List of people associated with University College London

This is a list of people associated with University College London, including notable staff and alumni associated with the institution.

Founders and supporters

Founders

Apart from Jeremy Bentham, all these men were named (in Latin) on the Foundation Stone.[1]

A translation of the Latin text engraved on a metal plate that was buried with the foundation stone reads as follows:[4]

To God's favour the greatest and best, eternal architect of the universe may it bring you happiness and good fortune at the beginning of the eighth year of the reign of King George IV of Britain the most highest prince Augustus Frederick Duke of Sussex patron of all the fine arts the oldest order of architecture the highest among the English the foundation stone of the London University between city state [i.e. citizens] and brothers standing around will be placed by his hand to applause.

Day before the day before the Kalends of May

The work of God desired by the most fortunate citizens of this town has begun at last in the year of human greeting 1827 and in the year of light 5827.

In the name of these most illustrious men who are present and with the guidance of Henry Duke of Norfolk, Henry Marquis of Lansdown, Lord John Russell, John, Viscount Dudley and Ward, George, Baron Auckland, the Hon. James Abercrombie and Sir James Macintosh, Alexander Baring, Henry Bougham, Isaac Lyon Goldsmid, George Grote, Zachary Macaulay, Benjamin Shaw, William Tooke, Henry Waymouth, George Birkbeck, Thomas Campbell, Olinthus Gregory, Joseph Hume, James Mill, John Smith, Henry Warburton, John Wishaw, Thomas Wilson, and William Wilkins, architect.

Supporters

Benefactors

  • Sir Herbert Bartlett (1842–1921), civil engineer, enabled the establishment of the UCL Bartlett School of Architecture
  • Sir Francis Galton, eugenicist and supporter of statistics and eugenics at UCL[5]
  • Sir Isaac Lyon Goldsmid (1778–1859), financier, promoter of UK Jewry's emancipation; advocate for the foundation of UCL and a very generous benefactor

Council members

Fields Medallists

The Fields Medal is often described as the "Nobel Prize in Mathematics". The UCL mathematical community has produced three Fields Medallists,[9]

1998: Timothy Gowers

  • Faculty member of the Department of Mathematics (1991–1995)

1970: Alan Baker

  • BSc (1961), Professor (1964–1965)

1958: Klaus Roth

  • MSc (1948), PhD (1950), Professor (1948–1966)

Former staff

Art, architecture, and design

Engineering sciences

Interdisciplinary studies

Languages and literature

Law

Mathematical, physical, and space sciences

Harold Davenport

Life sciences

J. B. S. Haldane

Philosophy

Social sciences, geography, and history

Current staff

Art, architecture, and design

Engineering sciences

History, languages and literature

Mathematical, physical and space sciences

Life sciences

Social sciences, geography, and history

Alumni

Academics

David Crystal
William Jevons

Economists

Engineers

Life scientists and medics

Sir Martin Evans shared the 2007 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine after discovering a method for introducing homologous recombination in mice employing embryonic stem cells

Mathematicians and physical scientists

Sir Edward Sharpey-Schafter is regarded as the founder of endocrinology

Architects, artists, and designers

Banking, business and commercial figures

Prominent UK businessman Digby Jones served as a government minister under UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown

Government and public officials, heads of state and politicians

Sir Stafford Cripps (left) attempted to negotiate with fellow UCL alumnus Mahatma Gandhi for full Indian support of the British war effort in World War II during his 1942 "Cripps mission"

Many prominent politicians in the UK and abroad have studied at UCL. Notable alumni include the "Father of the Nation" of each of India, Kenya and Mauritius, the founders of Ghana, modern Japan and Nigeria among others.

Hirobumi Itō drafted Imperial Japan's first constitution
Jomo Kenyatta oversaw the creation of Kenya's public institutions after independence from the United Kingdom
Junichiro Koizumi was the longest-serving Prime Minister of Japan since 1972
Thérèse Coffey became the first female Deputy Prime Minister of the United Kingdom in 2022
Sir Ernest Satow has been described as the first Englishman to become fluent in both written and spoken Japanese

Heads of state and heads of government

Heads of intergovernmental organisations

Other politicians, campaigners and public officials

Royalty

Lawyers and judges

Literary figures and authors

Rabindranath Tagore, the first Asian Nobel Laureate, with Gandhi, both of whom took courses at UCL

Film, television, theatre and radio

Editors, journalists and publishers

Musicians, musicologists and musical commentators

The members of Coldplay have met each other while studying at UCL. They are regarded as the most successful band of the 21st century.[129]

Sporting figures

Demetrius Vikelas served as the first president of the International Olympic Committee for the first modern Olympic Games in Athens

Other notable alumni

Fictional figures

Fictional alumni and students

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