List of alumni of Merton College, Oxford
- See also Former students, Fellows and current Honorary Fellows of Merton College.
Merton College, Oxford is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford.
This list of Merton Fellows and alumni is grouped into centuries; where the person's life spans more than one century, the (approximate) date of matriculation is used, and given in brackets when known.
Medieval
- Walter de Merton, Lord Chancellor, Bishop of Rochester (founder)
- Thomas Wilton, theologian and scholastic philosopher
- Walter Burley, scholastic philosopher and logician
- Archbishop Thomas Bradwardine, theologian and astronomer (1321), one of the Oxford Calculators
- William of Heytesbury (1330), one of the Oxford Calculators
- John Dumbleton (1338), one of the Oxford Calculators
- Richard Swineshead (1340), one of the Oxford Calculators
- John Wycliffe, theologian (1356)
- Robert Wikeford, Archbishop of Dublin (c. 1350 )
Two additional outstanding academic figures from the early 14th century, John Duns Scotus and William of Ockham have long been claimed as Merton alumni, but there is no contemporary evidence to support this claim and as Franciscans, they would have been ineligible for fellowships at Merton.[1]
16th century
- Bishop John Jewel, theologian and Anglican divine (1535)
- Sir Thomas Bodley, diplomat, scholar, and librarian (1563)
- Sir Henry Savile, scholar and statesman (1565)
- Richard Smyth, Regius Professor of Divinity, Merton College, and first Chancellor of the University of Douai
17th century
- John Bainbridge, astronomer (c1610)
- Admiral Robert Blake, military commander and Member of Parliament for Bridgwater (1615)
- William Harvey, physician (1645)
- Richard Steele, politician and writer (1691)
- Anthony Wood, antiquary
18th century
- David Hartley, Member of Parliament and signatory to the Treaty of Paris
- John Graves Simcoe, military officer and first lieutenant governor of Upper Canada
19th century
- Max Beerbohm, author and caricaturist (1890)
- Edmund Clerihew Bentley, inventor of the Clerihew (1894)
- F. H. Bradley, philosopher (fellow from 1870)
- Lord Randolph Churchill, British statesman (1867)
- Berdmore Compton, ecclesiastical writer
- Mandell Creighton, historian and Bishop of London (1862)
- Jose Gutierrez Guerra, Bolivian president (1890)
- Lord Halsbury, Lord Chancellor, and compiler of the Laws of England (1842)
- George Howson, reforming headmaster (1879)
- Walter Alison Phillips, historian (1882)
- George Saintsbury, writer, literary historian, scholar, critic and wine connoisseur (1863)
- Walter Scott, classical scholar (fellow from 1879)
- F. E. Smith, 1st Earl of Birkenhead, British statesman (1896, at Merton as a graduate)
- Frederick Soddy, radiochemist and Nobel Laureate in chemistry (1895)
20th century (matriculated before 1960)
- William Lindsay Renwick Professor of English Literature at King's College, University of Durham, and the University of Edinburgh (1920).
- Theodor Adorno, philosopher, sociologist, musicologist, and art critic (1934)
- Sir Leonard Allinson, former High Commissioner in Kenya and Ambassador to UN Environment Programme (1944)
- Sir Roger Bannister, middle-distance runner and neurologist (1950)
- Sir Lennox Berkeley, composer (1922)
- Sir Basil Blackwell, bookseller and publisher (1907)
- Edmund Blunden, Professor of Poetry (1931)
- Frank Bough, broadcaster (1952)
- Robert Byron, travel writer
- John Carey, literary critic (Merton Professor of English 1975-2001)
- Leonard Cheshire, RAF pilot and philanthropist (1936)
- Michael Davie, journalist and newspaper editor (1942)
- Keith Douglas, poet (1938)
- T. S. Eliot, poet and Nobel Laureate for literature (1914)
- Northrop Frye, literary critic (1936)
- Roger Lancelyn Green, children's writer and biographer (1937)
- Erich S. Gruen, classical scholar (Rhodes Scholar, 1957–1960, Visiting Fellow 1974)
- Stuart Hall, cultural theorist (1951)
- Sir Hector Hetherington, Principal of the University of Glasgow (1912)
- Sir Tony Hoare, computer scientist (1952)
- Ian Holbourn, artist, author, educator, and survivor of the RMS Lusitania
- Andrew Irvine, mountaineer (1921)
- Sir Jeremy Isaacs, broadcaster and impresario (1951)
- P. J. Kavanagh, poet, lecturer, actor, broadcaster and columnist (1951)
- Kris Kristofferson, actor and musician (1958)
- Professor Anthony Leggett, physicist, Nobel Laureate in physics (1959)
- John Lucas, philosopher (JRF 1953, Fellow 1960)
- Louis MacNeice, poet (1926)
- Reginald Maudling, politician (1933)
- Christopher Middleton, poet (1948)
- Bruce Mitchell, philologist (1952)
- R. I. Moore, medieval historian (1959)
- John Mulgan, writer, journalist and editor (1933)
- Airey Neave, politician (1934)
- Terence O'Brien, British ambassador to Nepal, Burma and Indonesia (1940)
- Sir Michael Palliser, diplomat (1940)
- Reynolds Price, author and professor at Duke University (1955)
- Sir George Radda, scientist (1957)
- Cecil Roth, scholar, historian (1905)
- Eric Simms, ornithologist (1939)
- Howard K. Smith, journalist and broadcaster (1937)
- Yukio Takasu, diplomat (1970)
- Sir Peter Tapsell, Father of the House of Commons (1950)
- Professor Niko Tinbergen, ethologist (1949)
- J. R. R. Tolkien, author and Merton Professor of English (1945)
- Sir Geoffrey Vickers (1913)
- Eric A. Walker, Professor Emeritus of Imperial History at the University of Cambridge (1908)
- The Honourable Sir John Hamilton Wallace, New Zealand judge (1955)
- Angus Wilson, author (1932)
- Patrick Wright, diplomat (1951)
- Yang Xianyi, translator (1936)
Contemporary (matriculated since 1960)
- HIH Princess Akiko of Mikasa of Japan (2010)
- Roger Bootle, economist (1970)
- Colin Bundy, academic (1968 Rhodes Scholar)
- Iain Burnside, pianist and accompanist (1974)
- Andy Cato, musician and DJ (1991)
- Alex Chisholm, chief executive designate of the United Kingdom's new Competition and Markets Authority (1986)
- James Clark, author of groff and open source software developer (1982)
- John A. Claughton, Chief Master of King Edward's School, Birmingham and the Foundation of the Schools of King Edward VI (1975)
- Juliet Davenport, businesswoman (1986)
- Howard Davies, Director, London School of Economics (1969)
- Charles Finch, author
- Pat Fish (Patrick Huntrods), musician and songwriter (1976)
- Paul Foot, comedian (1992)
- David Freud, investment banker (1969)
- John Selwyn Gilbert, television writer, director and producer (1961)
- Mark Haddon, author (1981)
- Dr Adam Hart-Davis, broadcaster (1962)
- Anthony Holden, writer, broadcaster, critic (1966)
- MacDonald P. Jackson, Emeritus Professor at the University of Auckland (1963)
- Tim Jackson, auctioneer (1983)
- Alec Jeffreys, geneticist (1968)
- Sir Ian Kershaw, historian (1966)
- Chris Laidlaw, rugby player, diplomat, MP, radio host and author (1969)
- Brian Leveson, Judge (1967)
- Jonathan Lord, MP (1981)
- Denis MacShane, Labour MP (1966)
- Sir Callum McCarthy, former Chairman of the Financial Services Authority (1962)
- Alister McGrath, scientist and theologian (1976 Domus Senior Scholar)
- Dominic Minghella, screenwriter (1986)
- John Mitchinson, writer and publisher (1982)
- Tim Mitchison, cell biologist (1977)
- John David Morley, novelist (1966)
- Arthur Mutambara, Zimbabwean politician, roboticist (1991 Rhodes scholar)
- HIH Naruhito, Crown Prince of Japan (1982)
- Jesse Norman, MP (1981)
- Tony Orchard, inorganic chemist (as a graduate)
- Hugh Osmond, co-founder of Punch Taverns (1980)
- Andrew Pettegree, historian (1976)
- Kieron Quirke, TV writer (1997)
- Michael Ridpath, author (1979)
- Dana Scott, logician
- Igor Sill, Investor, Wine Collector (2006)
- Sir Howard Stringer, Chief Executive Officer of Sony (1961, Honorary Fellow)
- Ben Summerskill, Chief Executive of Stonewall from 2003-2014 (1981)
- Michael Szonyi, Professor of Chinese history at Harvard University (1990 Rhodes Scholar)
- Mark Thompson, broadcaster, director general of the BBC (1976)
- Rick Trainor, Principal of King's College London (1971)
- Ed Vaizey, MP for Wantage (1986)
- Professor Sir Andrew Wiles, mathematician (1971), famous for proving Fermat's Last Theorem in 1994.
- Alexander Williams, animator (1986)
References
- ↑ Martin, G. H. & Highfield, J. R. L. (1997). A History of Merton College. Oxford: Oxford University Press, p. 53.
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