The Radcliffe Camera was opened in 1749, assisting the college's attempts at self-improvement.
Besides its university, there is a number of buildings famous for their architecture (the style in which they were built), like the Radcliffe Camera.
In 1860, the library was allowed to take over the adjacent building, known as the Radcliffe Camera.
The sale includes several fine architectural models, including one of the magnificent 18th-century Radcliffe Camera at Oxford.
It was at this point that the building became known as the Radcliffe Camera, serving as a reading room for the Bodleian.
Later stone extracted from the quarry was of less good quality, for example, that used to build the lower part of the Radcliffe Camera.
There used to be a small underground railway to transport books between the Radcliffe Camera and the main Bodleian site.
Actually, they collected quite a bit of lore on vampires, quaint stuff, and you can still see it in the Radcliffe Camera, across the way.
With Loudham's standing beneath the Radcliffe Camera and staring up at the sky the whole course of the Papers was changed.
Then there was that scene yesterday in the Radcliffe Camera, my father deep in-what had he been reading, exactly?