University College, Oxford is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford . Its alumni include politicians, lawyers, bishops, poets, and academics. The overwhelming maleness of this list is partially explained by the fact that. from its foundation in 1249 until 1979, women were barred from studying at the college.[ 1]
The sub-headings are given as a general guide and some names might fit under more than one category.
Abbreviations used in the following tables
M – Year of matriculation at University College (a dash indicates that the individual did not matriculate at the college)
G – Year of graduation / conclusion of study at University College (a dash indicates that the individual graduated from another college)
DNG – Did not graduate: left the college without taking a degree
? – Year unknown; an approximate year is used for table-sorting purposes.
(F) after name – later became a Fellow of University College, and included on the list of Fellows
(HF) after name – later became an Honorary Fellow of University College
Degree abbreviations
The subject studied and the degree classification are included, where known. Until the early 19th century, undergraduates read for a Bachelor of Arts degree that included study of Latin and Greek texts, mathematics, geometry, philosophy and theology. Individual subjects at undergraduate level were only introduced later: for example, Mathematics (1805), Natural Science (1850), Jurisprudence (1851, although it had been available before this to students who obtained special permission), Modern History (1851) and Theology (1871). Geography and Modern Languages were introduced in the 20th century. Music had been available as a specialist subject before these changes; medicine was studied as a post-graduate subject.[ 2]
Politicians and civil servants [ edit ]
Clement Attlee, 1st Earl Attlee
Bill Clinton
Bob Hawke
Name
M
G
Degree
Notes
Ref
Clement Attlee (F)
1901
1904
BA Modern History (2nd)
British Prime Minister
[ 3]
Sir Jeremy Beecham
1962
1965
Law (1st)
Labour politician
-
Kofi Abrefa Busia
1941
1947
BA PPE, DPhil
Prime Minister of Ghana
-
Robert Cecil
?
?
Law
A founder of the League of Nations , Nobel Peace Prize 1937.
-
Bill Clinton (HF)
1968
1970
[DNG]
42nd President of the United States of America
-
William de Silva
?
?
?
Ceylonese politician
-
Andrew George
?
1981
MA Agricultural Economics
Liberal Democrat MP
-
Richard Fuller
?
?
?
Conservative MP
-
Philip Hammond
?
?
PPE
Conservative Chancellor of the Exchequer 2016–present, Foreign Secretary 2014–2016
-
Bob Hawke (HF)
?
?
BLitt
Australian Prime Minister (Labor)
-
Festus Mogae (HF)
?
?
Economics
President of Botswana
-
Colin Moynihan
1974
1977
BA PPE
Silver medal 1980 Olympics, Conservative MP 1983–92, Minister for Sport 1987–90, Chairman British Olympic Association 2005
-
Robert Reich
1968
1970
PPE
22nd United States Secretary of Labor (Democratic Party )
-
David Renton (HF)
?
?
Law
MP
-
John Scott
?
1770
BA
Lord Chancellor of Great Britain
-
Roger Short
1963
1967
Literae humaniores
British consul-general to Turkey
-
Rajiva Wijesinha
?
?
Literae humaniores
University teacher; Sri Lankan Liberal Party MP, 2010–15
-
Tan Jee Say
1973
1976
PPE
Singaporean politician and former civil servant
-
Henry Thrale
1744
?
?
MP
-
William Weld
?
?
Economics
governor of Massachusetts
-
Andrew Theophanous
?
1973
MLitt Philosophy
Australian Labor Party , first Australian federal MP to be imprisoned for corruption.
-
Sir Edgar Whitehead
?
?
?
Prime Minister of Southern Rhodesia
-
Sir Rowland Whitehead
?
?
History (1st)
KC MP
-
Thomas A. Shannon Jr.
1980
?
Politics
American diplomat, former acting United States Secretary of State
John Maxton
?
?
?
Labour MP for Glasgow Cathcart, 1979–2001
-
Josh Frydenberg
?
?
MPhil International Relations
Treasurer of Australia , Deputy Leader of the Liberal Party of Australia
-
Alan Williams
?
?
PPE
Labour MP for Swansea West, 1964–2010
-
James Plaskitt
?
?
PPE
Labour MP for Warwick and Leamington, 1997–2010
-
Chris Philp
?
?
BA Physics
Conservative MP for Croydon South
-
Simon Clarke
2003
2006
History
Conservative MP for Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland
-
Bongbong Marcos
1975
1978
DNG[ 4] [ 5] [ 6]
Governor, Senator, 17th President-elect of the Philippines
[ 4] [ 5] [ 6]
Huw Pill
?
1989
PPE
Chief Economist of the Bank of England
[ 7]
Charles Jenkinson, 1st Earl of Liverpool , longest-serving President of the Board of Trade , namesake of the Hawkesbury River
William Windham , Secretary of State for War and the Colonies
William Scott, 1st Baron Stowell , Camden Reader of Ancient History, judge of the Admiralty Court, MP for Oxford University
Sir Roger Newdigate , MP for Middlesex and for Oxford University, establisher of the Newdigate Prize
Lord Butler of Brockwell , civil servant, college master
Jacob Pleydell-Bouverie, 2nd Earl of Radnor , MP for Salisbury
Sir Banastre Tarleton , British military leader during the American Revolutionary War and later Whig MP for Liverpool
Sir Angus Mackintosh , British diplomat
George Abbot , Archbishop of Canterbury (1611–33)
John Potter , Archbishop of Canterbury (1737–47)
Tobias Matthew , Archbishop of York (1606–28)
Anthony Fisher , Catholic Archbishop of Sydney 2014–present, Bishop of Parramatta 2010–2014
Richard Fleming , bishop of Lincoln (1420–31)
George Horne , bishop of Norwich (1790–92)
Herbert Sidney Pelham , bishop of Barrow-in-Furness 1926–1944
Richard Godfrey Parsons , bishop of Middleton 1927–32, bishop of Southwark 1932–41, bishop of Hereford 1942–48
Grandage Edwards Powell , bishop of Penrith 1939-44
Tom Longworth , bishop of Pontefract 1939–49, bishop of Hereford 1949–61
Peter Mumford , bishop of Hertford 1974–81, bishop of Truro 1981–89
Malcolm Menin , bishop of Knaresborough 1986–97
Christopher Chessun , Bishop of Southwark 2011–present, Bishop of Woolwich 2005-2011
Arthur Penrhyn Stanley , Dean of Westminster 1863–81, Rector of St Andrews 1874-77
Charles Boyd , Archdeacon of Colombo (1891-1901)
Artists and writers [ edit ]
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Edwin Arnold , poet, journalist, translator from Hindi
Peter Bayley , literary critic
Augustus Hare , writer
Michael Brand , composer
W. G. Collingwood , artist
Kodwo Eshun writer, theorist and filmmaker
Maurizio Giuliano , writer, traveller, and United Nations official
Ivo Graham , comedian and writer
Fred Harrison (born 1944), author and economist
Armando Iannucci , comedian, writer, satirist and radio producer
Richard Ingrams , co-founder of Private Eye
Richard Jago , poet
Gerard Langbaine , biographer
C. S. Lewis , writer, critic; student there from 1919 to 1923 (originally joined in 1917 but left soon afterwards after being called up for action in the Great War ); Philosophy tutor from 1924 to 1925[ 8]
Peter McDonald , poet
Cecil Mercer , novelist
Andrew Motion , British Poet Laureate
Neel Mukherjee , novelist
Shiva Naipaul , novelist and writer
Sir V. S. Naipaul , writer and Nobel Laureate
Andrew Robinson , author and former newspaper editor
Aubrey de Sélincourt , writer and classicist
William Shawcross , chairman of the Charity Commission for England and Wales , writer
Desmond Shawe-Taylor , artist
Percy Bysshe Shelley , poet
Sophie Solomon , violinist, songwriter and composer
Charles Sorley , poet
Stephen Spender , poet and writer
Mams Taylor , recording artist/songwriter, mixed-martial arts fighter and activist
Rajiva Wijesinha , writer
Fabian S. Woodley , poet
Braham Murray , theatre director
Philosophers and theologians [ edit ]
F. H. Bradley , Idealist philosopher
Frederick Cornwallis Conybeare , orientalist and religious thinker
A. C. Ewing , philosopher
A. D. Lindsay , 1st Baron Lindsay of Birker, Scottish political philosopher and historian of philosophy, Master of Balliol College, Oxford
R. G. Collingwood , Idealist philosopher and archaeologist
Gareth Evans , philosopher of language and mind, Wilde Reader in Mental Philosophy
Kwasi Wiredu , Ghanaian philosopher
Willie E. Abraham , Ghanaian philosopher, first African fellow of All Souls College, Oxford
John Finnis , Australian legal philosopher
Mark de Bretton Platts , philosopher of language
Peter Singer , Australian moral and political philosopher, Ira W. DeCamp Professor of Bioethics (Princeton University )
Jeremy Waldron , New Zealander political and legal philosopher, former Chichele Professor of Social and Political Theory
Owen Fiss , American jurist, Sterling Professor (Yale University )
Mortimer Sellers , American jurist
Irving Singer (did not take degree), American philosopher
David O. Brink (visiting student), American moral and political philosopher
Broadcasters, journalists and entertainers[ edit ]
Nick Robinson
Peter Beinart , The New Republic 1999–2006, editor-at-large 2006–
Nick Denton , founder of Gawker media
Edward Enfield , broadcaster and writer
Paul Foot , journalist and socialist
Richard Francis , managing director of BBC radio
Paul Gambaccini , presenter of and writer on pop music
Christopher Hitchens , Atheist, Vanity Fair Writer
Gordon Honeycombe , actor and playwright
Tom Hooper , Academy Award-winning director
Aboubakr Jamaï , journalist
Owen Jones , author and journalist
Christina Lamb , journalist and author
Warren Mitchell , actor
James Owen , writer and journalist
Nigel Playfair , actor and theatre manager
Mike Ratledge , keyboardist and composer
James Ridley , author
Nick Robinson , journalist and BBC political editor
Rajdeep Sardesai , journalist
Peter Sissons , television newsreader
Philippa Thomas , journalist and chief presenter at BBC World News
Alex Thomson , television journalist
Michael York , actor
Andy Zaltzman , political comedian
Scientists, inventors and engineers[ edit ]
Edmund Cartwright
Stephen Hawking
Social scientists, historians and philologists[ edit ]
Ernst Badian , classical scholar, John Moors Cabot Professor of History Emeritus at Harvard University
James Franck Bright , historian, Master of University College, Oxford
Hedley Bull , Australian scholar of international relations
Robin Darwall-Smith , archivist of University College
E. R. Dodds , Irish classicist, Regius Professor of Greek (Oxford)
Katharine Ellis , music historian
Christopher Fyfe , historian of west Africa
Norman Hampson , historian of the French Revolution
Kenneth Hamilton Jenkin , historian
Sir William Jones , Anglo-Welsh philologist, discoverer of Sanskrit 's relationship to Latin and Greek
Monier Monier-Williams , linguist, Boden Professor of Sanskrit
Herman Ramm , archaeologist
Geoffrey Serle , Australian historian
Ernest de Sélincourt , literary critic and editor
E. V. Gordon , Canadian philologist, editor and teacher of medieval Germanic languages
Aly Kassam-Remtulla , Canadian anthropologist
John Allen , Australian teacher, rugby player and cricketer
Francis Birley , three-time winner of the FA Cup in the 1870s
Mark Evans , Canadian rower, Olympic Gold Medallist in the 8+, Los Angeles 1984 Olympics
J. Michael Evans , Canadian rower, Olympic Gold Medallist in the 8+, Los Angeles 1984 Olympics
Thomas Gubb , rugby union international, represented Great Britain on 1927 British Lions tour to Argentina
Douglas Mackintosh , alpine skier, participated in the 1956 Winter Olympics
Nick Mallett , rugby player and coach
Charles Thomas McMillen , retired NBA professional basketball player, US congressman
Richard Nerurkar , Olympic athlete
Acer Nethercott , British coxswain, Olympic silver medallist for GB 8+, Beijing 2008 Olympics
James Parker , rower
Tom Solesbury , GB pair, Beijing 2008 Olympics , and GB quad, London 2012 Olympics
Adrian Stoop , rugby player
Ralph Williams , cricketer and barrister
Christian Cole , Inner Temple member and first black graduate of Oxford University
Kenneth Diplock , judge and Law Lord
Andrew Edis , judge
Robert A. Gorman (born 1937), law professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School
Neil Gorsuch , Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court
John Dyson Heydon , Justice of the High Court of Australia
David Hodgson , Australian judge
Jonathan Mance, Baron Mance , Justice of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom
Evelyn Monier-Williams , circuit judge
Walter Paton (1853–1937), English barrister who played for Oxford University in the 1873 FA Cup Final
Geoffrey Robertson , human rights barrister, academic, author and broadcaster
Joseph Santamaria , Judge of the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of Victoria
Raymond Wacks , Emeritus Professor of Law and Legal Theory, author
Sir John Richardson , Puisne Judge of Common Pleas
Sir David Edward KCMG PC QC FRSE, Scottish lawyer and academic, Judge of the European Court of Justice
Oswald Cheung , barrister of Hong Kong, known as the "doyen of the bar"
Prince Felix Yusupov
G.G. Bradley , noted Latinist, college master
Chelsea Clinton , daughter of Bill Clinton , the 42nd U.S. President , and the former U.S. Secretary of State , Hillary Clinton
Michael Hoban , headmaster of Harrow School
Luke McShane , chess Grandmaster
Joseph Bennet Odunton , Ghanaian public servant, first black African to hold appointment at the Buckingham Palace
Sir Alan Stewart , founding vice-chancellor of Massey University , New Zealand
Edward Maunde Thompson , Principal Librarian British Museum 1888–98, Director and Principal Librarian 1898–1909
Israel Tonge , conspirator
John Webster , classical organist
Felix Yusupov , participant in the murder of Grigori Rasputin
A number of alumni became fellows at their Alma mater at some point in their academic career. Honorary fellows are marked with an asterisk.
List
John Appleton , academic and later Master
Peter Bayley , literary critic
Thomas Bennet , academic and later Master
Thomas Benwell , academic and later Master
Joseph Bingham , historian
Jon Blundy , geologist
George Granville Bradley , priest and later Master of the college
James Franck Bright , historian and later Master
John Browne , academic, later Master
Robert Burton , academic and later Master
Roger Cashmore , physicist
Richard Clayton , canon and later Master
Bill Clinton *, 42nd President of the United States
Thomas Cockman , academic and later Master
George Croft , priest
Horace Davey , judge and politician
E. R. Dodds , classicist
Gareth Evans , philosopher
Robin Fearn ,[ a] diplomat
Thomas Foston , Master of the college
Valpy French , Christian missionary
John Finnis , legal philosopher
Laurence Grensted , priest and chaplain of University College
Edmund Lacey , bishop and later Master
Reginald Walter Macan , classical scholar and later Master
Jonathan Mance *, judge
Peter Medd , priest
James Plaskitt ,[ b] politician
Thomas Plumer , lawyer and politician
Frederick Charles Plumptre , classicist and later Master
David Renton *, politician
Bill Roscoe , computer scientist
Sir Amherst Selby-Bigge , civil servant and academic
William Smith , antiquary and author of The Annals of University College
Travers Twiss , jurist
Obadiah Walker , historian and later Master
Abraham Woodhead , writer
^ visiting Fellow
^ Lectureship only
University College arms University College arms