List of alumni of Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge

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A list of alumni of Fitzwilliam College, Cambridge, one of the constituent colleges of the University of Cambridge in England. Its alumni include politicians, members of the judiciary, academics, industrialists, artists, athletes and journalists. This list also includes non-collegiate students affiliated to Cambridge University, known as students of Fitzwilliam House, prior to the granting of collegiate status in 1966.

The college has educated six winners of the Nobel Prize: Angus Deaton (2015, in Economics), Joseph Stiglitz (2001, in Economics), César Milstein (1981, in Medicine), Ernst Boris Chain (1945, in Medicine), Albert Szent-Györgyi (1937, in Medicine), Charles Sherrington (1932, in Medicine).[1]

Heads of state or government, or royal consorts[]

Subhas Chandra Bose
  • Queen Sofía of Spain — Queen of Spain and wife of Juan Carlos I
  • Shankar Dayal Sharma — ninth President of India
  • Lee Kuan Yew — first prime minister of Singapore
  • Subhas Chandra Bose — Indian nationalist and Head of the State and Prime Minister of the Provisional Government of Free India (1943-5)

Politicians and civil servants[]

Cressida Dick

Lawyers and judges[]

Academics[]

Science[]

Charles Sherrington
  • Shankar Balasubramanian — chemist and Herchel Smith Professor of Medicinal Chemistry
  • David Cardwell — engineer and head of the Department of Engineering, University of Cambridge
  • Min Chueh Chang — reproductive biologist, co-developer of the birth control pill
  • Ernst Chain — biochemist and Nobel Prize winner
  • Henry Geepalaeontologist and evolutionary biologist
  • David Lagourie Gosling — nuclear physicist
  • Vasant Gowarikar — physicist and scientific adviser to the Prime Minister of India (1991-3)
  • Albert Szent-Györgyi — biochemist and Nobel Prize winner
  • C. E. M. Hansel — psychologist
  • Andy Harter — computer scientist
  • Christopher John Lamb — plant biologist
  • Harry Leitch — biologist
  • Anthony Michell — engineer
  • César Milstein — biochemist and Nobel Prize winner
  • Jayant Narlikar - astrophysicist
  • Mark Pallen — microbiologist
  • Adam Scaife — physicist
  • Charles Scott Sherringtonneurologist and Nobel Prize winner
  • M. S. Swaminathan - geneticist, winner the first World Food Prize
  • James Ward — Psychologist and philosopher, President of the Aristotelian Society (1919–20)

Mathematics[]

  • Richard Rado — mathematician
  • Arran Fernandez — mathematician and Senior Wrangler

Social Sciences[]

  • Nicholas Bloom — economist
  • Angus Deaton — economist and Nobel Prize winner (2015)
  • Geoff Dench — sociologist
  • Carlene Firmin — sociologist
  • Hal Lister — geographer
  • John Moore — economist
  • Norman Pounds — geographer and historian
  • Sigbert Prais — economist
  • Rogelio Ramírez de la O — econonomist
  • Gordon Redding — economist
  • T. Somasekaram — geographer
  • Joseph Stiglitz — economist and Nobel Prize winner

Humanities[]

  • Paul Mellars — archaeologist
  • Bernard Orchard — biblical scholar
  • John Pickstone — historian of science
  • Derek Pringle — literary critic
  • M Harunur Rashid — literary critic and scholar of Sufism
  • Sir J. Eric S. Thompson - translator of Mayan hieroglyphs
  • Charles Feinstein — historian
  • John Hedley Brooke — historian of science
  • Catherine Barnard — legal scholar
  • David W. Bebbington — historian
  • Maurice Bloch — anthropologist
Joseph Stiglitz
  • Louis Blom-Cooper lawyer and legal scholar
  • John Ingamells — art historian and former director of the Wallace Collection
  • Rhodri Jeffreys-Jones - historian
  • Sebastian Kim — theologian
  • Casimir Lewy — philosopher
  • John M. Hull — theologist
  • E. J. Lowe — philosopher
  • I. Howard MarshallNew Testament scholar
  • Moez Masoud — scholar of Islam

Clergy[]

Michael Nazir-Ali

Business[]

Ken Olisa

Artists, writers and musicians[]

  • David Atherton — conductor
  • Catherine Banner — novelist
  • Pat Chapman — food writer
  • James Charlton — poet
  • Walford Davies — composer
  • Christopher de Bellaigue — journalist in the Middle East
  • Nick Drake — singer
  • Simon H. Fell — bassist and composer
  • Giles Foden — author of The Last King of Scotland
  • Maurizio Giuliano — traveller and author
  • Catherine Grosvenor — playwright
  • Lee Hall — playwright
  • Charlotte Hudson — actress
  • Shiv K. Kumar — poet and novelist
  • Bem Le Hunte — novelist
  • Joseph McManners — singer
  • John Noble — baritone
  • James Norton — actor
  • Lawrence Osborne — novelist
  • Martin Outram — violist
  • Francis Scarfe — poet

Media[]

Peter Bazalgette
  • Peter Bazalgette — television executive
  • Humphrey Burton — music broadcaster
  • Nick Clarke — radio host
  • Tony Cornellparapsychologist and TV personality
  • Trevor Dann — writer and broadcaster
  • Brian Dooley — TV writer
  • Larry Elliott — journalist and economics editor at The Guardian
  • Robin Ellis — actor
  • Paul Henley — TV and radio journalist
  • Ciaran Jenkins — reporter with Channel 4
  • Ashley John-Baptiste — BBC broadcaster and presenter
  • Nick Kochan — financial journalist
  • Christopher Martin-Jenkins — cricket journalist
  • Ahmed Rashid — journalist and author
  • Beth Rigby - current political editor of Sky News
  • Dan Roan — Sports Editor for BBC News
  • David Starkey - historian and TV presenter
  • Tim Sullivan - Film and television director
  • Ted Young - Editor of Metro

Athletes[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Nobel Laureates". fitz.cam.ac.uk. 21 June 2019.
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