[1] It adjoins the Divinity School, which pre-dates it by just over two hundred years, and the Sheldonian Theatre, to its immediate north.
The entire westward section was originally known as Selden End, in recognition of the gift of books from the lawyer John Selden which occupy the portion of the Bodleian Library housed above.
[2] In 1665 and 1681, during the reign of Charles II, the chamber served as home for the Royalist Members of the English Parliament.
Convocation House is used for meetings of the University of Oxford's Convocation, but may be hired as a venue for civil weddings and partnership ceremonies, for which it, like the Divinity School and Chancellor's Court, is licensed,[4] renewal of vows, wedding blessings, wedding receptions, and conferences.
You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.This article about an Oxfordshire building or structure is a stub.