LIST OF UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD PEOPLE IN BRITISH PUBLIC LIFE
This is a list of 'University of Oxford people in British public life'. Many were students at one (or more) of the colleges of the University, and others held fellowships at a college.
This list forms part of a series of lists of people associated with the University of Oxford – for other lists, please see the main article List of University of Oxford people.
''Peers and members of the House of Commons who are better known for their endeavours outside of politics are listed in the appropriate category (e.g. the jurist William Blackstone, cricketer Colin Cowdrey, historian Edward Gibbon, scientists Susan Greenfield and Robert May, physician and journalist Thomas Stuttaford, and philosopher Mary Warnock).''
'Hereditary peers'
''In order of precedence. See also Lords of Appeal in Ordinary and other legal peers.''
'MPs and life peers'
''Excluding any MP who subsequently was created a hereditary peer or succeeded to a hereditary peerage, and also excluding any life peer who was or is simultaneously a hereditary peer, but including MPs who disclaimed a hereditary peerage in order to sit in the House of Commons (between 1963 and 1999) as well as hereditary peers sitting as MPs under the terms of the House of Lords Act 1999.''
''Members of the European Parliament who have also been members of the parliament at Westminster appear in the list of MPs and life peers.''
''Many MPs and MEPs have also been involved in local politics. They appear in their respective sections, above.''
'Victoria Cross or George Cross' recipients listed first.
★ A select list of former Rhodes Scholars
★ List of Vice-Chancellors of the University of Oxford
★ List of Current Heads of Oxford University Colleges, Societies, and Halls
★ British Society for the History of Mathematics: Oxford individuals
★ Famous Oxford Alumni
★ Short Alumni List Published by Oxford
1. Edward VII: Image of an Era 1841-1910, , Dana, Bentley-Cranch, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1992,
2. Edward VII
3. thePeerage.com
4. Edward VIII (later Prince Edward, duke of Windsor) (1894–1972)
5. Leopold, Prince, first duke of Albany (1853–1884) Rigg, J.M.
6. Marquess of Cambridge - Obituary
7. Death of Prince Christian Victor
8. Prince Michael of Kent: Marriage and family
9. Compton, Spencer, earl of Wilmington (c.1674–1743)
10. Pelham, Henry (1694–1754)
11. Grenville, George (1712–1770)
12. Pitt, William, first earl of Chatham (Pitt the elder) (1708–1778)
13. North, Frederick, second earl of Guilford (Lord North) (1732–1792)
14. Petty , William, second earl of Shelburne and first marquess of Lansdowne (1737–1805)
15. Bentinck, William Henry Cavendish Cavendish-, third duke of Portland (1738–1809)
16. Addington, Henry, first Viscount Sidmouth (1757–1844)
17. Grenville, William Wyndham, Baron Grenville (1759–1834)
18. Jenkinson, Robert Banks, second earl of Liverpool (1770–1828)
19. Canning, George (1770–1827)
20. Peel, Sir Robert, second baronet (1788–1850)
21. Stanley, Edward George Geoffrey Smith, fourteenth earl of Derby (1799–1869)
22. Gladstone, William Ewart (1809–1898)
23. Cecil, Robert Arthur Talbot Gascoyne-, third marquess of Salisbury (1830–1903)
24. Primrose, Archibald Philip, fifth earl of Rosebery and first earl of Midlothian (1847–1929)
25. Asquith, Herbert Henry, first earl of Oxford and Asquith (1852–1928)
26. Attlee, Clement Richard, first Earl Attlee (1883–1967)
27. Eden, (Robert) Anthony, first earl of Avon (1897–1977)
28. Macmillan, (Maurice) Harold, first earl of Stockton (1894–1986)
29. Home, Alexander Frederick Douglas-, fourteenth earl of Home and Baron Home of the Hirsel (1903–1995)
30. The Rival part 2 (book review)
31. Heir to Blair?
32. Hertford College News
33. Profile, The Manufacturing Alliance
34. BBC Vote 2001 - Candidates:John Hutton
35. The Brick (Keble alumni newsletter)
36. The Queen's College Newsletter
37. BBC Vote 2001 - Candidates:Ruth Kelly
38. Profile on the 10 Downing Street website
39. Balliol Old Members in the Houses of Parliament
40. The Virtual Stoa
41. Biography, HM Treasury website
42. BBC Vote 2001: Maria Eagle
43. Notable College Alumnae
44. Gordon Brown appoints Shriti Vadera to key ministerial post
45. Helen Goodman's profile, Office of the Leader of the House of Commons website
46. BBC Vote 2001: James Plaskitt
47. Pembroke College alumni
48. BBC Vote 2001:Kevin Brennan
49. A personal recollection of KHS by Lord Andrew Adonis
50. The Guardian profile: Andrew Adonis
51. Norfolk, 18th Duke of
52. Edward Adolphus, twelfth duke of Somerset (1804–1885)
53. Lennox, Charles Henry Gordon-, sixth duke of Richmond, sixth duke of Lennox, and first duke of Gordon (1818–1903)
54. Osborne, Francis, fifth duke of Leeds (1751–1799)
55. Russell, William, first duke of Bedford (1616–1700)
56. Russell, Hastings William Sackville, twelfth duke of Bedford (1888–1953)
57. Spencer, George, fourth duke of Marlborough (1739–1817)
58. Death Of Lord Malmesbury
59. Haig, Douglas, first Earl Haig (1861–1928)
60. Balliol College Memorial Inscriptions: Chapel Passage, West Wall
61. Balliol College News (22 October 2002 A New Honorary Fellow of Balliol)
62. Davison, Emily Wilding (1872–1913)
63. LMH News (1 June 2007) Dame Vivien Duffield to head Oxford Campaign)
64. Jebb, Eglantyne (1876–1928)
65. Pamela Sue Anderson, ‘Star Students for the USA’, ''The Star'' no. 2 (August 2006), p. 4
66. Nicholson, (Edward) Max (1904–2003)
67. ''Mail on Sunday'' article, 9 July 2000.
This list forms part of a series of lists of people associated with the University of Oxford – for other lists, please see the main article List of University of Oxford people.
Monarchs
| Name | College | Years | Reign | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| H.M. King Edward VII | Christ Church | 1859–1860 | King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland 1901–1910 | [1][2] |
| H.M. King Edward VIII | Magdalen | 1912–1914 | King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland 1936 (abdicated) | [3][4] |
Royal persons
| Name | College | Years at Oxford | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| H.R.H. The Prince Leopold, Duke of Albany | Christ Church | 1872–1876 | [5] |
| The Most Honourable George, Marquess of Cambridge (formerly H.S.H. Prince George of Teck) | Magdalen | [6] | |
| H.H. Prince Christian Victor of Schleswig-Holstein | Magdalen | [7] | |
| Lord Frederick Windsor | Magdalen | –2002 | [8] |
Prime Ministers
Her Majesty's Government
Members of the Cabinet
Other Ministers
Shadow Cabinet
| Name | College | Years at Oxford | Title | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| David Cameron | Brasenose | Leader of the Opposition | ||
| William Hague | Magdalen | Shadow Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs and Senior Member of the Shadow Cabinet | ||
| George Osborne | Magdalen | Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer and General Election Campaign Coordinator | ||
| Theresa May | St Hugh's | Shadow Leader of the House of Commons | ||
| Michael Gove | Lady Margaret Hall | Shadow Secretary of State for Children, Schools and Families | ||
| David Willetts | Christ Church | Shadow Secretary of State for Innovation, Universities and Skills | ||
| Theresa Villiers | Jesus | Shadow Secretary of State for Transport | ||
| Alan Duncan | St John's | Shadow Secretary of State for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform | ||
| Philip Hammond | University | Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury | ||
| Peter Ainsworth | Lincoln | Shadow Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs | ||
| Pauline Neville-Jones | Lady Margaret Hall | Shadow Minister for Security | ||
| Jeremy Hunt | Magdalen | Shadow Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport |
House of Lords and House of Commons
''Peers and members of the House of Commons who are better known for their endeavours outside of politics are listed in the appropriate category (e.g. the jurist William Blackstone, cricketer Colin Cowdrey, historian Edward Gibbon, scientists Susan Greenfield and Robert May, physician and journalist Thomas Stuttaford, and philosopher Mary Warnock).''
'Hereditary peers'
''In order of precedence. See also Lords of Appeal in Ordinary and other legal peers.''
'MPs and life peers'
''Excluding any MP who subsequently was created a hereditary peer or succeeded to a hereditary peerage, and also excluding any life peer who was or is simultaneously a hereditary peer, but including MPs who disclaimed a hereditary peerage in order to sit in the House of Commons (between 1963 and 1999) as well as hereditary peers sitting as MPs under the terms of the House of Lords Act 1999.''
British Members of the European Parliament
''Members of the European Parliament who have also been members of the parliament at Westminster appear in the list of MPs and life peers.''
| Name | College | Years at Oxford | Party | Notes | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Philip Bushill-Matthews | University | ||||
| Richard Corbett | Trinity | ||||
| Daniel Hannan | Oriel | ||||
| Caroline Jackson | St Hugh's and Nuffield | ||||
| Christopher Jackson | Magdalen | ||||
| Stanley Johnson | Exeter | ||||
| Shaun Spiers | St John's | ||||
| Charles Tannock | Balliol | ||||
| Arthur Wellesley, Marquess of Douro | Christ Church and Keble |
British local politicians
''Many MPs and MEPs have also been involved in local politics. They appear in their respective sections, above.''
| Name | College | Years at Oxford | Party | Notes | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nicholas Boles | Magdalen | member of Westminster City Council 1998–2002 | |||
| Ian Frank Bowater | Magdalen | Lord Mayor of London 1969–70 | |||
| Nicholas Bye | Mayor of Torbay 2003–04, directly–elected Mayor of Torbay 2005– | ||||
| George Gordon, 2nd Marquess of Aberdeen and Temair | Balliol | London County Council 1910–25 & 1931–34 | |||
| Christopher Newbury | Keble | member of Wiltshire County Council 1997–, of the Congress of the Council of Europe 1998– | |||
| Kathleen Ollerenshaw | Somerville | Lord Mayor of Manchester 1975–76 | |||
| Lena Townsend | Somerville | Leader of the Inner London Education Authority 1969–70 | |||
| Mike Woodin | Wolfson and Balliol | Green Party member of Oxford City Council 1994–2004 |
Civil Servants
| Name | College | Years at Oxford | Notes | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Robert Armstrong, Baron Armstrong of Ilminster | Christ Church | Cabinet Secretary 1979–87 | ||
| Edward Bridges, 1st Baron Bridges | Magdalen | Cabinet Secretary 1938–46, Permanent Secretary to the Treasury 1946–56 | ||
| Norman Brook, 1st Baron Normanbrook | Wadham | Secretary of the Cabinet 1947–62, Chairman of the BBC 1964–67 | ||
| Robin Butler, Baron Butler of Brockwell | University | Cabinet Secretary 1988–98, Master of University College, Oxford 1997– | ||
| Suma Chakrabarti | New College | Permanent Secretary to the Department for International Development | ||
| John Elvidge | Permanent Secretary to the Scottish Executive 2003– | |||
| Thomas Farrer, 1st Baron Farrer | Balliol | permanent secretary to the Board of Trade 1867–86 | ||
| David Faulkner | St John's | Dep Secy, Home Office 1982–90; Chairman, Howard League for Penal Reform 1998–2002 | ||
| Warren Fisher | Hertford | Permanent Secretary of the Treasury and Head of the Civil Service 1919–39 | ||
| John Gieve | New College | permanent secretary, Home Office 2001–05; deputy governor, Bank of England 2006– | ||
| Robin Harris | Director Conservative Research Department 1985–88, member Prime Minister's Policy Unit 1989–90 | |||
| David Kelly | Linacre | sometime UN weapons inspector and Head of Defence Microbiology Division Porton Down | ||
| Tim Lankester | Corpus Christi | Permanent Secretary Overseas Development Administration 1989–94 | ||
| Robin Leigh-Pemberton, Baron Kingsdown | Trinity | Governor of the Bank of England 1983–93 | ||
| Ralph Lingen, 1st Baron Lingen | Trinity and Balliol | Sec to the Education Office 1849–69, Permanent Secy to the Treasury 1869–85 | ||
| Nicholas Macpherson | Balliol | Permanent Secretary to the Treasury 2005– | ||
| Geoff Mulgan | Balliol | Dir Young Foundn 2005–, formerly Dir PM's Strategy Unit, Dir Demos 1993–98 | ||
| David Normington | Corpus Christi | Permanent Secretary to the Department for Education and Skills 2001–05, to the Home Office 2005– | ||
| Ronald Oxburgh, Baron Oxburgh | University | Pres Qu Coll Cam 82-88, Chief Scientific Adv MoD 88–93, Rector Imp Coll Lon 93–00 | ||
| John Rickard | St John's | Chief Economic Adviser, UK Government; Fiscal Advisor, Ministry of Finance, Republic of Moldova | ||
| Ivan Rogers | Principal Private Secretary to the Prime Minister 2003– | |||
| Michael Scholar | St John's | Permanent Secy Welsh Office 1993–96, Department of Trade & Industry 1996–2001 | ||
| Richard Scott, 10th Duke of Buccleuch | Christ Church | Millennium Commission rep for Northern England 1994–2003 | ||
| Martin Sixsmith | Director of Communications, Department for Transport, Local Government, and the Regions 2001–02 | |||
| Nicholas Stern | Prof of Economics LSE 1994–99; Chief Economist & Sen V–P World Bank 2000–03, Hd of Govt Economic Service 2003– | |||
| Will Straw | New College | |||
| Henry Summers | Trinity | Under–Secretary to Ministry of Housing and Local Government 1955–71 |
Diplomats
| Name | College | Years at Oxford | Notes | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antony Acland | Christ Church | head of Diplomatic Service 1982–86, ambassador to Washington 1986–91, provost of Eton 1991–2000 | ||
| Hugh James Arbuthnott | New College | Ambassador to Romania 1986–89, Portugal 1989–93, Denmark 1993–96 | ||
| Julian Asquith, 2nd Earl of Oxford and Asquith | Balliol | Governor of the Seychelles 1962-67 | ||
| Malcolm Barclay-Harvey | Christ Church | MP 1923-29 & 1931-39, Governor South Australia 1939-44 | ||
| Lord William Bentinck | Christ Church | Governor General of India 1828–35 | ||
| James Bryce, 1st Viscount Bryce | Trinity and Oriel | MP 1880-1907, Ambassador to the United States 1907-13 | ||
| George Curzon, 1st Marquess Curzon of Kedleston | Balliol and All Souls | Viceroy of India 1899-1905, Foreign Secretary 1919-24 | ||
| John Hamilton-Gordon, 1st Marquess of Aberdeen and Temair | Governor General of Canada 1893-98 | |||
| Frederick Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood, 1st Marquess of Dufferin and Ava | Christ Church | Gov Gen Canada 1872-8, Viceroy India 1884-8 | ||
| David Hannay, Baron Hannay of Chiswick | New College | Ambassador to EEC 1985–90, to UN 1990–96, UN Special Rep Cyprus 1996–2003 | ||
| James Harford | governor and commander–in–chief of Saint Helena 1954-58 | |||
| Nicholas Henderson | Hertford | Ambassador to France 1975-79, to the US 1979-82, Lord Warden of the Stannaries 1985-90 | ||
| Michael Jay, Baron Jay of Ewelme | Magdalen | Ambassador to France 1996–2001; Permanent Under–Secretary, FCO 2002–06 | ||
| Gladwyn Jebb, 1st Baron Gladwyn | Magdalen | Acting Sec–Gen UN 1945–46, Ambassador to UN 1950–54, to France 1954–60, MEP 1973–76 | ||
| John Kerr, Baron Kerr of Kinlochard | Pembroke | Permanent Under–Sec, FCO 1997–2002; Sec Gen, European Convention 2000–03 | ||
| Murray MacLehose, Baron MacLehose of Beoch | Balliol | Governor of Hong Kong 1971–82 | ||
| John Maffey, 1st Baron Rugby | Christ Church | Gov–Gen Sudan 1926–33, Perm Under–Sec for Colonies 33-37, Rep to Ireland 39-48 | ||
| Frederick Millar, 1st Baron Inchyra | New College | Ambassador, W. Germany 1955–56, Permanent Under–Secy for Foreign Affairs 1957–62 | ||
| Edward Mortimer | All Souls | Hd of Speechwriting Executive Office of the Sec Gen of the UN 1998–, Dir of Communications 2001– | ||
| Arthur Nicolson, 1st Baron Carnock | Ambassador to Spain 1904–5, to Russia 1905–10, Under–Secretary for Foreign Affairs 1910–16 | |||
| David Ormsby-Gore, 5th Baron Harlech | Ambassador to the United States 1961–65 | |||
| Ivor Roberts | Keble, St Antony's and Trinity | Ambassador to Yugoslavia 1992–98, Ireland 1999–2003, Italy 2003–06 | ||
| Frederic Rogers, 1st Baron Blachford | Oriel | Permanent Under–Secretary of State for the Colonies 1860–71 | ||
| William Tyrrell, 1st Baron Tyrrell | Balliol | Permanent Under–Secretary for Foreign Affairs 1925–28, Ambassador to Paris 1928–34 | ||
| John Weston | Oxford | Dep Cabinet Secretary 1988–92, Permanent Rep NATO 1992–95, Permanent Rep UN 1995–98 | ||
| David Williamson, Baron Williamson of Horton | Exeter | Head of Eur Secretariat Cabinet Office 1983–87, Sec–Gen Eur Commn 1987–97 |
Members of the Royal Household
| Name | College | Years at Oxford | Notes | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sedley Andrus | Lancaster Herald 1972–82, Beaumont Herald Extraordinary 1982– | |||
| George Bellew | Christ Church | Garter Principal King of Arms 1950–61, Secretary of the Order of the Garter 1961–74 | ||
| John Brooke-Little | New College | Clarenceux King of Arms 1995–97 | ||
| Clive Cheesman | Rouge Dragon Pursuivant of Arms 1998– | |||
| Hubert Chesshyre | Christ Church | Clarenceux King of Arms 1997– | ||
| Colin Cole | Brasenose | Garter Principal King of Arms 1978–92 | ||
| Robin de la Lanne-Mirrlees | Merton | Richmond Herald 1962–67 | ||
| Patric Laurence Dickinson | Richmond Herald 1989–, Secretary of the Order of the Garter 2004– | |||
| Montague Eliot, 8th Earl of St Germans | Exeter | Groom of the Robes to HM King George V 1920–36 | ||
| Edward Ford | New College | Asst Private Secretary to HM King George VI 1946–52, to HM The Queen 1952–67, Extra Equerry 1955–2006 | ||
| Michael Maclagan | Trinity | Richmond Herald 1980–89 | ||
| Theobald Mathew | Balliol | Windsor Herald and Deputy Treasurer of the College of Arms 1978–97 | ||
| Iain Moncreiffe of that Ilk | Christ Church | Falkland Pursuivant 1952–53, Kintyre Pursuivant 1953–61, Albany Herald 1961–85 | ||
| Robert Noel | Exeter | Lancaster Herald 1999– | ||
| Michael Peat | Trinity | Principal Private Secretary to the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall 2005– | ||
| Matthew Ridley, 4th Viscount Ridley | Balliol | Lord Steward of the Household 1989–2001 | ||
| Stuart Shilson | Balliol | Assistant Private Secretary to HM The Queen 2001–2004 | ||
| Anthony Wagner | Balliol | Garter Principal King of Arms 1961–78 |
Military, security, and police personnel
'Victoria Cross or George Cross' recipients listed first.
| Name | College | Years at Oxford | Notes | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lieutenant General Sir Adrian Carton de Wiart, VC, KBE, CB, CMG, DSO | Balliol | |||
| Group Captain Leonard Cheshire, Baron Cheshire, VC, OM, DSO and two bars, DFC, RAF | Merton | |||
| Captain John Liddell, VC, MC, Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders, RFC | Balliol | 1908–? | ||
| Captain Robert Nairac, GC, Grenadier Guards | Lincoln | |||
| Colonel Sir Geoffrey Vickers, VC | Merton | |||
| Captain Garth Neville Walford, VC, Royal Regiment of Artillery | Balliol | 1900–? | [60] | |
| Trevor Bigham | Magdalen | Deputy Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis 1931–35 | ||
| Ian Blair | Christ Church | Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis 2005 onwards | ||
| Paul Condon, Baron Condon | St Peter's | Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis 1993–2000 | ||
| David Craig, Baron Craig of Radley | Lincoln | Chief of the Defence Staff 1988–91, Convenor of Crossbenchers 1999–2004 | ||
| Cressida Dick | Balliol | Deputy Assistant Commissioner, Metropolitan Police 2006 onwards | ||
| Colin McColl | The Queen's | Director of the Secret Intelligence Service 1989–94 | ||
| Eliza Manningham-Buller | Lady Margaret Hall | Director-General of the Security Service 2002–2007 | ||
| Brian Paddick | The Queen's | deputy assistant commissioner, Metropolitan Police 2003 onwards | ||
| John Rennie | Balliol | Director of the Secret Intelligence Service 1968–73 | ||
| John Scarlett | Magdalen | Director of the Secret Intelligence Service 2004 onwards | ||
| David Spedding | Hertford | Director of the Secret Intelligence Service 1994–99 | ||
| David Westwood | Lady Margaret Hall | Chief Constable of Humberside Police 1999–2005 |
Non-government people in public life
| Name | College | Years at Oxford | Notes | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peter Benenson | Balliol | 1939–1940 | Left Oxford because of WWII. Founder, Amnesty International (1961); General Secretary (1961–64), President (1961-66) | [61] |
| Nicky Blair | Lady Margaret Hall | 2004–2007 | Son of Tony Blair, Bachelor of Arts Modern History, Co-Chair Oxford University Labour Club Trinity Term 2006, schoolmaster | |
| Beau Brummell | Oriel | 1794–? | Arbiter of fashion and friend of The Prince Regent | |
| Emily Davison | St Hugh's | 1895 | First-class honours in English in the Oxford University examination for women, but women were unable to graduate at that time. Suffragette. | [62] |
| Vivien Duffield | Lady Margaret Hall | 1963–? | Philanthropist | [63] |
| Arnold Goodman, Baron Goodman | University | 1976–1986 (Master of University College) | Chairman of the Arts Council of Great Britain 1965–72 | |
| Eglantyne Jebb | Lady Margaret Hall | 1895–1898 | founder of Save the Children Fund (1919) | [64] |
| Alexandra Knatchbull | Regent's Park College | 2002–2005 | BA Philosophy and Theology. Great-great-great-great-granddaughter of Queen Victoria, third cousin twice removed of H.M. The Queen, and god-daughter of Diana, Princess of Wales | [65] |
| Elizabeth Pakenham, Countess of Longford | Lady Margaret Hall | |||
| Max Nicholson | Hertford | 1926–1929 | founder of British Trust for Ornithology (1932) and WWF (1961), president of RSPB 1980–85 | [66] |
| Beau Nash | Jesus | Master of Ceremonies, Bath, Somerset | ||
| Tom Parker Bowles | Worcester | Son of H.R.H. The Duchess of Cornwall and stepson and godson of H.R.H. The Prince of Wales. Member of Piers Gaveston Society. | [67] | |
| Jonathon Porritt | Magdalen | co–founder Forum for the Future 1996; Chairman Sustainable Development Commission 2000– | ||
| Ben Summerskill | Merton | Chief Executive of Stonewall 2003– |
See also
★ A select list of former Rhodes Scholars
★ List of Vice-Chancellors of the University of Oxford
★ List of Current Heads of Oxford University Colleges, Societies, and Halls
External links
★ British Society for the History of Mathematics: Oxford individuals
★ Famous Oxford Alumni
★ Short Alumni List Published by Oxford
References
1. Edward VII: Image of an Era 1841-1910, , Dana, Bentley-Cranch, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1992,
2. Edward VII
3. thePeerage.com
4. Edward VIII (later Prince Edward, duke of Windsor) (1894–1972)
5. Leopold, Prince, first duke of Albany (1853–1884) Rigg, J.M.
6. Marquess of Cambridge - Obituary
7. Death of Prince Christian Victor
8. Prince Michael of Kent: Marriage and family
9. Compton, Spencer, earl of Wilmington (c.1674–1743)
10. Pelham, Henry (1694–1754)
11. Grenville, George (1712–1770)
12. Pitt, William, first earl of Chatham (Pitt the elder) (1708–1778)
13. North, Frederick, second earl of Guilford (Lord North) (1732–1792)
14. Petty , William, second earl of Shelburne and first marquess of Lansdowne (1737–1805)
15. Bentinck, William Henry Cavendish Cavendish-, third duke of Portland (1738–1809)
16. Addington, Henry, first Viscount Sidmouth (1757–1844)
17. Grenville, William Wyndham, Baron Grenville (1759–1834)
18. Jenkinson, Robert Banks, second earl of Liverpool (1770–1828)
19. Canning, George (1770–1827)
20. Peel, Sir Robert, second baronet (1788–1850)
21. Stanley, Edward George Geoffrey Smith, fourteenth earl of Derby (1799–1869)
22. Gladstone, William Ewart (1809–1898)
23. Cecil, Robert Arthur Talbot Gascoyne-, third marquess of Salisbury (1830–1903)
24. Primrose, Archibald Philip, fifth earl of Rosebery and first earl of Midlothian (1847–1929)
25. Asquith, Herbert Henry, first earl of Oxford and Asquith (1852–1928)
26. Attlee, Clement Richard, first Earl Attlee (1883–1967)
27. Eden, (Robert) Anthony, first earl of Avon (1897–1977)
28. Macmillan, (Maurice) Harold, first earl of Stockton (1894–1986)
29. Home, Alexander Frederick Douglas-, fourteenth earl of Home and Baron Home of the Hirsel (1903–1995)
30. The Rival part 2 (book review)
31. Heir to Blair?
32. Hertford College News
33. Profile, The Manufacturing Alliance
34. BBC Vote 2001 - Candidates:John Hutton
35. The Brick (Keble alumni newsletter)
36. The Queen's College Newsletter
37. BBC Vote 2001 - Candidates:Ruth Kelly
38. Profile on the 10 Downing Street website
39. Balliol Old Members in the Houses of Parliament
40. The Virtual Stoa
41. Biography, HM Treasury website
42. BBC Vote 2001: Maria Eagle
43. Notable College Alumnae
44. Gordon Brown appoints Shriti Vadera to key ministerial post
45. Helen Goodman's profile, Office of the Leader of the House of Commons website
46. BBC Vote 2001: James Plaskitt
47. Pembroke College alumni
48. BBC Vote 2001:Kevin Brennan
49. A personal recollection of KHS by Lord Andrew Adonis
50. The Guardian profile: Andrew Adonis
51. Norfolk, 18th Duke of
52. Edward Adolphus, twelfth duke of Somerset (1804–1885)
53. Lennox, Charles Henry Gordon-, sixth duke of Richmond, sixth duke of Lennox, and first duke of Gordon (1818–1903)
54. Osborne, Francis, fifth duke of Leeds (1751–1799)
55. Russell, William, first duke of Bedford (1616–1700)
56. Russell, Hastings William Sackville, twelfth duke of Bedford (1888–1953)
57. Spencer, George, fourth duke of Marlborough (1739–1817)
58. Death Of Lord Malmesbury
59. Haig, Douglas, first Earl Haig (1861–1928)
60. Balliol College Memorial Inscriptions: Chapel Passage, West Wall
61. Balliol College News (22 October 2002 A New Honorary Fellow of Balliol)
62. Davison, Emily Wilding (1872–1913)
63. LMH News (1 June 2007) Dame Vivien Duffield to head Oxford Campaign)
64. Jebb, Eglantyne (1876–1928)
65. Pamela Sue Anderson, ‘Star Students for the USA’, ''The Star'' no. 2 (August 2006), p. 4
66. Nicholson, (Edward) Max (1904–2003)
67. ''Mail on Sunday'' article, 9 July 2000.
This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.
psst.. try this: add to faves
Featured Companies
| Green Parrot Beach Houses Resort | |
| Selloffvacations.com Oakville |
Newest Companies
List of University of Oxford people in British public life Travel Deals

العربية
中国
Français
Deutsch
Ελληνική
हिन्दी
Italiano
日本語
Português
Русский
Español