- Source: List of alumni of Hertford College, Oxford
A list of alumni of Hertford College, Oxford, including alumni of its two predecessor institutions, Hart Hall and Magdalen Hall.
Hart Hall (1282–1740)
Joseph Bowles, Bodley's Librarian
Thomas Bray, clergyman and abolitionist
Saint Alexander Briant, Jesuit martyr
Henry Bromley, politician
Morgan Coleman, MP for Newport, Cornwall
John Donne, poet, Anglican priest
Payne Fisher, poet
Nicholas Fuller, Hebraist, philologist
John Glynne, jurist
Peter Heylyn, polemicist
John Hutchins, antiquary
Thomas Manton, Puritan clergyman and chaplain to Oliver Cromwell
John Norden, cartographer
Henry Pelham, British Whig Prime Minister
John Selden, jurist, MP for Oxford University
George Augustus Selwyn, politician
Thomas Shirley, politician, soldier, adventurer, and privateer
Jonathan Swift, satirist, poet, Anglican priest, author of Gulliver's Travels
Henry Swinburne, ecclesiastical lawyer
Hertford College, first foundation 1740–1816
Charles James Fox, Whig statesman
John Hippisley, politician, diplomat
Magdalen Hall, old site 1480–1822
Robert Ashley, writer
Daniel Burgess, Presbyterian minister
Matthew Bryan, Jacobite preacher
Walter Charleton, Epicurean philosopher
Samuel Daniel, poet, historian
Matthew Hale, Lord Chief Justice
Thomas Hobbes, political philosopher, author of Leviathan
John Huckell, poet
Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon, historian, statesman
John Gilbert, Archbishop of York
Narcissus Marsh, Primate of All Ireland
Richard Morton, physician
Philip Nye, clergyman and member of the Westminster Assembly of Divines
Robert Plot, naturalist, first Professor of Chemistry at the University of Oxford, and first Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum
John Rickman, statistician
Obadiah Sedgwick, clergyman and member of the Westminster Assembly of Divines
George Shaw, biologist
Fleetwood Sheppard, courtier
William Tyndale, Bible translator, Reformation martyr
Henry Vane the Younger, Parliamentarian statesman
Sir Ralph Verney, 1st Baronet, of Middle Claydon, politician
William Waller, Parliamentarian soldier
John Wilkins, naturalist, Warden of Wadham College, Oxford, and founder of the Royal Society
Benjamin Woodbridge, clergyman and controversialist
Magdalen Hall, new site 1822–1874
Montagu Burrows, first Chichele Professor of Modern History
William Robinson Clark, theologian
William Cowper, first Dean of Sydney
John Thadeus Delane, journalist
Clement Jackson, founder of the Amateur Athletic Association
Arthur Mayo VC, soldier
Francis McDougall, first Anglican bishop of Labuan and the Kingdom of Sarawak
Brownlow North, evangelist
Thorold Rogers, political economist
William Williams, first Anglican Bishop of Waiapu, New Zealand
Leonard Williams, third Bishop of Waiapu (son of William Williams)
Nathaniel Woodard, Priest in the Church of England, founder of the Woodard Corporation
Hertford College, second foundation 1874–
Richard Addinsell, composer of film music
Helen Alexander, businesswoman
C. A. J. Armstrong, historian
Sharon Ashbrook, chemist
Bernard Ashmole, archaeologist, art historian
Andrea Ashworth, author, academic
Christopher Ballinas Valdés, Mexican public policy expert and civil servant
Edmund Bartley-Denniss, politician and cyclist
Charles Bean, war correspondent and historian
John Behan, educationist, jurist
Marian Bell, economist
Catherine Bennett, journalist
David Blomfield, leader of the Liberal Party group on Richmond upon Thames Council, writer, book editor and local historian
Martin Bridson FRS, mathematician
Jasmine Brown, author
Isaac Hawkins Browne, industrialist
Fiona Bruce, BBC newsreader
Rupert Bruce-Mitford, archaeologist and scholar
Anthony Bushell, actor
Carole Cadwalladr, journalist
Walter Carey, clergyman
Victor Cha, national security specialist
Jean Chapdelaine, diplomat
Calvin Cheng, Singapore modelling agency head, former Nominated Member of Parliament
William Robinson Clark, theologian
Nick Cohen, political journalist
Geoffrey Corbett, civil servant and mountaineer
W. Maxwell Cowan, neuroscientist
Sherard Cowper-Coles, diplomat
George Dangerfield, journalist, historian
Daniel Dennett, philosopher of the mind
David Dilks, historian
Jack Herbert Driberg, anthropologist
Bill Duff, Arabist
Jack Duppa-Miller, sailor
Alfred Earle, bishop
J. Meade Falkner, novelist, The Lost Stradivarius
Richard W. Fisher, diplomat
Warren Fisher, civil servant
Adam Fleming, BBC newsreader
Thomas Fletcher, diplomat
Nicholas Foulkes, historian, journalist
Henry Sanderson Furniss, 1st Baron Sanderson, socialist educationalist
Helen Ghosh, Master of Balliol College, Oxford, former Director-General of the National Trust.
Pinny Grylls, documentary film maker
Krishnan Guru-Murthy, Channel 4 newsreader
Gideon Henderson, geochemist, climate-change scientist
Nicholas Henderson, diplomat
Jeremy Heywood, civil servant
Leonard Hodgson, church historian
Jeffrey John, Dean of St Alban's Cathedral
James John Joicey, amateur entomologist
Mark S. Joshi, financial mathematician
Natasha Kaplinsky, ITN newsreader
Khalid Jawed Khan, Attorney General of Pakistan
Soweto Kinch, jazz saxophonist, rapper
Mark A. Lemmon FRS, Chair of Pharmacology at Yale University School of Medicine
Seth Lerer, literary critic
Alain LeRoy Locke, writer of the Harlem Renaissance
Jurek Martin, journalist
Ronald Martland, former justice of the Supreme Court of Canada
Gavin Maxwell, naturalist, author of Ring of Bright Water
Arthur Mayo, recipient of the Victoria Cross
Roland Michener, former Governor General of Canada
Dom Mintoff, former Prime Minister of Malta
Ian Morison FRAS, 35th Gresham Professor of Astronomy
David Naylor, medical researcher
Edward Max Nicholson, founder of the World Wildlife Fund
Richard Norton-Taylor, journalist, playwright
Elizabeth Norton, historian and author
Richard Parsons, founder of CGP Guides
Peter Pears, tenor
Barbara A. Perry, constitutional lawyer
James Pettifer, scholar of the Balkans
Bridget Phillipson, MP for Houghton and Sunderland South
Tracey Poirier, Rhodes Scholar, first female Vermont Army National Guard general officer
Maisie Richardson-Sellers, actor
Nigel Saul, historian
Joseph Gordon Saunders, composer
Jacqui Smith, former British Home Secretary
David Spedding, former Head of MI6
Manisha Tank, CNN newsreader
Thum Ping Tjin, the first Singaporean to swim the English Channel
Ed Vulliamy, journalist and world reporter
Evelyn Waugh, author of Brideshead Revisited, journalist
Roger Westbrook, diplomat
Byron White, U.S. Associate Supreme Court Justice
Athol Williams, South African poet and social philosopher
Tobias Wolff, author of This Boy's Life
Nathaniel Woodard, educationalist
Alison Young, legal scholar, Sir David Williams Professor of Public Law at the University of Cambridge
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Universitas Oxford
- List of alumni of Hertford College, Oxford
- List of honorary fellows of Hertford College, Oxford
- List of alumni of Magdalen College, Oxford
- List of alumni of Keble College, Oxford
- List of University of Oxford people
- List of people associated with Balliol College, Oxford
- List of alumni of University College, Oxford
- Magdalen College, Oxford
- List of University of Oxford alumni by academic discipline
- List of alumni of King's College London