List of Pembroke College, Oxford, people
A list of Pembroke College, Oxford people including former students, Fellows, Honorary Fellows and Masters of Pembroke College, University of Oxford, England.
Former students
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries.
- Abdullah II of Jordan, current ruler of Jordan
- Sukhumbhand Paribatra, Governor of Bangkok, Thailand
- William Adams, religious writer and essayist
- Patience Agbabi, performance poet
- Hilarion Alfeyev, Metropolitan of the Russian Orthodox Church, theologian, composer
- Michael Bettaney, a former MI5 intelligence officer convicted of Official Secrets Act offences in 1984
- Francis Beaumont, playwright
- Tanya Beckett, journalist and TV presenter
- Gaspar Bergman, film director
- William Blackstone, jurist and barrister
- Chris Rokos, hedge fund manager
- Edmund Bonner, bishop, known as 'Bloody Bonner'
- Kevin Brennan, Labour politician, MP for Cardiff West
- Sir Thomas Browne, seventeenth-century author
- William Camden, antiquarian and historian
- John Charmley, Professor of Modern History at the University of East Anglia
- Oz Clarke, oenophile and broadcaster
- Ed Conway, the first Economics Editor of Sky News (since 2011)
- Richard Corbet, Bishop of Oxford and Norwich, was a student resident in Broadgates Hall before it became Pembroke College
- Benjamin Cox, English baptist minister, student resident in Broadgates Hall before it became Pembroke College
- David Cracknell, former Sunday Times Political Editor
- Mary Creagh, Labour politician
- Thomas Percival Creed, Principal Queen Mary, University of London; Vice-Chancellor University of London
- Julian Critchley, journalist and Conservative politician
- Caryn Davies Rowing, World Championships, Olympic Games Gold medal
- Denzil Davies, Labour politician
- Maria Eagle, Labour government minister
- Alun Evans, Co-founder of BUSA and Chief Executive Officer of Football Association of Wales
- J. William Fulbright, Democratic U.S. Senator representing Arkansas
- Stefan Gates, food & cookery writer and television presenter
- David Allen Green, lawyer and legal writer
- Tim Griffin, Republican Member of Congress representing Arkansas
- John Hattendorf, maritime historian
- Charles Hawtrey (19th century actor)
- George Procter Hawtrey, actor and playwright
- Michael Heseltine, former Conservative Deputy Prime Minister and publisher
- Walter Isaacson, author and President and CEO of the Aspen Institute
- Samuel Johnson, lexicographer, biographer, writer, poet
- John Jordan, poet, writer, literary critic, editor, academic and broadcaster
- Roz Kaveney, writer
- Charles Kempe, Victorian stained glass designer
- John Kerr, Baron Kerr of Kinlochard, diplomat
- Philip Lader, former American Ambassador to the UK, businessman
- Richard G. Lugar, American Republican Senator
- John Mummery, Lord Justice of Appeal
- Viktor Orbán, Prime Minister of Hungary (1998-2002, 2010-)
- Tarik O'Regan, composer
- Mom Rajawongse Sukhumbhand Paripatra, 15th Governor of Bangkok
- John Pym, parliamentarian and critic of Charles I of England
- Peter Ricketts, diplomat
- Roland Ritchie, former justice of the Supreme Court of Canada
- Win Rockefeller, American philanthropist, Lt. Governor of Arkansas
- William Shenstone, 18th Century poet
- Radek Sikorski, Polish politician and current Minister of Foreign Affairs
- James Smithson, mineralogist, benefactor of the Smithsonian Institution
- John Snagge, BBC newsreader and commentator
- The Rt Rev. Thomas Stanage, Anglican Bishop in South Africa
- Samuel John Stone, Anglican clergyman and hymnwriter (The Church's One Foundation)
- Katharine Viner, editor-in-chief of The Guardian from summer 2015[1][2]
- Honeysuckle Weeks, actress
- George Whitefield, leader of the Methodist movement in the eighteenth century
- John Scott KCMG, DCL., Deputy Judge Advocate-General in Egypt, Judicial Advisor to the Khedive, 1891-98.
Fellows
- Gerald Allen, bishop, Fellow, Dean, and Chaplain of Pembroke College (1910–20), made an Honorary Fellow in 1934
- Antony Andrewes, historian, Fellow (1933-46)
- Robert Baldick, scholar of French literature
- Simon Blackburn, philosopher, former Fellow
- The Rt Rev. Brian Burrowes, bishop, Fellow, Lecturer, Dean and Chaplain until 1937
- John Cameron, Lord Abernethy, Scottish lawyer, Honorary Fellow
- Henry William Chandler, classical scholar, elected Fellow in 1853
- R. G. Collingwood, philosopher and historian.
- David Eastwood, academic, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Birmingham since 13 April 2009, former fellow
- John Eekelaar, law lecturer, academic director of Pembroke College (2005–2009)
- Charles Harding Firth, historian, Fellow in 1887
- Malcolm Reginald Godden, Junior Research Fellow (1969–1972), Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of Anglo-Saxon in the University of Oxford since May 1991.
- Richard Graves, minister and poet
- Conyngham Greene, diplomat, Honorary Fellow 1917
- Martha Klein, philosopher, retired in 2006
- John Krebs, Baron Krebs, zoologist, current Principal of Jesus College, Oxford
- Robert Reynolds Macintosh, New Zealand-born anaesthetist, Honorary Fellow 1965
- Kenneth Mackenzie, Bishop of Brechin (1935–1943), Fellow, Dean and Chaplain (1905–1910)
- Piers Mackesy, military historian, tutor in modern history and Fellow (1954-88)
- Christopher Melchert, American scholar of Islam, Fellow in Arabic
- Edward Moore, canon of Canterbury Cathedral, Honorary Fellow of Pembroke and Queen's colleges
- Robert Payne, cleric, natural philosopher, second Fellow of the college in 1624
- Zbigniew Pełczyński, politics scholar, emeritus fellow
- Thomas Risley, Presbyterian minister
- George Rolleston, physician and zoologist, Fellow 1851
- Colin Sheppard, engineer, Fellow (1979–89)
- Helen Small, Professor of English Literature
- Eric Stanley, scholar of Medieval literature, Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of Anglo-Saxon and Fellow of Pembroke College, Oxford (1977–91)
- William Thomas, Welsh clergyman and academic, Fellow after 1760
- J. R. R. Tolkien, a Fellow from 1925 to 1945 and wrote The Hobbit and the first two books of The Lord of the Rings during his time there.
- Christopher M. Tuckett, biblical scholar, Professor of New Testament Studies and Fellow
- Metropolitan Kallistos Ware, English bishop in the Eastern Orthodox church, theologian, Fellow (1970–2001)
- Robin Wilson, mathematician, Stipendiary Lecturer at Pembroke
- Michael Winterbottom, Classics Professor
- Charles Leslie Wrenn, Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of Anglo-Saxon (1945–63), member of the "Inklings"
Masters
Source:[3]
- 1526 Richard Arche
- 1549–53 Thomas Randolph, ambassador of Elizabeth I, Principal of Broadgates Hall, which is now Pembroke College
?
- 1624–47 Thomas Clayton, the last Principal of Broadgates Hall and became the first Master of Pembroke College
- 1647 Henry Wightwick, when Clayton died the Fellows elected Wightwick as Master
- 1647–60 Henry Langley, however the Parliamentary Committee for the University elected Langley
- 1660–64 Henry Wightwick, restored as Master
- 1664–1709 John Hall
- 1710–14 Colwell Brickenden
- 1714–38 Matthew Panting, contributed to the building of the Chapel
- 1738–75 John Ratcliffe
- 1775–89 William Adams
- 1789–96 William Sergrove, a descendent of Thomas Tesdale's (whose gift made Pembroke's existence possible). Died aged only 49.
- 1796–1809 John Smyth, one-time naval chaplain, his stories earned him the nickname 'Sinbad the Sailor'.
- 1809–43 George William Hall, academic administrator
- 1844–64 Francis Jeune, clergyman, Dean of Jersey (1838–1844)
- 1864–91 Evan Evans, Philipps Fellow of Pembroke College (1843–1864), serving as Tutor and senior Dean, Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University (1878–1882)
- 1892–98 Bartholomew Price, mathematician, became fellow in 1844 and tutor and mathematical lecturer in 1845, one of the teachers of Lewis Carroll
- 1899–1918 John Mitchinson, President of the Union, teacher and Anglican priest
- 1918–55 Frederick Homes Dudden, theological scholar, Chaplain to King George V and George VI (1929–52), Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University (1929–32)
- 1955–68 Ronald McCallum, Fellow in history in 1925
- 1968–75 George Pickering, had held the Regius Chair of Medicine
- 1975–85 Geoffrey Arthur, diplomat
- 1985–93 Roger Bannister, medic, best known as the first man to run the mile in under four minutes.
- 1993–2001 Robert Stevens, lawyer, previously Professor of Law at Yale, President of Haverford College, Chancellor of the University of California at Santa Cruz
- July 2001 – July 2013 Giles Henderson CBE, Senior Partner at law firm Slaughter and May
- August 2013 – present Lynne Brindley, the former Chief Executive of the British Library, the United Kingdom's national library (July 2000-July 2012), was elected to succeed Giles Henderson as the next Master of Pembroke College beginning on 1 August 2013.
References
- ↑ "Guardian appoints Katharine Viner as editor-in-chief", The Guardian, 20 March 2015
- ↑ "Candidate's Statement: Katharine Viner", Statement in the internal ballot of Guardian journalists, National Union of Journalists website
- ↑ http://web.archive.org/web/20080503043737/http://www.pmb.ox.ac.uk/College/History/Masters.php
- ↑ Pembroke College - Next Master Elected
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