List of alumni of Queen Mary University of London
A list of alumni of Queen Mary University of London, former students of Queen Mary University of London.
Notable alumni of Queen Mary
Academics
- Samson Abramsky – British computer scientist.[1]
- Igor Aleksander – British artificial intelligence researcher.[2]
- Edgar Adrian – British neuroscientist and physiologist, recipient of the 1932 Nobel Prize for Physiology, and Barts alumnus.[3]
- Timothy Ball – Canadian geographer and historical climatologist.
- Frederick Blackman – British botanist and plant physiologist.
- Malcolm Bowie – British academic and literary critic.
- Keith Clark – British computer scientist; Professor of Computer Science at Imperial College London.
- John Frederick Dewey – British geologist
- David Drewry – British glaciologist and geophysicist. (Geography, 1969)
- Ian Lewis – British computer scientist.
- Alasdair MacIntyre – British philosopher.
- Francis Rose – British botanist, conservationist, nature writer
- Brendan Scaife – Irish engineer and physicist.
- David Southwood – British space scientist
- G. Spencer-Brown – British mathematician.
Biologists
- Bill Ballantine (biologist) – British-born New Zealand marine biologist.
- Felix Eugen Fritsch – British biologist.
- William Elford Leach – British zoologist and marine biologist.
- Sir Richard Owen – British biologist, comparative anatomist and paleontologist.
Historians
- Thomas Asbridge – British medievalist and historian.
- David N Farr – British historian and schoolmaster.
- Eric Ives – British historian and an expert on the Tudor period.
- Marjorie Reeves – British historian.
- Sir Roy Strong – British historian.[4]
Chemists
- Sir Jack Drummond – biochemist and nutritionist.
- Sir Edward Frankland – British chemist.
- C. Robin Ganellin – British chemist. (Chemistry, 1958)
- Sir John Meurig Thomas – British physical chemist.
- Sir Robert Watson – British chemist. (PhD in atmospheric chemistry in 1973)
Physicians, surgeons, medical researchers
- John Abernethy – British surgeon.
- Joseph Adams (physician) – British surgeon and pathologist.
- George Augustus Auden – British Professor of public health.
- John Badley – British surgeon.
- Edward Bancroft – British physician and double agent in the American Revolution.
- Gopal Baratham – Singaporean author and neurosurgeon.
- Sir Gilbert Barling – British surgeon; Vice Chancellor of the University of Birmingham.
- Hannah Billig – British medical doctor.
- Sir William Blizard – British surgeon, co-founded England's first clinical medical school, The London Hospital Medical College.
- George Busk – British surgeon, zoologist and palaeontologist.
- William Job Collins – British surgeon and politician.
- John Desmond Cronin – British surgeon and politician.
- Thomas Blizard Curling – British surgeon.
- Sir Henry Hallett Dale – British pharmacologist and physiologist, shared the 1936 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.[5]
- Sir Archibald Garrod – British physician, first to appreciate the importance of biochemistry in medicine.
- William Harvey – British physician who made seminal contributions in anatomy and physiology, first person to describe circulation.
- Allan Victor Hoffbrand – British medical doctor and academic.
- Sir James Paget – British surgeon and founder of scientific medical pathology.
- Stephen Paget – British surgeon, the son of the distinguished surgeon and pathologist Sir James Paget, proposed the "seed and soil" theory of metastasis.
- Percivall Pott – British surgeon, one of the founders of orthopedics, and the first scientist to demonstrate that a cancer may be caused by an environmental carcinogen.
- Sir Ronald Ross – British medical doctor, received the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1902 for his work on the transmission of malaria.[6]
- Sir Frederick Treves, 1st Baronet – British surgeon.
- Daniel Hack Tuke – British expert on mental illness.
- William Turner (University Principal) – British anatomist and former principal of Edinburgh University.
- Karen Vousden – British medical researcher
- Hugh Watkins – British cardiologist.[7]
- William James Erasmus Wilson – British surgeon.
Physicists
- Alexander Bradshaw – British physicist.
- Sir Philip Campbell – British physicist. (MSc Astrophysics, 1974)
- Michael Duff – British physicist. (Physics, 1969)
- Geraint F. Lewis – British astrophysicist, professor of Astrophysics at the University of Sydney.
- Sir Peter Mansfield – British Nobel Prize–winning physicist.[8]
- Charles Taylor – British physicist, lecturer and author.
- Sir Tejinder Virdee – British physicist.
- Rosemary Wyse – British astrophysicist.
Athletes
- Richard Budgett – British gold medal-winning Olympic rower.
- Martin Cross – British gold medal-winning Olympic rower.
- W. G. Grace – British cricketer and Barts alumnus.
- Mike Hennessy – British olympic rower.
- Jimmy Hill – British footballer, football manager, TV presenter.
- Martyna Snopek – Polish paralympic rower.
- Arthur Wint – Jamaican athlete, won Jamaica's first gold medal at the 1948 London Olympics in the 400 metres, and a silver medal in the 800 metres.[4]
Business figures
- Sir Richard Broadbent – British businessman.
- Sir Frank Chapman – British CEO of BG Group.
- Piers Corbyn – British scientist, businessman.
- Christopher Rawson Penfold – British businessman, founder of Penfolds, an Australian wine producer.
- David Sullivan – British businessman, newspaper publisher, and football chairmen and investor.
Civil servants
- Halima Begum – British civil servant.
- David Blanchflower – British-American economist.
- Dame Colette Bowe – British civil servant.
- Simon Case – British civil servant.
- Linda Chalker – British politician, served as Minister of State for Overseas Development at the Foreign Office, in the Conservative government from 1989 to 1997.
- Sir Curtis Keeble – British ambassador to the USSR.
- Sir Michael Lyons – British chairman of the BBC Trust.
- Davidson Nicol – Sierra Leonean academic and diplomat, Permanent Representative of Sierra Leone to the United Nations, High Commissioner to the United Kingdom and Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations.
- Louise Stanton – British diplomat, served as British High Commissioner to Malta from 2009 to 2012.
- Dame Veronica Sutherland – British ambassador, sixth President of Lucy Cavendish College, Cambridge, and former ambassador to the Republic of Ireland.
- Martin Uden – British ambassador to South Korea.
Engineers
- Kurt Berger – Finnish aviation engineer.
- William Glanville – civil engineer.
- George Hockham – British engineer, together with Nobel Prize winner Charles Kao, is widely recognised a pioneer in the field of optical fibres. (PhD Electronic Engineering, 1969)
Lawyers
- Dame Laura Cox – British lawyer, English High Court judge.
- Sir William Davis – British lawyer, English High Court judge.
- Roy Goode – British lawyer and author.
- Basil Markesinis – British lawyer.
- Jeremy Phillips – British lawyer.
- Sir Christopher Pitchford – British lawyer, Lord Justice of Appeal.
- Roger Tan Kor Mee – Malaysian lawyer.
- Anand Ramlogan – Trinidad and Tobago lawyer, Attorney-General of Trinidad and Tobago.
- K. Sripavan – Sri Lankan lawyer, judge, the 44th and current Chief Justice of Sri Lanka.
Media personalities
- Graham Chapman – British actor, member of comedy group Monty Python, and Barts alumnus.[4]
- Mubashir Malik - British author, actor and banker
- Fleur East – British singer and The X Factor contestant.
- Katia Elizarova – Russian model and actress.
- Romola Garai – British actress.
- Julie Gardner – British television producer responsible for Doctor Who.
- Sean Gilder – British actor.
- Sarah Harrison, British journalist.
- Ching He Huang – British television chef.
- Jane Hill – British newsreader, BBC News.
- Bill O'Reilly – American television host, author, historian, syndicated columnist and political commentator.
- Claire Price – British actress.
- Roger Tilling – British broadcaster and voice of University Challenge.
- Valanto Trifonos – Greek–Cypriot singer; winner of Greek Idol season 1.
- Prannoy Roy – Indian journalist.
- Kate Williams – British broadcaster and historian.
- Peter Wingfield – British actor.
Medical missionaries
- Alfred James Broomhall – British medical missionary.
- Albert Ruskin Cook – British medical missionary.
- Sir Wilfred Grenfell – British medical missionary.
- John Preston Maxwell – British medical missionary.
- Robert Morrison – British medical missionary.
- Frederick Howard Taylor – British medical missionary.
- Herbert Hudson Taylor – British medical missionary.
- Hudson Taylor – British medical missionary.
Musicians
- Bernard Butler – British musician, former guitarist of Suede.
- Bruce Dickinson – British singer of Iron Maiden.[4]
- Pete Doherty – British musician, writer, actor, poet and artist.
- Jay Sean – British singer.
- Shakka – British singer.
- Roger Taylor – British drummer of the band Queen.
Politicians
- Christopher Addison, 1st Viscount Addison – British politician.
- Sir Peter Caruana – Gibraltarian politician, Chief Minister of Gibraltar.
- David Currie, Baron Currie of Marylebone – British politician, member of the House of Lords .
- Marcia Matilda Falkender, Baroness Falkender – British politician, member of the House of Lords.[4]
- Donald McIntosh Johnson – British author and politician.
- Peter Hain – British politician, Labour MP, former Secretary of State for Work and Pensions and Secretary of State for Wales.[4]
- Stephen Hammond – British politician, Conservative Party and former UK Government Minister.
- Anthony Hamilton-Smith, 3rd Baron Colwyn – British politician.
- Charles Hill, Baron Hill of Luton – British politician and former chairman of the BBC.
- Guðni Th. Jóhannesson – Icelandic politician, historian and lecturer; President of Iceland (2016-)
- Tom Pursglove – British politician, Conservative MP.
- Janet Royall, Baroness Royall of Blaisdon – British politician, Leader of the House of Lords from October 2008 to May 2010.
- Caroline Spelman – British politician, Conservative MP and former Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs.[4]
- John Whittaker – British politician, UKIP MEP.
Writers
- Kia Abdullah – British writer.
- J. G. Ballard – British writer of Empire of the Sun and Crash.[4]
- Alia Bano – British playwright.
- Stephen Barber (writer) – British writer.
- Sir Malcolm Bradbury – British writer.
- Robert Bridges – British poet and holder of the honour of poet laureate from 1913.
- Richard Gordon – British screenwriter and writer.
- Lee Harwood – British poet.
- Ruth Prawer Jhabvala – British writer and Academy Award-winning screenwriter.
- Derek Marlowe - British playwright and screenwriter (did not graduate)
- Eleanor Updale – British award-winning author.
- Sarah Waters – British author of Tipping The Velvet.
Other notable alumni
- Ashley Banjo – British choreographer.
- Thomas Barnardo – Irish philanthropist.[4]
- Frederick Batten – British neurologist and pediatrician.
- George Bodington – Pulmonary specialist.
- Henry Edmund Gaskin Boyle – Anaesthetist.
- William Carr – Former director of the Royal Australian Navy's Naval Medical Services.
- Tim Crow – Psychiatrist.
- John Langdon Down – first to describe Down syndrome, a genetic disorder named after him.
- Pamela Evans – GP and author.
- John Freke – First ophthalmic surgeon.
- Major Greenwood – Epidemiologist and statistician.
- Gordon Hamilton-Fairley – Oncologist.
- James Hinton (surgeon) – Surgeon and author.
- Ebbe Hoff – Founding director of the Virginia Division of Substance Abuse.
- Jonathan Hutchinson – Ophthalmologist.
- John Hughlings Jackson – Neurologist.
- John Hunter (surgeon) – Surgeon and anatomist. The Hunterian Society is named in his honour.
- William Lawrence – Surgeon, a founder of British ophthalmology.
- John Leech – Caricaturist.
- William John Little – British surgeon, pioneer of orthopaedic surgery.
- Martyn Lloyd-Jones – Evangelical Christian religious leader.
- Morell Mackenzie – British pioneer of laryngology.
- Florence Mahoney – Gambian academic, first woman to obtain a PhD from Gambia.
- Peter William Mathieson – British president of the University of Hong Kong.
- William Marsden (surgeon) – British surgeon, founder of The Royal Free and Marsden Hospitals.
- Simon C. Page – British graphic designer.
- James Parkinson – British political activist and first to describe Parkinson's Disease.[4]
- Jonathan Pereira – British pharmacologist.
- Elizabeth Press – British immunologist.
- W. H. R. Rivers – British psychiatrist, psychiatric anthropologist.
- William Scovell Savory – British surgeon.
- Princess Laurentien of the Netherlands – Dutch royalty.
References
- ↑ Samson Abramsky at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ↑ Igor Aleksander at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ↑ "Edgar Adrian". Nobelprize.org.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 "Queen Mary, University of London - Complete University Guide". Complete University Guide. 2016.
- ↑ Waddington, Keir (2003). Medical education at St. Bartholomew's hospital, 1123-1995. Boydell & Brewer. p. 123. Retrieved 20 March 2016.
- ↑ "Ronald Ross – Facts". Nobel Media AB. Retrieved 31 January 2014.
- ↑ 'WATKINS, Prof. Hugh Christian', in Who's Who 2012 (London: A. & C. Black, 2012)
- ↑ "Peter Mansfield: Autobiography". Nobel Foundation. 2003. Retrieved 19 December 2010.
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