Sheldonian Theatre
Christopher Wren's architectural debut sits right on Broad Street, a 17th-century masterpiece that still hosts Oxford's graduation ceremonies today.
About Sheldonian Theatre
Christopher Wren's architectural debut sits right on Broad Street, a 17th-century masterpiece that still hosts Oxford's graduation ceremonies today. You'll climb 127 steps to the cupola for genuinely spectacular 360-degree views over the Bodleian Library, Radcliffe Camera, and All Souls College spires. The main theatre below features Robert Streater's elaborate ceiling painting showing Truth descending upon the Arts and Sciences, plus those famous carved heads around the building's exterior that watched over centuries of students.
Inside feels surprisingly intimate for such a grand building. The semicircular seating rises steeply around you, designed exactly like Roman amphitheatres but covered with England's first geometric ceiling. Most visitors spend 10 minutes downstairs admiring the restoration work, then head straight up the narrow spiral staircase. The cupola viewing platform is small, fitting maybe 15 people comfortably, with wraparound windows offering the city's best aerial perspective.
At £4.50 for adults, it's Oxford's best value viewpoint by miles. Skip the audio guide, the building's simple enough to appreciate without commentary. Go between 2-4pm for perfect light on the golden Cotswold stone, avoiding the morning tour groups. The steps are steep and narrow, genuinely challenging if you have mobility issues, but the payoff upstairs makes every tourist photo from ground level look amateur.
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