List of University of Melbourne people

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of University of Melbourne people, including alumni and staff.

Alumni[]

Academia[]

  • Sir John Behan, educator; Australia's first Rhodes Scholar[1]
  • Geoff Bowker, professor of informatics at the University of California, Irvine
  • Alec Broers, Baron Broers, electrical engineer, former Vice Chancellor of the University of Cambridge
  • Karen Burns, architectural historian
  • Joseph Camilleri, professor at La Trobe University
  • Simon Chesterman, Dean of Law at the National University of Singapore[2]
  • Michael Clyne, linguist
  • Greg Craven, Vice-Chancellor of Australian Catholic University
  • John Deeble, Architect of Medicare Australia
  • Ding Dyason, medical historian
  • Alan Ebringer, immunologist, professor at King's College in the University of London
  • Arie Freiberg, AM, legal academic
  • Germaine Greer, feminist
  • Maria Gough, art historian at Harvard University
  • Bella Guerin, educator and activist; first female university graduate in Australia
  • John Alexander Gunn, philosophy professor
  • Peter Karmel, former vice-chancellor of Australian National University and Flinders University
  • Hugh Gemmell Lamb-Smith, Australian educator; landed at Anzac Cove on 25 April 1915.
  • Arthur Lucas, principal of King's College London (1993–2003)
  • Robert Manne, professor of politics at La Trobe University
  • Samaresh Mitra, bioinorganic chemist, Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar laureate
  • Peter McPhee, Provost of the University of Melbourne
  • Fulvio Melia, professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Arizona and associate editor of the Astrophysical Journal
  • Bruce Mitchell, fellow of St Edmund Hall, Oxford
  • David S. Oderberg, professor of philosophy at the University of Reading
  • Richard G. Pestell, Executive Vice President at Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia USA
  • Abbas Rajabifard, professor and head of the Department of Infrastructure Engineering in the Melbourne School of Engineering
  • Michael Roe, historian
  • David Shallcross, chemical engineer
  • James Simpson, Harvard University professor
  • Alexander Smits, Eugene Higgins Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at Princeton University
  • Gillian Triggs, international legal academic and President of the Australian Human Rights Commission[3]
  • Frances Valintine, education futurist
  • Sally Walker, Vice-Chancellor of Deakin University
  • Frank T. M. White, Foundation Professor, Mining and Metallurgical Engineering, University of Queensland; Macdonald Professor of Mining Engineering and Applied Geophysics, McGill University

Architecture[]

  • Douglas Alexandra
  • James Birrell
  • Gregory Burgess
  • Peter Corrigan
  • Norman Day
  • John Denton
  • Roy Grounds
  • Ellison Harvie
  • John Hipwell
  • Peter Ho
  • Nonda Katsalidis
  • Hijjas Kasturi
  • Barry Patten
  • Louise St John Kennedy

Business[]

  • , Chief Operating Officer, Dairy Farm
  • Leigh Clifford, Chairman of Qantas Airways
  • Robert Champion de Crespigny
  • John Elliott, former president, Liberal Party of Australia and Carlton Football Club
  • Aubrey Gibson
  • Charles Goode, former Chairman, ANZ Bank
  • James P. Gorman, Chairman and CEO, Morgan Stanley
  • David Hains
  • Sir John Holland
  • Sir , former Chairman, Amcor
  • Margaret Jackson
  • , Executive Chairman, Village Roadshow
  • Ananda Krishnan, CEO, Usaha Tegas Sdn Bhd
  • Alwyn K.H. Lim, CPA
  • Hugh Morgan, former board member of the Reserve Bank of Australia
  • Rupert Myer, director, Myer Family Company
  • Richard Pratt
  • James Riady, Chairman, Lippo Group
  • Graeme Samuel, AC
  • Karl Siegling, funds manager
  • Lei Cheng Tan, Chairman, IGB Corporation Berhad
  • Evan Thornley, entrepreneur[4]

Community activism[]

  • Julian Assange, Wikileaks spokesperson and founder (did not graduate)
  • Waleed Aly
  • Helen Durham, international humanitarian lawyer[5]
  • Avery Ng, Hong Kong activist
  • Tilman Ruff, public health scholar and founder of International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), winner of the 2017 Nobel Peace Prize.

Government[]

Governors General of Australia[]

  • Richard Casey, Baron Casey, KG, GCMG, CH, DSO, MC, PC, 16th Governor-General of Australia (did not graduate)
  • Sir Zelman Cowen, AK, GCMG, GCVO, QC, PC[6]
  • Peter Hollingworth, AC, OBE
  • Sir Isaac Isaacs, GCB, GCMG, KC, also former Chief Justice of Australia
  • Sir Ninian Stephen, KG, AK, GCMG, GCVO, KBE, QC, also a previous Justice of the High Court of Australia[7]

Governors of Victoria[]

  • Alex Chernov, AC, QC[8]
  • Professor David de Kretser
  • Sir James Gobbo, AC, CVO, QC, also a previous Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria
  • John Landy
  • Richard McGarvie
  • Sir Henry Winneke, AC KCMG KCVO OBE KStJ QC, also a previous Chief Justice of Victoria[9]

Politicians[]

Prime Ministers of Australia[]
  • Alfred Deakin[10]
  • Julia Gillard, AC[11]
  • Harold Holt, CH[12]
  • Sir Robert Menzies, KT, AK, CH, FAA, FRS, QC[13]
Premiers of Victoria[]
  • Ted Baillieu
  • John Brumby
  • John Cain II
  • Rupert Hamer
  • Sir William Irvine, GCMG, also a former Chief Justice of Victoria[14]
  • Joan Kirner
  • William Shiels[15]
  • Lindsay Thompson
Federal politicians[]
  • Lyn Allison, former Member of the Australian Senate and leader of the Australian Democrats
  • Richard Alston, AO, former Member of the Australian Senate
  • Kevin Andrews, MP, Member of the Australian House of Representatives[16]
  • Bruce Baird, AM, former Member of the Australian House of Representatives
  • Maurice Blackburn, lawyer and former Member of the Australian House of Representatives[17]
  • Neil Brown, QC, former Member of the Australian House of Representatives
  • Anna Burke, MP, Member of the Australian House of Representatives
  • John Button, former Member of the Australian Senate[18]
  • Jim Cairns, former Deputy Prime Minister of Australia
  • Sam Cohen, former Member of the Australian Senate[19]
  • Barney Cooney, former Member of the Australian Senate[20]
  • Mark Dreyfus, QC, MP, Member of Australian House of Representatives[21]
  • Gareth Evans, AC, QC, international policymaker, academic, and former Member of the Australian Senate
  • John Alexander Forrest
  • Petro Georgiou, former Member of Australian House of Representatives
  • Andrew Giles, Member of Australian House of Representatives
  • Ivor Greenwood, former Member of the Australian Senate
  • Ray Groom, AO, former Member of the Australian House of Representatives and Premier of Tasmania
  • H. B. Higgins, former Attorney-General of Australia and Justice of the High Court of Australia
  • Greg Hunt, MP, Member of Australian House of Representatives
  • Dennis Jensen, Member of Australian House of Representatives
  • Barry Jones, AC former Member of Australian House of Representatives and Parliament of Victoria.
  • David Kemp, former Member of Australian House of Representatives
  • John Langmore, Member of Australian House of Representatives
  • William Maloney, Member of Australian House of Representatives
  • Richard Marles, Member of Australian House of Representatives
  • Peter McGauran, former Member of Australian House of Representatives
  • Kelly O'Dwyer, MP, Member of Australian House of Representatives[22]
  • Andrew Peacock, AC, GCL, former Member of Australian House of Representatives
  • Sir Arthur Robinson, KCMG, former Member of Australian House of Representatives[23]
  • Nicola Roxon, former Member of the Australian House of Representatives[24]
  • Roger Shipton, OAM, former Member of the Australian House of Representatives
  • Bill Shorten, MP, Member of Australian House of Representatives[25]
  • Bruce Smith, KC, former Member of Australian House of Representatives[26]
  • Sir John Spicer, former Member of the Australian Senate[27]
  • Sid Spindler, former Member of the Australian Senate
  • Lindsay Tanner, former Member of the Australian House of Representatives
  • Ralph Willis, AO, former Member of the Australian House of Representatives
  • Agar Wynne, former Member of the Australian House of Representatives[28]
Australian state and territory politicians[]
  • Sir Clifden Eager KBE KC, former President of the Victorian Legislative Council[29]
  • Maurice Blackburn, lawyer and former Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly[17]
  • John Bourke, lawyer and former Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly[30]
  • Thomas Brennan, political journalist and former Member of the Victorian Legislative Council[31]
  • Bruce Chamberlain, AM, former Member of both the Victorian Legislative Assembly and Council[32]
  • Robert Clark, former Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly[33]
  • Neil Cole, former Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly and playwright and researcher[34]
  • Robert Dean, former Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly
  • Frank Field, former Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly[35]
  • John Galbally, CBE, QC, former Member of both the Victorian Legislative Assembly and Council[36]
  • Matthew Groom, MP, Member of the Tasmanian House of Assembly
  • Ray Groom, AO, former Premier of Tasmania and Member of the Australian House of Representatives
  • Tim Holding, former Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly
  • Robert Wilfred Holt, Minister for Lands in the Cain government 1952–54
  • Trevor Oldham, former Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly, serving as Deputy Premier[37]
  • Herbert Postle, former Member of the Tasmanian House of Assembly[38]
  • Robert Ramsay, former Member of both the Victorian Legislative Assembly[39]
  • Edward Reynolds, QC, former Member of both the Victorian Legislative Assembly
  • T. J. Ryan, KC, former Premier of Queensland[40]
  • Sir Arthur Rylah, KBE, CMG, former Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly and Deputy Premier[41]
  • Prue Sibree, former Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly[42]
  • Oswald Snowball, former Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly, serving as Speaker
  • Alan Stockdale, former Member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly, serving as Treasurer[43]
  • Shane Stone, AC, QC, former Chief Minister of the Northern Territory
  • Richard Ward, QC, former Member of the Northern Territory Legislative Council and Supreme Court judge[44]
  • Sir Henry Wrixon, KCMG, QC, former Member of both the Victorian Legislative Assembly and Council[45]
  • Agar Wynne, former Member of the Victorian Legislative Council[28]
International politicians[]
Public servants[]
  • William Macmahon Ball, diplomat
  • Jean-Pierre Blais, Canadian bureaucrat; Chairman of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission[47]
  • Peta Credlin, political advisor[48]
  • Francis Patrick Donovan, AM, diplomat and jurist[49]
  • Bill Paterson, Australian Ambassador to Republic of Korea; previously Australian Ambassador to Thailand and Australian Ambassador for Counter-Terrorism[50]
  • Trevor Ashmore Pyman, diplomat.
  • John So, Lord Mayor of Melbourne
  • Fred Whitlam, Crown Solicitor; father of Gough[51]

Humanities[]

Arts[]

  • Angela Brennan, artist
  • Steve Cox, painter and watercolourist
  • John Dahlsen, environmental artist
  • Hugh Davies, mixed media artist
  • Bill Henson, photographer and Venice Biennale representative
  • Ali Hogg, photographer and activist
  • Pamela Irving, artist and educator
  • Anastasia Klose, video artist and Biennale of Sydney representative
  • Doris McKellar, photographer[52]
  • Azlan McLennan, artist and activist
  • Lewis Miller, Archibald Prize winning painter
  • Victor O'Connor, artist[53]
  • Stieg Persson, painter
  • Patricia Piccinini, sculptor and Venice Biennale representative
  • Van Thanh Rudd, artist and activist
  • Anne-Louise Sarks, theatre director and writer
  • Matt Scholten, theatre director, teacher & writer
  • Ricky Swallow, sculptor and Venice Biennale representative
  • Timothy James Webb, artist
  • Bradd Westmoreland, artist
  • Marcus Wills, Archibald Prize winning painter
  • Shaun Parker, Award-Winning Choreographer, founder of Shaun Parker & Company

Film and television[]

  • Adam Arkapaw, cinematographer (True Detective, Animal Kingdom, Snowtown)
  • Gillian Armstrong, director (Charlotte Gray, Little Women)
  • Tony Ayres, Australian Film Institute award-winning director (The Home Song Stories, Walking on Water)
  • Alison Bell, Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts Award nominated actor (I Rock, Laid)
  • Tahir Raj Bhasin, Indian actor
  • Jill Bilcock, Academy Award-nominated editor (Elizabeth, Moulin Rouge!, Red Dog)
  • Hamish Blake, comedian (did not graduate)
  • Cate Blanchett, actress (did not graduate)
  • Jamie Blanks, director (Urban Legend, Valentine)
  • John Bluthal, actor
  • Sibylla Budd, actor and documentary presenter (All Saints, Sea Patrol, The Secret Life of Us)
  • Ronny Chieng, comedian
  • Santo Cilauro, television and feature film producer[54]
  • Vince Colosimo, Australian Film Institute Award winning actor (Body of Lies, Chopper, Lantana)
  • Marg Downey, comedian and actress
  • Elizabeth Debicki, actress
  • Adam Elliot, Academy Award-winning animator (Harvie Krumpet, Mary and Max)
  • Alice Garner, historian, musician and actress
  • Antony I. Ginnane, film producer
  • Tom Gleisner, director, producer, writer, comedian, actor and author[55]
  • Libbi Gorr, comedian
  • Hanna Griffiths, Award Winning Film Producer & Actress
  • Barry Humphries, comedian
  • Red Hong Yi, artist and architectural designer
  • Sammy J, comedian
  • Clayton Jacobson, director (Kenny)
  • Justin Kurzel, director (Snowtown, Macbeth (2015), Assassin's Creed)
  • Andy Lee, comedian
  • Anthony Lucas, Academy Award nominated animator (The Mysterious Geographic Explorations of Jasper Morello)
  • Robert Luketic, director (21, Legally Blonde, Monster-in-Law)
  • Catherine Mack-Hancock, actress
  • Lara Jean Marshall, actress best known for her role on The Saddle Club
  • Belinda McClory, actor and screenwriter (Acolytes, Blue Heelers, The Matrix)
  • David Michôd, director (Animal Kingdom)
  • Rhys Muldoon, actor
  • Lloyd Newson, director, dancer and choreographer
  • Michael Pattinson, producer (Ground Zero, Secrets)
  • Hannie Rayson, Australian Writers' Guild Award and Sidney Myer Performing Arts Award winning playwright and actor (SeaChange)
  • Glenn Robbins, comedian and actor
  • Portia de Rossi, actress
  • Pallavi Sharda, Indian actor
  • Jonathan M. Shiff, Australian Film Institute and British Academy of Film and Television Arts award-winning producer (Ocean Girl, Thunderstone)
  • Rob Sitch, co-writer and co-director of the movies The Castle and The Dish; co-host of The Panel
  • Matt Scholten, Director
  • Simon Stone, Director & Actor
  • Sam Strong, Director, Artistic Director Queensland Theatre
  • Magda Szubanski, comedian and actress
  • Nadia Townsend, actor and theatre director (City Homicide, Fireflies, Knowing)
  • Andrew Upton, Director & Playwright
  • Steve Vizard, television and radio presenter, lawyer, comedian, producer, author and screenwriter[56]
  • Luke Walker, director/producer (Beyond Our Ken, Lasseter's Bones)
  • Sarah Watt, director and animator (Look Both Ways, My Year Without Sex)
  • Angela White, pornographic actress, director
  • Alison Whyte, Logie Award-winning actor (Frontline, Satisfaction)
  • Geoffrey Wright, director (Macbeth (2006), Metal Skin, Romper Stomper)
  • Julia Zemiro, Television Presenter
  • Randeep Hooda, Indian Actor
  • Yashma Gill, Pakistani Actor
  • Lydia Zimmermann, director (Aro Tolbukhin. En la mente del asesino)
  • Ashley Zukerman, Logie Award nominated actor (Lowdown, The Pacific, Rush)

History[]

  • Geoffrey Blainey, one of the Australian Living Treasures
  • Manning Clark
  • Charles Coppel, former barrister and historian[57]
  • Keith Hancock
  • Stuart Macintyre
  • Michael Roe, historian and academic
  • A. G. L. Shaw

Journalism[]

  • Tiffiny Hall, journalist, author and television personality
  • Joe Hildebrand, journalist, social commentator and news columnist
  • Christine Kenneally, New York City-based journalist
  • Matt Tinney, newsreader
  • Bill Tipping, former journalist, social commentator and activist[58]

Literature, writing and poetry[]

  • Randa Abdel-Fattah, Australian Muslim author and lawyer[59]
  • Russell Blackford, writer, philosopher and critic[60]
  • Vincent Buckley
  • Anna Ciddor, author and illustrator [61]
  • Helen Garner, author
  • Kerry Greenwood, crime writer
  • Germaine Greer, feminist writer and academic
  • Jack Hibberd
  • Fulvio Melia
  • Gerald Murnane, novelist and short story writer
  • Chris Wallace-Crabbe, Visiting Professor of Australian Studies at Harvard University
  • Lynne Kelly (science writer), writer, researcher and science educator

Music[]

  • Harry James Angus, trumpeter and vocalist (The Cat Empire)
  • Wouter De Backer, musician known as 'Gotye'
  • Cheryl Barker, opera singer
  • Michael Barker, drummer (John Butler Trio, Split Enz)
  • Don Banks, composer
  • Arthur Chanter 1866–1950, composer
  • Diana Doherty, oboe soloist (New York Philharmonic)
  • Leonard Dommett, violinist and conductor
  • Julian Gavin, opera singer
  • Antoinette Halloran, opera singer
  • Missy Higgins, singer/songwriter
  • Rex Hobcroft, pianist and administrator
  • , composer and actress
  • Tania de Jong soprano and social entrepreneur[62]
  • Liza Lim, composer
  • John McAll, pianist and Musical Director
  • Mona McBurney 1867–1932 composer
  • Ryan Monro, bassist (The Cat Empire)
  • Ian Munro, pianist and composer
  • Patrick Savage, film composer and former principal first violin (Royal Philharmonic Orchestra)
  • Peter Sculthorpe, composer
  • Dudley Simpson, conductor and television composer
  • Jan Skubiszewski, multi-award-winning record producer film composer
  • Red Symons, musician, television and radio personality
  • Penelope Thwaites, musicologist and pianist
  • Yelian He, cellist
  • Charles Zwar, songwriter, composer, lyricist, pianist and music director[63]
  • David Burd, US rapper, known as Lil Dicky[citation needed]

Philosophy[]

  • Samuel Alexander
  • Leslie Cannold
  • Raimond Gaita
  • Charles Leonard Hamblin
  • Frank Cameron Jackson
  • Graham Oppy
  • Toby Ord
  • Brian O'Shaughnessy
  • Graham Priest
  • Ian Robinson
  • Peter Singer
  • John Tasioulas, moral and legal philosopher
  • Nick Trakakis
  • John Weckert
  • Damon Young

Law[]

Chief Justices of Australia
  • Sir Owen Dixon, OM, GCMG, KC[64]
  • Sir Frank Gavan Duffy, KCMG, PC, KC[65]
  • Sir Isaac Isaacs, GCB, GCMG, KC[66]
  • Sir John Latham, GCMG, KC[67]
Justices of the High Court of Australia
  • Sir Keith Aickin, KBE, QC, former justice[68]
  • Susan Crennan
  • Sir Daryl Dawson, AC, KBE, CB, QC, former justice[69]
  • Sir Wilfred Fullagar, KBE, KC, former justice[70]
  • Kenneth Hayne
  • H. B. Higgins, former justice
  • Sir Douglas Menzies, former justice
  • Geoffrey Nettle
  • Sir Ninian Stephen, KG, AK, GCMG, GCVO, KBE, QC, also a previous Governor-General of Australia[7]
Chief Justice of the Federal Court of Australia
Justices of the Federal Court of Australia
Chief Justice of the Family Court of Australia
  • Diana Bryant, AO, QC, Chief Justice since 2004[74]
  • Alastair Nicholson, AO, RFD, QC, former Chief Justice
Justices of the Family Court of Australia
Chief Justices of Victoria
  • Lieutenant General Sir Edmund Herring, KCMG KBE DSO MC KStJ ED QC, also a former Lieutenant Governor of Victoria[76]
  • Sir William Irvine, GCMG, also a former Premier of Victoria[14]
  • Sir John Madden, GCMG, also a former Vice-Chancellor and Chancellor of the University[77]
  • Sir Frederick Mann, KCMG, also a former Lieutenant Governor of Victoria[78]
  • John Harber Phillips, AC QC, also a former Victorian Director of Public Prosecutions and Director of the National Crime Authority[79]
  • Sir Henry Winneke, AC KCMG KCVO OBE KStJ QC, also a former Governor of Victoria[9]
  • Sir John Young, AC KCMG[80]
Justices of the Supreme Court of Victoria
  • Sir Kevin Anderson, QC[81]
  • Sir Arthur Dean, KC[82]
  • Sir James Gobbo, AC, CVO, QC, also a former Governor of Victoria
  • Sir George Pape[83]
  • Joseph Santamaria QC
Presidents of the Victorian Court of Appeal

Other legal professionals[]

  • Philip Alston, international law scholar; former United Nations Special Rapporteur[85]
  • John Bennett, civil libertarian[86]
  • Matthew Collins, barrister and Senior Fellow at the Melbourne Law School[87]
  • Mario Condello, lawyer; murdered during Melbourne gangland killings
  • Frank Costigan, QC, lawyer, Royal Commissioner and social justice activist[88]
  • Rowan Downing, QC, barrister and international jurist[89]
  • Frank Galbally, CBE, criminal defence lawyer[90]
  • Flos Greig, first woman to be admitted to practise as a barrister and solicitor in Australia[91]
  • Philip Griffiths, KC, jurist[92]
  • Francis Gurry, international intellectual property lawyer and bureaucrat[93]
  • Colin Lovitt, QC, criminal barrister[94]
  • Julian McMahon, A.C., barrister, humanitarian, campaigner against death penalty
  • Rob Stary, criminal defence lawyer
  • Lord Uthwatt, Judge, Chancery Division, High Court of Justice of England and Wales, Lord of Appeal in Ordinary, House of Lords

Military[]

  • Group Captain John Balmer, OBE, DFC, World War II RAAF bomber pilot[95]
  • Major General Sir Julius Bruche, KCB, CMG, Second Boer War and World War I army officer[96]
  • Sir Samuel Burston, army doctor and World War II general
  • Rupert Downes, army doctor and World War II general
  • Sir Edward 'Weary' Dunlop, army doctor and humanitarian
  • Major General Harold 'Pompey' Elliott, CB, CMG, DSO, DCM, VD, politician and World War I army general[97]
  • Sir Neil Hamilton Fairley, army doctor
  • Brigadier General William Grant, CMG, World War I general
  • Sir James Whiteside McCay, politician and World War I general
  • Sir John Monash, World War I general
  • Sir Kingsley Norris, army doctor and major general
  • Lieutenant Colonel Philip Rhoden, OBE, ED, lawyer and World War II army officer[98]
  • Ian Upjohn, CSC, SC, Army Reserve officer and barrister[99]

Religious leaders[]

Sciences[]

Agriculture[]

  • Yvonne Aitken, botanist, first woman to earn a PhD in Agriculture form the University of Melbourne in 1970[101]

Biology[]

  • Elizabeth Blackburn, awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 2009
  • Margaret Blackwood, botanist and geneticist
  • Kirsten Parris, urban ecologist

Computing[]

  • Andrew Freeman FACS – Fellow of the Australian Computer Society (elected in 1997), and an Honorary Life Member (HLM) of the ACS (elected in 2018)[102]

Geology[]

  • Norman Greenwood

Chemistry[]

Engineering[]

  • Sir Walter Bassett
  • William Charles Kernot
  • Diane Lemaire, first woman to graduate from the University of Melbourne with a degree in engineering
  • Anthony Michell
  • John Monash
  • Elizabeth Jens
  • Ian A. Young, senior fellow of Intel; co-inventor of BiCMOS logic family and clocks for Pentium series microprocessors

Mathematics[]

  • Robert Bartnik
  • Keith Briggs
  • Danny Calegari
  • Robert William Chapman
  • Thomas MacFarland Cherry
  • Ian G. Enting
  • Greg Hjorth
  • Mark S. Joshi
  • Kenneth McIntyre
  • Brendan McKay
  • Samuel McLaren
  • John Henry Michell
  • Edward J. Nanson
  • Jonathan Pila
  • E. J. G. Pitman
  • J. Hyam Rubinstein
  • Hans Schwerdtfeger
  • Ian Sloan
  • Geoffrey Watson
  • William Parkinson Wilson

Medicine[]

  • Lilian Helen Alexander, one of the first women to study medicine at the university
  • Ellen Balaam, first woman surgeon in Melbourne
  • David Bowen, deregistered medical practitioner[103]
  • Vera Scantlebury Brown
  • Sir Frank Macfarlane Burnet, awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1960 "for the discovery that the immune system of the fetus learns how to distinguish between self and non-self"
  • Sir John Carew Eccles, awarded the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1963 "for describing the electric transmission of impulses along nerves"
  • Aditya Tedjaseputra, inventor of pain-free speculum.
  • Constance Ellis, first woman to receive a Doctor of Medicine from the university
  • Jane Stocks Greig, public health specialist
  • Janet Greig, Victoria's first female anaesthetist
  • David Handelsman, Australia's first professor in reproductive endocrinology and andrology
  • James Lawson, public health doctor and scientist
  • Elizabeth Scarr, associate professor at the Department of Psychiatry, project leader of Cooperative Research Centre for Mental Health, and leader of the Psychiatric Neuropathology laboratory at the university
  • Helen Sexton, surgeon, one of the first women to study medicine at the university
  • Rajaratnam Sundarason, surgeon, one of the founders of International House[104]
  • Sydney James Van Pelt, pioneer of modern hypnotherapy

Physics[]

  • Walter Boas
  • Samuel L. Braunstein
  • John M. Cowley
  • Rod Crewther
  • Richard Dalitz – inventor of the Dalitz plot
  • Terence James Elkins
  • Colin J. Gillespie
  • Kerr Grant
  • Peter Hannaford
  • Alan Head
  • T. H. Laby
  • Rodney Marks
  • Leslie H. Martin
  • Sir Harrie Massey
  • Fulvio Melia
  • Keith Nugent
  • Helen Quinn – former president of the American Physical Society; recipient of the Dirac Medal in 2000 and the Sakurai Prize in 2013
  • William Sutherland

Psychology[]

  • Vicki Anderson (psychologist), pediatric neuropsychologist
  • Kathleen Funder, researcher, Australian Institute of Family Studies
  • Peter O'Connor (psychologist), psychologist

Veterinary Science[]

  • Cyril Seelenmeyer – VFL footballer, veterinary surgeon, winner of Military Cross
  • Harold Addison Woodruff – Professor of veterinary pathology and director of the veterinary institute

Sport[]

  • Kim Crow, London Olympics silver and bronze medallist for doubles and singles sculling respectively
  • Bev Francis, IFBB professional Australian female bodybuilder, powerlifter, and national shot put champion
  • Geoff Grover, VFL and VFA footballer; VFA interstate representative (1966 Hobart Carnival)
  • John Robinson, VFL Footballer; recipient of the Distinguished Conduct Medal (1917)

Faculty[]

Administration[]

Chancellors[]

Order Chancellor Years Notes
1 Sir Redmond Barry 1853–1880 [105]
2 Sir William Stawell 1881–1882
3 James Moorhouse 1883–1886 [106]
4 William Hearn 1886
5 Sir Anthony Brownless 1887–1897 [107]
6 Sir John Madden 1897–1918 [77]
7 Sir John MacFarland 1918–1935 [108]
8 Sir James Barrett 1935–1939 [109]
9 Sir John Latham 1939–1941
10 Sir Charles John Lowe 1941–1954
11 Sir Arthur Dean 1954–1966 [82]
12 Sir William Upjohn 1966–1967 [110]
13 Sir Robert Menzies 1967–1972 [111]
14 1972–1978
15 1978–1980
16 Sir Roy Wright 1980–1989 [112]
17 Sir Edward Woodward 1990–2001
18 Fay Marles 2001–2004
19 Ian Renard 2005–2009 [113]
20 Alex Chernov 2009–2011 [8]
21 Elizabeth Alexander 2011–2016 [114]
22 Allan Myers 2017–

Vice-Chancellors[]

Order Vice-Chancellor Years Notes
1 Hugh Childers 1853–1857 [115]
2 Anthony Brownless 1858–1887 [107]
3 Martin Irving 1887–1889 [116]
4 Sir John Madden 1889–1897 [77]
5 Sir Henry Wrixon 1897–1910 [45]
6 Sir John MacFarland 1910–1918 [108]
7 Sir John Grice 1918–1923 [117]
8 General Sir John Monash 1923–1931 [118]
9 James Barrett 1931–1934 [109]
10 Sir Raymond Priestley 1935–1938
11 Sir John Medley 1938–1951
12 Professor David Caro 1982–1987
13 David Penington 1988–1995 [119]
14 Alan Gilbert 1996–2004 [120]
15 Glyn Davis 2005–2018 [121]
16 Duncan Maskell 2018 - [122]

References[]

  1. ^ Shaw, A. G. L., Behan, Sir John Clifford Valentine (1881 - 1957), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 7, Melbourne University Press, 1979, pp 247–248. Retrieved 2008-10-10.
  2. ^ "Professor Simon Chesterman to be new Dean of NUS Law School" (Press release). National University of Singapore. 31 October 2011. Retrieved 14 March 2015.
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