list of trinity college dublin people

      List of Trinity College Dublin people GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21

      This is a list of notable alumni and faculty members of Trinity College Dublin.


      Armed forces


      Tom Clonan, retired Irish Army officer, author and security analyst
      Eyre Coote (1762–1823), Irish British Army soldier and politician; Governor-General of Jamaica (1806–1808)
      Henry George Gore-Browne (1830–1912), Irish British Army colonial of the 100th Regiment of Foot; awarded the Victoria Cross (circa 1857, while a captain of the 32nd Regiment of Foot)
      James Murray Irwin (1858–1938), Irish British Army major-general doctor
      Col. Ernest Achey Loftus, CBE, soldier, teacher and diarist
      Michael Lynch, MMG (1942–2008), Irish Army officer and recipient of the Military Medal for Gallantry
      Robert Nairac (1948–1977), English British Army captain; abducted and killed by the Provisional Irish Republican Army in 1977; posthumously awarded the George Cross (1979)
      Robert Ross (1766–1814), Anglo-Irish British Army officer; participated in the Napoleonic Wars (various ranks); commander of the British force which sacked Washington, D.C., and burned down the White House, during the War of 1812 (as major-general)
      Sir Hovenden Walker (1656/1666–1725/1728), Royal Navy officer


      Arts


      Lenny Abrahamson, Oscar-nominated film director
      Thomas Bateson, 17th-century writer of madrigals
      Aisling Bea, actress and comedian
      Cathy Belton, actress
      John Butler Yeats, artist
      David Benioff, filmmaker and co-creator of Game of Thrones
      Michael Bogdanov, theatre director
      Sammy Copley, singer and musician
      Derbhle Crotty, actress
      Brian Boydell, composer
      Selina Cartmell, theatre director, and director of the Gate Theatre
      Lou Caubet, Queen of the Swag
      Michael Colgan, director of the Gate Theatre, film and television producer
      Houston Collisson, musician
      Anne Crookshank, emeritus professor of the history of art and founder of the faculty
      Chris de Burgh, singer and musician
      Thomas Manly Deane, architect
      Pádraic Delaney, actor
      Donnacha Dennehy, composer
      Ciarán Farrell, composer
      Margaret Fiedler, musician and singer
      Susan Fitzgerald, actress
      Percy French, songwriter and entertainer
      Jack Gleeson, actor
      Constantine Gregory, actor
      Lisa Hannigan, singer
      Aaron Heffernan, actor
      Rachael Hegarty, poet
      Ciaran Hope, composer of orchestral, choral, and film music
      Andrew Hozier-Byrne, singer-songwriter (did not finish course)
      Fergus Johnston, composer
      Dillie Keane, singer-songwriter and actress
      Lisa Lambe, actress and singer
      Nathaniel Lande, author, filmmaker and former creative director of Time
      Jacknife Lee, record producer
      Allen Leech, actor
      Damien Leith, singer
      Eleanor McEvoy, singer-songwriter
      Katie McGrath, actress
      Sean Pol McGreevy, actor/musician
      Paul McGuinness, manager of U2
      Pauline McLynn, actress, comedian and novelist
      Katie McMahon, singer and musician
      Ruth Negga, actress
      Jonathon Ng, musician
      Méav Ní Mhaolchatha, singer
      Sylvia O'Brien, opera singer
      David O'Doherty, comedian
      Rebecca O'Mara, actress
      Matthew Pilkington, satirist and art historian
      Laura Pyper, actress
      Norman Rodway, actor
      James Edward Rogers, architect and artist
      Andrew Scott, actor
      Chris Singleton, singer-songwriter and producer
      Max Stafford-Clark, theatre director
      Rhys Thomas, film and television director
      Stanley Townsend, actor
      Tom Vaughan-Lawlor, actor
      D. B. Weiss, novelist and co-creator of Game of Thrones
      Garret Wesley, 1st Earl of Mornington, composer, father of the Duke of Wellington
      Dominic West, British actor
      Ian Whitcomb, singer and entertainer
      James White, historical novelist
      Paul Mescal, actor


      Broadcasting and journalism


      Bruce Arnold, journalist and author
      Sharon Ní Bheoláin, news presenter
      James David Bourchier, Balkans correspondent for The Times and advisor to Tzar Ferdinand of Bulgaria
      John Bowman, journalist and broadcaster
      Rory Carroll, US West Coast correspondent, The Guardian
      Tony Connelly, Europe Editor, RTÉ
      Crosaire (J. D. Crozier), B.A. Dubl 1940, compiled the cryptic crossword for The Irish Times for fifty-nine years
      Ray D'Arcy, television and radio presenter
      Joe Duffy, radio presenter
      Maia Dunphy, broadcaster
      Ken Early, soccer journalist
      Robert Fisk, journalist
      Douglas Gageby, editor of the Irish Times
      Veronica Guerin, crime reporter
      Charles Graham Halpine, journalist
      Vincent Hanna, Northern Irish television journalist
      Brian Inglis, journalist, historian and television presenter
      Mary Jordan, Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist
      Aine Lawlor, radio and television presenter
      Quentin Letts, British columnist and theatre critic
      Martyn Lewis, British newsreader and journalist
      Mark Little, journalist
      Alex Massie, freelance journalist
      David McWilliams, writer and broadcaster on economic and social issues
      Denis Murray OBE former BBC Ireland Correspondent.
      Edmund O'Donovan, war correspondent
      Rupert Pennant-Rea, former editor of The Economist
      Gerry Ryan, radio presenter
      Cliff Taylor, editor, Sunday Business Post
      Nick Webb, Business Editor, Sunday Independent


      Business


      Conrad Burke, physicist and entrepreneur
      Paul Coulson
      Olivia Grosvenor, Duchess of Westminster, senior account manager
      Lord Haskins of Skidby, chairman of Northern Foods
      Alan Joyce, chief executive of Qantas
      Laura Magahy, company director and former director of Sláintecare
      Dermot Mannion, former chief executive of Aer Lingus
      Michael O'Leary, chief executive of Ryanair
      Willie Walsh, chief executive of British Airways


      Economics


      Sean Barrett, economist and member of Seanad Éireann
      Peter Bellew, chief executive of Malaysia Airlines
      Phelim Boyle (born 1941), academic and economist; pioneer of the use of Monte Carlo methods in derivatives pricing
      George Alexander Duncan (1902–2006), professor of political economy
      Francis Ysidro Edgeworth (1845–1926), philosopher and political economist
      Morgan Kelly, professor of economics, University College Dublin
      Philip R. Lane (born 1969), academic and economist
      Kevin O'Rourke, Professor of Economic History, Oxford


      Education


      Robert Blackburn, International Secretary of the United World Colleges; Deputy Director General of the International Baccalaureate
      Increase Mather, seventh president of Harvard University
      McFadden Alexander Newell, first principal of Maryland State Normal School (Towson University)
      Ferdinand von Prondzynski, president of Dublin City University
      Louise Richardson, former executive dean of Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study; political scientist at Harvard University; Principal of the University of St Andrews; first female Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford as of 1 Jan 2016


      Science, mathematics, engineering and medicine


      Beulah Bewley, public health physician
      Denis Parsons Burkitt, surgeon and researcher into childhood cancer (cf. Burkitt's lymphoma)
      William C. Campbell, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2015
      Georgia Chenevix-Trench, cancer researcher
      Aeneas Coffey, engineer, inventor of the Coffey still
      Steven Collins, co-founder of Havok
      Dimitri Leonidas Contostavlos, physician, forensic pathologist
      Andrew Hope Davidson, physician and Master of the Rotunda Hospital
      George Francis FitzGerald, professor of physics
      Gordon Foster (1920–2010), fellow emeritus at the college; Professor of Statistics and Dean of the Faculty of Engineering and statistics; author of the International Standard Book Number (ISBN) system (a global standard), and the book Information Technology in Developing Countries
      Aoife Gowen, researcher and professor
      Oliver St John Gogarty, physician and ear surgeon
      Alexander Henry Haliday, entomologist
      Hugh Hamilton, professor of natural philosophy
      William Rowan Hamilton, mathematician
      William Henry Harvey, botanist
      William Charles Hood, physician
      Caroline Hussey, microbiologist
      Werner Israel, physicist
      John Joly, physicist and geologist
      Sir John MacNeill, civil engineer
      Robert Mallet, engineer and scientist
      Una Martin, Clinical Pharmacologist
      Richard Maunsell, Chief Mechanical Engineer, South Eastern and Chatham Railway, and Southern Railway
      Henry Benedict Medlicott, geologist
      William Molyneux, natural philosopher
      Suzanne O'Sullivan, neurologist, prizewinning writer
      Charles Algernon Parsons, engineer, inventor of the modern steam turbine
      Thomas Preston, scientist
      Ouida Ramón-Moliner, anaesthetist
      Michael Roberts, mathematician
      William Johnson Sollas, geologist and anthropologist
      William Stokes, physician and professor
      George Johnstone Stoney, physicist who proposed the term 'electron' for the fundamental unit of electricity
      Jane Stout, ecologist and entomologist
      John Lighton Synge, mathematician and scientist
      Charles Hawkes Todd, physician, professor, and president of the Royal College of Surgeons
      Robert Bentley Todd, physician, Kings College professor, and identified with Todd's palsy
      Edward Hutchinson Synge, Irish physicist and nanoscience pioneer
      Ernest Walton, Nobel Prize winner
      Benjamin Worsley, 17th-century physician, surveyor and alchemist
      Peter Wyse Jackson, botanist
      Valerie O'Leary, scientist and researcher


      Humanities


      James Auchmuty, historian, wartime MI6 propagandist and inaugural vice-chancellor of the University of Newcastle, Australia
      Jonathan Bardon, historian
      George Berkeley, philosopher (cf. subjective idealism)
      Turtle Bunbury, historian and author
      J. B. Bury, Irish historian and classicist
      Anna Chahoud, Latin philologist
      Edward Courtney, scholar of Latin literature
      John Cruickshank, scholar of French literature, language, and culture
      Edward Dowden, Shakespearean scholar
      Sorcha Ní Fhlainn, academic specializing in vampire fiction, horror film, and gothic studies
      Roy Foster, Carroll Professor of Irish History, Hertford College, Oxford
      Ian Graham (BSc 1951), Mayanist archaeologist
      Edward Hincks, Orientalist
      Linda Hogan, fellow and Professor of Ecumenics
      Declan Kiberd, Professor of Anglo-Irish Literature, University College Dublin
      R. J. B. Knight, naval historian
      Richard Layte, Professor of Sociology
      William Edward Hartpole Lecky, historian
      John V. Luce, classicist
      F. S. L. Lyons, historian and Provost of Trinity College Dublin
      John Pentland Mahaffy, classicist
      R. B. McDowell, historian
      Robert McKim, philosopher of religion
      Christine E. Morris, Andrew A. David Professor in Greek Archaeology and History
      Jane Ohlmeyer, historian
      Franc Sadleir, Regius Professor Greek and later Provost of Trinity College Dublin; advocate for Catholic emancipation
      Brendan Simms, historian and fellow of Peterhouse, Cambridge
      William Bedell Stanford, senator and Regius Professor of Greek at Trinity College Dublin
      Alastair Sweeny, Canadian historian, publisher
      Rory Sweetman, New Zealand historian
      James Henthorn Todd, Regis Professor, co-founder of Irish Archaeological Society, president of Royal Irish Academy
      Nikolai Tolstoy, historian


      Law


      Sir James Andrews, 1st Baronet, Lord Chief Justice of Northern Ireland
      Deirdre Curtin, lawyer
      Susan Denham, former Chief Justice of the Irish Supreme Court
      Sir Valentine Fleming, chief justice of the Supreme Court of Tasmania
      Henry Flavelle Forbes, C.I.E., President of the Court of Appeal, Iraq, 1920/21
      Hari Singh Gaur, barrister, jurist and educationist in India
      John George, Solicitor-General for Ireland
      Edward Gibson, 1st Baron Ashbourne, Attorney-General and Lord Chancellor of Ireland
      Maureen Harding Clark, judge of the International Criminal Court and the High Court of Ireland
      Gerard Hogan, judge of the Court of Appeal
      Brian McCracken, retired Justice of the Irish Supreme Court; chair of the McCracken Tribunal
      Catherine McGuinness, retired Justice of the Irish Supreme Court; former member of Seanad Éireann and President of the Law Reform Commission
      Frank Murphy, United States Supreme Court Associate Justice (1940–49)
      Patricia O'Brien, United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Legal Affairs and United Nations Legal Counsel
      Christopher Palles, judge, Solicitor-General for Ireland
      Alan Shatter, politician
      James Skinner, Chief Justice of Zambia and Malawi
      William Frederick L. Stanley (1872–1939), lawyer and judge in Republic of Hawaii
      William Stawell, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Victoria
      Egbert Udo Udoma, justice of the Nigerian Supreme Court and Chief Justice of Uganda
      Peter Whelan, professor of law


      Literature


      Sebastian Barry, novelist
      Samuel Beckett, dramatist, Nobel laureate
      Eavan Boland, poet
      John Boyne, novelist
      Nicholas Brady, poet and translator
      Erskine Barton Childers, writer and journalist
      Eoin Colfer, children's writer
      Naoise Dolan, novelist
      William Congreve, playwright and poet
      Michael de Larrabeiti, author
      J. P. Donleavy, Irish-American author
      Richard Ellmann, literary critic and biographer
      Anne Enright, novelist, winner of Man Booker Prize 2007
      George Farquhar, dramatist
      Oliver Goldsmith, writer and surgeon
      John Haffenden, professor of literature
      Claire Hennessy, writer and editor
      Jennifer Johnston, Man Booker Prize–winning novelist
      Brendan Kennelly, poet and author
      William Larminie, poet
      Sheridan Le Fanu, author
      Michael Longley, poet
      Patrick MacDonogh, poet
      Rupert Mackeson, racing author
      Thomas MacNevin, writer and journalist
      Derek Mahon, poet
      Bryan Malessa, novelist
      Barry McCrea, novelist and lecturer
      Mark C. McGarrity, crime fiction novelist (under pen name Bartholomew Gill)
      Annemarie Ní Churreáin, poet
      Melatu-Uche Okorie, short-story writer
      Sally Rooney, novelist
      Oliver St. John Gogarty, poet and surgeon
      Jo Shapcott, poet
      Thomas Southerne, dramatist
      Bram Stoker, author, known for Dracula
      Jonathan Swift, satirist, author of Gulliver's Travels
      John Millington Synge, dramatist, poet; author of The Playboy of the Western World
      Nahum Tate, lyricist and Poet Laureate
      William Trevor, novelist particularly known for short stories
      Trevor White, food critic and author of Kitchen Con
      John Duncan Craig, poet
      Oscar Wilde, poet, dramatist, wit; read Greats in Trinity 1871–1874;


      Politics and government


      J. E. W. Addison, British judge and Conservative politician
      Ernest Alton, independent Unionist politician in the House of Commons of Southern Ireland and in Seanad Éireann
      Hugh Annesley, 5th Earl Annesley, M.P. for Cavan, later an Irish representative peer in the House of Lords
      Thekla Beere, civil servant and chairwoman of the ILO
      John Beresford, statesman
      Harman Blennerhassett, Irish-American supporter of the Burr conspiracy
      Frederick Boland, diplomat and twenty-first Chancellor of the University
      John Boyd, member of the Wisconsin State Assembly
      Noël Browne, Irish Minister for Health and physician
      Edmund Burke, philosopher, political theorist, statesman and MP for the British Whig Party
      Hugh Cairns, 1st Earl Cairns, Lord Chancellor of Great Britain and Chancellor of the University of Dublin
      Sir Edward Carson, leader of the Irish Unionists
      Hélène Conway-Mouret, French senator and former minister
      Richard Curran, National Centre Party and later Fine Gael TD
      Sir Colville Deverell, Governor of the Windward Islands and Mauritius
      Robert Emmet, Irish nationalist
      Henry Grattan, member of the Irish House of Commons
      Cecil Harmsworth, 1st Baron Harmsworth, Liberal MP and brother of press barons, Lord Northcliffe and Lord Rothermere
      Mary Harney, politician, former leader of the PDs and former Tánaiste
      Mark Herdman, diplomat, Governor of the British Virgin Islands (1986–1991)
      Douglas Hyde, first President of Ireland
      Princess Kako of Akishino, Japan
      Brian Lenihan, politician, former Minister for Finance
      George Macartney, British statesman (1st Earl Macartney)
      Jennifer Carroll MacNeill, politician
      Richard Graves MacDonnell, Governor of South Australia, Lieutenant-Governor of Nova Scotia and Governor of Hong Kong
      Josepha Madigan, politician, former Minister Minister for Culture, Heritage and the Gaeltacht
      Mairead Maguire (Irish School of Ecumenics), a peace activist, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1976
      Mary McAleese, 8th President of Ireland
      Mary Lou McDonald, politician and leader of Sinn Fein*
      Leonard Greenham Star Molloy, surgeon and politician
      David Norris, senator, gay rights activist and former presidential candidate
      Conor Cruise O'Brien, politician, writer and academic
      John O'Connell, member of parliament, leader of the Repeal Association
      Liz O'Donnell, politician, former Minister for Overseas Development
      Emily O'Reilly, former journalist, author, Irish Ombudsman, European Ombudsman
      William Hoey Kearney Redmond, Nationalist politician; first World War fatality
      Mary Robinson, former President of Ireland
      Edward Stafford (politician) third Premier of New Zealand
      Sir Malcolm Stevenson, Governor of Cyprus and of the Seychelles
      James Stopford, 2nd Earl of Courtown, Tory politician
      Leo Varadkar, politician, Taoiseach and leader of Fine Gael
      Theobald Wolfe Tone, father of Irish republicanism
      Jaja Wachuku first Nigerian Foreign Affairs Minister
      Henry Westenra, 3rd Baron Rossmore, politician and piper
      Thomas Wyse, politician and diplomat


      Religion


      Arthur William Barton, Church of Ireland Archbishop of Dublin
      John Henry Bernard, Church of Ireland Archbishop of Dublin
      Robert Henry Charles, biblical scholar, theologian, and translator
      Rt. Rev. Dr. John Curtis, bishop of Chekiang, China
      John Nelson Darby, evangelist and Bible translator
      Charles D'Arcy, Church of Ireland Archbishop of Dublin and Armagh
      John Dowden, Bishop of Edinburgh and ecclesiastical historian
      Richard William Enraght, Anglican priest and religious controversialist
      William Fitzgerald, Church of Ireland bishop and author
      David F. Ford, Regius Professor of Divinity at the University of Cambridge since 1991
      Alexander Charles Garrett, bishop of the Episcopal Church in the United States of America
      John Graham, author
      William Connor Magee, Anglican Archbishop of York
      Father John Main, OSB, Benedictine monk
      Fr. Malachi Martin S.J., author
      Charles Maturin, Church of Ireland clergyman and gothic author
      Joseph Ferguson Peacocke, Church of Ireland Archbishop of Dublin
      Robert Ram, author of The Soldiers Catechism issued to the New Model Army
      William Reeves, bishop, antiquarian, and President of the Royal Irish Academy
      Robert Warren Stewart, missionary to China, murdered in Kucheng Massacre
      James Henthorn Todd, biblical scholar, educator, and Irish historian: Regius Professor of Hebrew
      William Gowan Todd, author, cleric, and founder of St. Mary's Orphanage for Boys in London
      James Ussher, Primate of All Ireland, noted for calculating the date of creation as the night preceding Sunday 23 October 4004 BC
      Robert Wyse Jackson, Bishop of Limerick, Ardfert and Aghadoe


      Sports


      Edward Allman-Smith (1886–1969), British Army soldier and field-hockey player; Olympic silver medalist, as member of the Ireland field-hockey team at the 1908 Summer Olympics
      Henry Dunlop, founder of Lansdowne Football Club and builder of Lansdowne Road stadium
      Michael Gibson, rugby footballer
      Ed Joyce Irish cricketer
      James Lindsay-Fynn, rower, world championship gold, Great Britain, LM4 - Munich 2007
      Hugo MacNeill, Ireland and British and Irish Lions rugby player
      William McCrum, inventor of penalty kick of football
      Robin Roe (1928–2010), clergyman and rugby footballer
      Dick Spring (born 1950), Gaelic footballer, hurler, rugby footballer, businessman and politician


      Other


      Sir Robert Anderson, intelligence officer, theologian and policeman
      Edward Chichester, 4th Marquess of Donegall
      Richard Lovell Edgeworth, inventor, father of Maria Edgeworth
      Mary Elmes (1908–2002), Irish aid worker who was honoured as Righteous Among the Nations for saving the lives of more than 200 Jewish children during the Second World War
      Michael Elmore-Meegan, expert on global health issues, author, humanitarian, founder of charities
      Scilla Elworthy, human rights campaigner
      Sally Fegan-Wyles, director of UNDG
      Half Hung MacNaghten, 18th-century gentleman fraudster
      Kevin McCormack, dancer with Riverdance; graduated from Trinity College with a Bachelor of Science in Pharmacy
      Leonard McNally, playwright, attorney, British spy
      Pamela Uba, medical scientist and first black person to win Miss Ireland title


      See also



      List of chancellors of the University of Dublin
      List of professorships at the University of Dublin
      List of provosts of Trinity College Dublin
      List of scholars of Trinity College Dublin


      References

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