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Piers Gaveston Society

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University of Oxford dining club

Edward II. and his Favourite, Piers Gaveston, Marcus Stone, 1872.

The Piers Gaveston Society, or Piers Gav for short, is a dining club founded in 1977 at the University of Oxford. It is named in honour of Piers Gaveston, favourite of King Edward II of England. In recent years, parties run by the society have been the focus of increased tabloid news coverage revolving around lurid allegations of debauched behaviour, such as Piggate.

History

The Piers Gaveston Society was founded in 1977 by a group of friends that included the brewery heir Valentine Guinness (younger son of the 3rd Baron Moyne). It was then limited to 12 male members. In 1986, an article of The Washington Post claimed Count Gottfried von Bismarck was a member of the Society and described the club as "originally an all-gay group the rules say members have to dress in drag and parade openly in public".

The Society was first brought into the spotlight in 1983 after photos of the ball at the Park Lane Hotel leaked to the public, including photos of the young actor Hugh Grant.

Motto

The club's motto is Latin: "(Sane) non memini ne audisse unum alterum ita dilexisse" which translates roughly as "Truly, none remember hearing of a person enjoying another so much".

Crest

The club’s crest is an adaptation of the original coat of arms of Piers Gaveston.

Activities

While some have described it as an extreme club that hosts secret events which include hard drug use and orgies, others have said that the society's events – at least during the 1990s – were not as debauched or scandalous as the media portrayed. Journalist Danny Kemp described it as “raunchy fancy dress” and “not-terribly-debauched public schoolboys’ idea of debauchery.”

Attendants allegedly have to sign a non-disclosure agreement before participating to the society's events, and no phones are allowed.

Membership

Membership is limited to 10 undergraduates, grouped into 'Masters' and 'Minions'.

To join the Society as a 'Minion' an undergraduate must attend a party before submitting an application and being elected by existing members. In their second year as a member they become Masters, and are paired with a Minion.

Non-members are invited to most events including the winter, spring and summer balls. Each member may invite dozens of guests, who may be blackballed by other members if deemed unsuitable.

Piggate

Main article: Piggate

Piggate refers to an uncorroborated anecdote by a British MP that British Prime Minister David Cameron inserted part of his genitalia into a dead pig’s mouth as part of a Piers Gaveston Society initiation ceremony. The Piers Gaveston Society received significant media attention as a result of Piggate. Cameron has strongly denied those claims.

See also

References

  1. ^ Midgley, Dominic (27 September 2017). "PIERS GAVESTON: Secrets of Oxford drinking club where anything goes". Daily Express. Retrieved 7 November 2022.
  2. DeYoung, Karen (17 June 1986). "The Oxford Connection". The Washington Post. Retrieved 7 November 2022.
  3. "From Hugh Grant to David Cameron to Nigella Lawson: Oxford partying in the 80s – in pictures". The Guardian. 25 September 2015. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 7 November 2022.
  4. ^ Nadia Khomami (21 September 2015). "David Cameron and the Piers Gaveston: what we know of Oxford 'secret society'". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 September 2015.
  5. Slater, Sasha (23 December 2010). "New hedonists beat decadence of my youth". London Evening Standard.
  6. ^ Thomson, Jess (16 July 2021). "Inside Oxford University's Most Exclusive Sex Party". Vice News. Retrieved 7 November 2022.
  7. "David Cameron publicly denies Lord Ashcroft pig allegation for first time". The Guardian. 27 September 2015. Retrieved 7 November 2022.

External links

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