Institute of Mediæval Studies (PIMS), 59 Queen’s Park Crescent East
PR E.J. Pratt Library, 71 Queen’s Park Crescent East
RB Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library, 120 St George Street
RL Robarts Library, Dictionary of Old English, Room 14284, 14th floor, 130 St George Street
SS Sidney Smith Hall, 100 St George Street
TC Trinity College, 6 Hoskin Avenue
TF Teefy Hall, 57 Queen’s Park Crescent East
UC University College, 12 King’s College Circle
VC Victoria College, 73 Queen’s Park Crescent East
WI Wilson Hall, New College, 40 Willcocks Street