List of alumni of Magdalen College, Oxford

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A list of alumni of Magdalen College (/ˈmɔːdlɪn/ MAWD-lin),[1] one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England. Notable former students include politicians, lawyers, bishops, poets, and academics. The list is largely male as women were first admitted to study at Magdalen in 1979.[2]

Politicians, civil servants and Parliamentarians[]

Dominic Grieve, former Attorney General for England and Wales
  • Geoffrey Adams, British Diplomatic Service
  • Montek Singh Ahluwalia, Indian economist and civil servant
  • Francis Ashley, lawyer and MP between 1614 and 1625
  • Sir Walter Bagot, 5th Baronet, 18th-century MP
  • Lord Baker, politician, former MP
  • Thomas Berkeley, MP
  • Sir John Biggs-Davison, former Conservative MP
  • Sir Trevor Bigham, barrister and Assistant Commissioner of the London Metropolitan Police, 1914–1931
  • Nicholas Boles, Conservative MP for Grantham and Stamford
  • Sir Ian Bowater, Lord Mayor of London (1967–1970)
  • Sir Ashley Bramall, Labour Party politician, MP for Bexley, 1946–1950
  • George Brandis, Australian diplomat and former Attorney-General (2013–2017)
  • Jock, Lord Bruce-Gardyne, Conservative politician
  • Sir Julian Bullard, diplomat, Foreign Office Minister and Pro-chancellor of Birmingham University
  • Alex Chalk, Conservative MP for Cheltenham and Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Justice
  • Tankerville Chamberlayne, landowner in Hampshire and a Member of Parliament for Southampton
  • Wesley Clark, American Army general and politician
  • Sir Cecil Clementi, British colonial administrator who served as Governor of Hong Kong, 1925–1930; Governor and Commander-in-Chief of the Straits Settlements, 1930–1934
  • Robert Douglas Coe, diplomat and U.S. Ambassador to Denmark, 1953–1957
  • Sir Douglas Dodds-Parker, member of the Special Operations Executive in the Second World War, and later a UK Conservative MP
  • Francis Patrick Donovan, Australian diplomat and jurist
  • Sir Erasmus Dryden, 1st Baronet, Member of Parliament for Banbury (1624)
  • Gareth Evans, Australian international policymaker, former politician and current Chancellor of the Australian National University
  • Jim Forbes, Australian politician
  • Malcolm Fraser, former Australian Liberal Party politician; 22nd Prime Minister of Australia
  • Sir Marrack Goulding, diplomat, Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations, Warden of St Antony's College (1997–2006)
  • Dominic Grieve, Conservative politician and former Attorney General
  • William Hague, Conservative politician and former Foreign Secretary
  • John Hemming, Liberal Democrat politician and businessman[3]
  • Chris Huhne, Liberal Democrat politician
  • Jeremy Hunt, Conservative politician and former Foreign Secretary
  • Lord Hutton, formerly John Hutton MP
  • Harford Montgomery Hyde, barrister, politician (Ulster Unionist MP for Belfast North), author and biographer
  • Christopher Jackson, politician, businessman, author (Conservative MEP for Kent East 1979–1994, Deputy Leader Conservative MEPs)
  • Michael Jay, Baron Jay of Ewelme, former diplomat and Chairman of the House of Lords Appointments Commission
  • Gladwyn Jebb, civil servant, diplomat and politician
  • Keith Joseph, barrister and politician
  • Francis Oswald Lindley, British diplomat
  • Stephen Milligan, Conservative politician and journalist
  • Randy Minchew, American politician and lawyer
  • Audri Mukhopadhyay, Canadian diplomat
  • George Osborne, Conservative MP for Tatton (2001–2017), former Chancellor of the Exchequer and newspaper editor
  • John Redwood, Conservative MP for Wokingham
  • Tim Renton, Baron Renton of Mount Harry, Conservative politician: Chief Whip, Minister of State and Arts Minister, 1984-1992
  • William Rodgers, Baron Rodgers of Quarry Bank, one of the "Gang of Four" of senior British Labour Party politicians who defected to form the Social Democratic Party (SDP)
  • Henry Sacheverell, clergyman and politician
  • Duncan Sandys, politician
  • Sir John Scarlett, Director General of the British Secret Intelligence Service (MI6), 2004–2009
  • Arthur Snell, former British High Commissioner to The Republic of Trinidad and Tobago
  • Siôn Simon, Labour politician and MP (2001–2010)
  • Zev Sufott, British-born Israeli diplomat, Ambassador to the Netherlands, first Israeli Ambassador to China[4]
  • John Turner, lawyer and former politician; 17th Prime Minister of Canada
King Edward VIII

Peers and royalty[]

A number of Magdalen alumni have been associated with royal families around the world, or the peerage:

  • King Edward VIII (attended when Prince of Wales; did not graduate)
  • Wriothesley Russell, 2nd Duke of Bedford
  • Wilfrid Ashley, 1st Baron Mount Temple, soldier and Conservative politician
  • King Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck of Bhutan
  • Robert Boothby, Baron Boothby, Conservative politician
  • Al-Muhtadee Billah, Crown Prince of Brunei Darussalam
  • Edward Knatchbull-Hugessen, 1st Baron Brabourne, Liberal politician in William Gladstone's government
  • Edward Bridges, 1st Baron Bridges, civil servant and Chancellor of Reading University (1959–1969)
  • George Cambridge, 2nd Marquess of Cambridge, great-great-grandson of King George III
  • Frederic Thesiger, 1st Viscount Chelmsford, Governor of Queensland (1905–1909), Governor of New South Wales (1909–1913); Viceroy of India (1916–1921)
  • John Hely-Hutchinson, 2nd Earl of Donoughmore, politician, peer and soldier
  • Arthur Hill, 2nd Marquess of Downshire, peer and MP
  • Thomas Fairfax, 5th Lord Fairfax of Cameron, 17th-century politician
  • Patrick Neill, Baron Neill of Bladen, member of the House of Lords, Warden of All Souls College (1977–1995), Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University (1985–1989)
  • Henry Pelham-Clinton-Hope, 9th Duke of Newcastle, peer and aviator
  • Prince Tomohito of Mikasa, cousin of Emperor Akihito
  • Yasuhito, Prince Chichibu, second son of Emperor Taishō
  • Prince Christian Victor of Schleswig-Holstein, member of the British royal family
  • Nicolas Browne-Wilkinson, Baron Browne-Wilkinson, former Senior Lord of Appeal in Ordinary in the United Kingdom; former Head of the Privy Council and Vice-Chancellor of the High Court
  • Lord Frederick Windsor, great-grandson of King George V

Justice[]

Russ Feingold

Clergy[]

  • William Tyndale
    Edward Barber, (Archdeacon of Chester) (1886–1914)
  • Hugh Boulter, Archbishop of Armagh in the Church of Ireland
  • John Colet, churchman and educational pioneer
  • Thomas Cooper, English bishop, lexicographer, theologian, and writer
  • John Davenport, puritan clergyman and co-founder of the American colony of New Haven
  • Alan Don, Chaplain & Secretary to the Archbishop of Canterbury (1931–1941), Chaplain to the Speaker of the House of Commons, 1936–1946; Dean of Westminster, 1946–1959
  • David Edwards, Dean of Norwich, Provost of Southwark and a prolific author
  • Accepted Frewen, priest and Archbishop of York, 1660–1664
  • Bede Griffiths, monk and theologian
  • Henry Hammond, 17th-century churchman
  • Robert Hawker, Anglican vicar and scholar
  • Charles Bousfield Huleatt, Anglican priest
  • Basil Jellicoe, missioner to Canning Town
  • Owen Oglethorpe, academic and Catholic Bishop, President of Magdalen College, Oxford (1536–1552 and 1553–1555), Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University (1551–1552)
  • Robert Parker, clergyman and scholar
  • Henry Phillpotts, Anglican Bishop of Exeter, 1830–1869
  • Reginald Pole, Cardinal in the Church of Rome
  • Jeremy Sheehy, Anglican priest and academic
  • William Tyndale, English reformer, linguistic genius, theologian
  • Timothy Ware, monk and Bishop of the Eastern Orthodox Church (alias Kallistos Ware)
  • Thomas Wolsey, Cardinal in the Church of Rome

Academics[]

Economists[]

  • Caroline Hoxby, American economist

Philosophers[]

A. C. Grayling in 2011
  • Ronald Dworkin, legal philosopher
  • James Frederick Ferrier, metaphysical writer
  • Edward Goldsmith, writer, environmentalist and philosopher
  • A. C. Grayling, philosopher
  • Peter Heylin, ecclesiastic and author of theological works
  • Benedikt Isserlin, former Reader and Head of the Department of Semitic Studies at the University of Leeds
  • Larry Siedentop, political philosopher

Historians and linguists[]

  • Donald Adamson, author and historian
  • Richard J. C. Atkinson, historian and archaeologist
  • Robert Blake, Baron Blake, historian and life peer
  • John Rouse Bloxam, historian and Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford
  • Thomas Sherrer Ross Boase, art historian, President of Magdalen College (1947–1968) and Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University (1958–1960)
  • Derek Brewer, author and scholar, Master of Emmanuel College, Cambridge (1977–1990)
  • Lionel Harry Butler, academic and Principal of Royal Holloway College, University of London (1973–1981)
  • William Camden, antiquarian and historian
  • Sir Neil Chalmers, former Director of the Natural History Museum London and Warden of Wadham College, Oxford
  • Richard Chandler, antiquary
  • William Cleaver, churchman and academic, Principal of Brasenose College, Oxford (1785–1809)
  • Prof Edward Byles Cowell, translator of Persian poetry and the first Professor of Sanskrit at Cambridge University
  • Norman Davies, historian
  • Arthur Geoffrey Dickens, academic and author, Pro-Vice-Chancellor of the University of Hull (1959–1962)
  • George Edmundson, clergyman and academic historian
  • James Fenton, poet, journalist and literary critic
  • Niall Ferguson, historian
  • Felipe Fernández-Armesto, historian and author
  • Theophilus Gale, educationalist, nonconformist and theologian of dissent
  • Bernard Gardiner, Warden of All Souls College, Oxford and Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University (1712–1715)
  • N. H. Gibbs, Chichele Professor of the History of War of Oxford University (1953–1977)
  • Edward Gibbon, historian and Member of Parliament
  • Martin Gilbert, historian
  • Richard Gombrich, scholar of Sanskrit, Pāli, and Buddhist Studies, currently Founder-President of the Oxford Centre for Buddhist Studies
  • Giles Henderson, Master of Pembroke College, Oxford
  • R. L. Holdsworth, educationalist, cricketer and Himalayan mountaineer
  • Albert Hourani, historian
  • Reginald Johnston, academic, diplomat and tutor to Puyi
  • Professor Anthony King, psephologist and political commentator
  • Robin Lane Fox, classicist and gardener
  • Francis Leighton, academic and Warden of All Souls College, Oxford (1858–1881)
  • David Marquand, academic and former Labour Party MP
  • David Thomas Powell, genealogist and antiquarian
  • Hormuzd Rassam, native Assyriologist, British diplomat and traveller
  • Adam Roberts, professor of international relations

Mathematicians and scientists[]

Nobel laureates are identified

Ben Goldacre in 2009
  • Paul Attfield, chemist and materials scientist
  • John D. Barrow, cosmologist, theoretical physicist, and mathematician
  • James Bateman, horticulturist
  • H. A. Berlin, neuroscientist
  • Humphry Bowen, chemist and botanist
  • Henry Clerke, academic and physician, President of Magdalen College, Oxford, 1672–1687
  • Frank Close, particle physicist, Professor of Physics at the University of Oxford
  • William Henry Corfield
  • Charles Daubeny, chemist, botanist and geologist
  • Sir Gavin de Beer, evolutionary embryologist, Director of the British Museum of Natural History and President of the Linnean Society of London
  • Robin Dunbar, anthropologist and evolutionary psychologist, currently Professor of Evolutionary Psychology at Oxford
  • John Eccles, Nobel laureate (1963, Medicine)
  • Sir John Bretland Farmer, botanist; Professor of Botany at Imperial College London
  • James Fisher, author, editor, broadcaster, naturalist
  • Howard Walter Florey, Nobel laureate (1945, Medicine)
  • Ben Goldacre, physician, academic and science writer
  • Jeffrey Alan Gray, psychologist
  • John M. Goldman, haematologist, oncologist and medical researcher; pioneer in bone-marrow transplantation for chronic myeloid leukaemia; founding Chairman of the charity Leuka[5]
  • Brian Greene, theoretical physicist and string theorist
  • Frank Robinson Hartley, chemist, Vice Chancellor Cranfield University
  • Geoffrey Herford, entomologist and civil servant
  • Francis Charles Robert Jourdain, amateur ornithologist and oologist
  • Anthony James Leggett, physicist Nobel Laureate (2003, physics)
  • Alfred Lodge, mathematician and President of the Mathematical Association
  • Amory Lovins, American physicist, environmental scientist and writer
  • Peter Medawar, Nobel laureate (1960, Medicine)
  • Desmond Morris, zoologist, ethologist and surrealist painter
  • Gareth A. Morris, chemist
  • Sheffield Airey Neave, naturalist and entomologist
  • Matt Ridley, scientist, journalist, popular author, member of the House of Lords
  • Sir Alexander Carr-Saunders, biologist and sociologist and later Director of the London School of Economics (1937–1957)
  • A. Michael Spence, Nobel laureate (2001, Economics)
  • Jon Stallworthy, Professor Emeritus of English at the University of Oxford
  • Thomas William Webb, astronomer

Sports people[]

Artists and writers[]

Ian Hislop in 2009
  • Donald Adamson, author and historian
  • Julian Barnes, writer
  • Neil Bartlett, author, theatre director
  • Sir John Betjeman, poet, writer and broadcaster
  • Christopher Derrick, author, reviewer, publisher's reader and lecturer
  • Lord Alfred Douglas, author, poet and translator
  • Fernanda Eberstadt, writer
  • Duncan Fallowell, novelist, travel writer, memoirist
  • John Florio, linguist and lexicographer
  • Alan Garner, novelist
  • John Gerrard, Legacy Fellow at Magdalen and artist
  • Alan Hollinghurst, novelist and poet
  • Pico Iyer, essayist and writer
  • Gavin Lambert, screenwriter, novelist and biographer
  • Andrew Lloyd Webber, Peer of the realm and music composer
  • John Lyly, writer, poet, dramatist, playwright and politician
  • Robert Macfarlane, travel writer
  • Compton Mackenzie, writer of fiction, biography, histories, and memoir
  • Andrew McNeillie, currently Literature Editor at Oxford University Press
  • Dave Morris, author of gamebooks, novels and comics
  • Douglas Murray, author, writer and commentator
  • Stephen Potts, author
  • Benjamin Schwarz, writer
  • Andrew Sullivan, author, editor, political commentator and blogger
  • Wilfred Thesiger, explorer and travel writer
  • Lucy Wadham, writer
  • Oscar Wilde, Irish writer and poet
  • George Wither, poet, pamphleteer and satirist

Journalists[]

  • Aravind Adiga, writer and journalist
  • Swaminathan S. Anklesaria Aiyar, journalist and columnist
  • Clive Crook, columnist for the Financial Times
  • Matthew D'Ancona, journalist
  • Geoffrey Dawson, editor of The Times (1912–1919 and 1923–1941)
  • Bill Emmott, editor of The Economist (1993–2006)
  • Ronan Farrow, investigative journalist
  • Sagarika Ghose, journalist, news anchor and author
  • Julia Hartley-Brewer, presenter of the weekday morning radio show on Talkradio
  • Bevis Hillier, art historian, author and journalist
  • Ian Hislop, editor Private Eye magazine and TV series Have I Got News for You team captain
  • Paul Johnson, journalist, historian, speechwriter and author
  • Robert Kee, broadcaster, journalist and writer
  • Nicholas D. Kristof, journalist, author, op-ed columnist
  • Donald McLachlan, Scottish journalist and author, founding editor of The Sunday Telegraph
  • John Micklethwait, editor-in-chief of The Economist
  • Peter Millar, journalist
  • John Sergeant, journalist and TV personality
  • Charles Spencer, 9th Earl Spencer, UK Peer, brother of Diana, Princess of Wales, journalist and broadcaster
  • , deputy editor of the Financial Times
  • George Will, columnist, journalist and author

Musicians[]

  • Paul Agnew, operatic tenor
  • John Mark Ainsley, lyric tenor
  • Robin Blaze, countertenor
  • Paul Brough, conductor and teacher
  • Harry Christophers, conductor
  • Vinicius de Moraes, poet, essayist, playwright and lyricist
  • Anna Lapwood, organist, conductor and broadcaster
  • David Lloyd-Jones, conductor
  • Dudley Moore, actor, comedian, composer and musician
  • Nicholas O'Neill, composer, arranger, organist and choral director
  • Paul Sartin, oboist, violinist and singer with Bellowhead, and others
  • James Whitbourn, composer and conductor

Broadcasters and entertainers[]

Louis Theroux in 2009
  • Peter Brook, film and stage director
  • Michael Denison, actor
  • Freddie Grisewood, radio broadcaster
  • Robert Hardy, actor
  • Brian Inglis, journalist, historian and television presenter
  • Terrence Malick, film director, screenwriter and producer
  • Katie Mitchell, theatre director
  • Wallace Shawn, actor
  • Louis Theroux, broadcaster
  • Simon Woods, actor

Business[]

Other people[]

Portrait of Vincent Cartwright Vickers, platinum print, circa 1910.

Fictional characters[]

  • P. G. Wodehouse attributes a Magdalen undergraduateship to his fictional literary character Bertie Wooster.
  • Tibby, in E. M. Forster's Howards End, is also a Magdalen undergraduate.
  • Bridey in Evelyn Waugh's Brideshead Revisited
  • Nicholas Glozier in J.H. Fox's A Kentish Dream
  • Bernard Woolley, the political adviser in Yes Minister and Yes Prime Minister.

References[]

  1. ^ "Magdalen (Name)". First Names Dictionary on AskOxford.com.
  2. ^ "College History | Magdalen College Oxford". www.magd.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 2018-05-04.
  3. ^ "John Hemming".
  4. ^ Twersky, Mordechai I. (2014-04-21). "Zev Sufott, Israel's first ambassador to China, dies aged 86". Haaretz. Retrieved 2014-05-16.
  5. ^ Leuka
  6. ^ Sweeting, Adam (22 May 2014). "Prince Rupert Loewenstein obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 May 2014.
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