Oxford is a city shaped entirely by its university, and the university is shaped entirely by its buildings. The colleges — thirty-nine of them — are the real attraction: medieval quadrangles, chapel choirs, dining halls that inspired Hogwarts, and libraries where the silence is so deep it feels physical. Christ Church has a cathedral and a meadow. Bodleian Library has been collecting books since 1602. Magdalen College has a deer park and a bell tower from which a choir sings at dawn on May Day.
The Covered Market has operated since 1774, selling everything from Oxford sausages to handmade shoes. The Pitt Rivers Museum is a Victorian cabinet of curiosities — shrunken heads, totem poles, and Hawaiian feather cloaks crammed into glass cases with handwritten labels. Punting on the Cherwell is the quintessential Oxford experience: a flat-bottomed boat, a long pole, and a picnic, drifting past willow trees and college gardens with varying degrees of competence.
When to go: May for wisteria in bloom and the May Day celebrations. September through October for golden stone in autumn light. Term time adds energy.