• Source: Sporting colours
    • Sporting colours or just colours (sometimes with a modifier, e.g. club colours or school colours) are awarded to members of a university or school who have excelled in a sport. Many schools do not limit their use to sport but may also give colours for academic excellence or non-sporting extra-curricular activities, Colours are traditionally indicated by the wearing of a special tie or blazer.
      Many university colours are known by the name of the colour used, which is usually the colour worn by the university's sports teams, e.g. Blue at Oxford and Cambridge, Palatinate at Durham, Pink at Trinity College Dublin or Red at Bristol. These are similar to the varsity letters awarded by American universities.
      The level of representation required for the award of a colour varies between the different schemes. A full Palatinate at Durham, a Royal Blue at Liverpool or Full Colours at Cardiff require a student to have represented their country, while at Oxford the requirement for a full Blue is to have represented the university in a varsity match against Cambridge in an eligible sport. In many colour award schemes, it is possible to receive a half colour. These are normally given for lower levels of achievement than a full colour.


      History


      University colours were first introduced in the second University Boat Race between Oxford and Cambridge in 1836. Durham adopted palatinate purple for its degree hoods at about the same time. At Cambridge, teams would seek permission of the boat club to use their blue colour; by the 1860s the established sports with full blue status were rowing, cricket and athletics. In 1884, the rugby and football clubs awarded themselves blues following their varsity matches (against Oxford), leading to a debate at the Cambridge Union that was decisively lost by the boat club. The hockey club also gained full blue status (in 1894) before the system was formalised by the establishment of the blues committee in 1912.
      The award of Palatinates for sports at Durham dates to at least 1883, when the cricket "Eleven" were permitted to wear the "university coat" (i.e. blazer) of palatinate purple rather than the claret coat of the club, and the award of both Palatinates and half Palatinates was well established by the end of the century. Manchester adopted maroon in 1905. Trinity College Dublin adopted Pink in 1950.


      University colours


      Different universities award different colours, often based on the colour worn by their athletes. Sometimes these are known by the colour used, but they may also simply be known as "colours". These include:

      Aberdeen: Blue
      Bath: Blue
      Birmingham: Blue
      Bristol: Red
      Cambridge: Blue
      Cardiff: Colours
      Dublin: Pink or Colours
      Dundee: Blue (with Colours as a lower-level below Half Blue)
      Durham: Palatinate
      Edinburgh: Colours
      Glasgow: Blue
      Heriot-Watt: Blue
      Leeds: Colours
      Liverpool: Blue or Colours
      London: Purple
      Loughborough: AU Colours
      Manchester (pre-2004): Maroon
      Nottingham Trent: Colours
      Oxford: Blue
      Robert Gordon: Blue
      St Andrews: Blue or Colours
      St Mary's: Blue
      Sheffield: Colours
      Stirling: Blue or Colours


      Gallery

















      Notes




      See also


      School colors


      References

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