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The recesses at Christmas and Easter shall not exceed two weeks each.

Persons desirous of prosecuting particular branches of science or literature shall be permitted, on conforming to the regulations made in reference to Non-Matriculated Students, to attend any separate Course or Courses of Lectures, but not to become Candidates for Scholarships, or to enjoy the other privileges of Matriculated Students.

The fees payable for Matriculated Students to the Bursar, on behalf of the College, shall not exceed :—

At the commencement of the first year (including Entrance
Fee),

At the commencement of the second year,
At the commencement of the third year,
At the commencement of the fourth year,

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£ s. d.

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300 2 0 0

200

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200

The fees payable by Students, whether Matriculated or Non-Matriculated, to the several Professors, for attendance on the several Pass Courses of Lectures or instruction, which are now or may be hereafter prescribed by the College Council, for any degree or other University distinction, shall be £1 for each Course extending over one term only, and £2 for each course extending over more than one term of a Session, when attended for the first time, and £1 for each re-attendance on the same; except that the fee payable for the Course of Anatomy and Physiology shall be £3 when attended for the first time, and £2 for every subsequent attendance; except also that the fee payable for Practical Anatomy or Practical Chemistry shall be £3 for each attendance.

In the case of Students receiving special instruction not prescribed as a qualification for a degree or other University distinction, or attending Honor Courses of Lectures, the Council shall have power to fix the amount of the fee to be paid by each Student; provided that the fee to be paid for any Honor Course of Lectures which Students are entitled to substitute for a prescribed Pass Course, shall in no case be less than £2.

No Professor shall be entitled to claim the fees of any Class of Students, except so long as that Class shall be

required by the Council to attend his instruction: and it shall be the duty of the Council to revise and amend the Regulations prescribing Courses of Study from time of time, whenever they deem it conducive to the interests to education and of the Students so to do, irrespective of considerations affecting the incomes of Professors.

CHAPTER XIX.

Ad-eundem Students.

It shall be competent to the Council to permit any Student who shall have pursued part of his collegiate studies in any one of the Colleges founded under the said Act of Parliament, or in any University capable of granting Degrees in the several Faculties of Arts, Law, and Medicine, and any Legal or Medical Student who shall have pursued part of his legal or medical studies under teachers recognised, or to be recognised, by the Senate of the Queen's University, on passing such examinations and fulfilling such other conditions as the Council shall prescribe, to take corresponding rank in this College, and also to compete for Scholarships or other prizes of the corresponding year, provided he shall not hold at the same time a Scholarship or other office of emolument in any other University, College, or Medical School.

And We do also, for Us, our heirs and successors, grant and declare that this our Royal Letter, and the Letters Patent intended to be issued by virtue thereof, or the enrolment or exemplification of such Letters Patent, shall be in all things good, firm, valid, and effectual in law, according to the true intent and meaning of the same; and shall be taken, construed, and adjudged, in all our courts or elsewhere, in the most favourable and beneficial sense, and for the best advantage of the said College, any misrecital, non-recital, omission, defect, imperfection, matter or thing whatsoever notwithstanding. And lastly WE do hereby promise and declare, for Us, our heirs, and successors, that WE and they shall and will, at all times hereafter, give and grant to the afore

said President and Professors, and their successors, such other reasonable powers and authorities as may be necessary for the better government thereof, and the more effectual execution of these premises. IN WITNESS whereof, we have caused these our Letters to be made Patent. Witness George William Frederick, Earl of Carlisle, our Lieutenant-General and General Governor of Ireland, at Dublin, the twelfth day of October, in the twenty-seventh year of our Reign.

Enrolled in the Office of the Rolls of Her Majesty's High Court of Chancery in Ireland on the thirtieth day of November, one thousand eight hundred and sixty-three.

QUEEN'S COLLEGE, BELFAST,

FOUNDED DECEMBER 30, 1845.

THIS College is a Corporation under the name and style of "The President, Vice-President, and Professors of Queen's College, Belfast."

The General Government and Administration of the College under the Statutes, and in cases not provided for by the Statutes, is vested in the College Council.

VISITORS.

His Grace the Lord Primate.

His Grace the Duke of Leinster.

The Chief Secretary for Ireland, for the time being.
Earl Dufferin and Clandeboye.

The Right Rev. the Lord Bishop of Down and Connor and Dromore.
The Right Honorable Mr. Justice Fitzgerald.

The Moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland, for the time being.

The President of the King's and Queen's College of Physicians, for the time being.

The President of the Royal College of Surgeons, for the time being. The President of the Association of Non-Subscribing Presbyterians of Ireland, for the time being.

The Right Honorable Baron Dowse.

PRESIDENT.

The Reverend Pooley Shuldham Henry, D.D., M.R.L.A.

VICE-PRESIDENT.

Thomas Andrews, M.D., LL.D., F.R.S., Hon. F.R.S.E.

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PROFESSORS.

The Greek Language,

The Latin Language,

Charles MacDouall, LL.D., M.R.A.S.
William Nesbitt, M.A.

History and English Literature, Charles Duke Yonge, M.A., Oxon.

Modern Languages,

Mathematics,

Natural Philosophy,
Chemistry,

Natural History,

Logic and Metaphysics,
Civil Engineering,
Agriculture,

Anatomy and Physiology,

Medicine,

Surgery,

Materia Medica,

Midwifery,

English Law,

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A. L. Meissner, Ph.D.

. John Purser, M.A.

. Joseph D. Everett, M.A., D.C.L.

. Thos. Andrews, M.D., LL.D., F.R.S.,

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. James Cuming, M.D.

Alexander Gordon, M.D.

. James Seaton Reid, M.D.
R. F. Dill, M.D.

Echlin Molyneux, A.M.

Jurisprudence and Polit. Econ. T. E. Cliffe Leslie, LL.B.

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General Assembly of the Pres-Rev. Josias Leslie Porter,

byterian Church in Ireland,S Church of Ireland, Wesleyan Methodists,

Irish Association of Non-Sub-) scribing Presbyterians,

APPOINTED.

D.D., LL.D.,

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1849. Rev. Frederick Howe Ringwood, M.A., Professor of Greek,

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1849. Charles MacDouall, Esq., A. M., Professor
of Latin,

1849. James MacAdam, Esq., Librarian,
1849. Robert Blakey, Esq., Professor of Logic

and Metaphysics,

1850. Rev. Wm. Lupton, Dean of Residences,

APPOINTED.

1866

1872

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1873

1874

VACATED.

Resigned, 1850.

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Wesleyan Methodists,

Resigned, 1852.

1849. W. J. C. Allen, Esq., Registrar,

Resigned, 1852.

1849. W. N. Hancock, LL.B., Professor of Juris

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