List of people associated with Brasenose College, Oxford

This is a list of notable people associated with Brasenose College, Oxford. Some individuals fall into several categories. They are sorted alphabetically by surname.

This list of notable alumni consists predominantly of men, due to the fact that women first studied at Brasenose as undergraduates in 1974, the college being among the first to go mixed at this point.[1]

Alumni edit

See also Former students of Brasenose College, Oxford.

Politicians and civil servants edit

 
David Cameron

Judges and lawyers edit

 
William Robert Grove

Clergy edit

Military personnel edit

Classicists and archaeologists edit

Historians and antiquarians edit

 
Elias Ashmole

Language and literature academics edit

Philosophers and theologians edit

  • John Foxe, English historian and martyrologist
  • Alexander Nowell, Anglican Puritan theologian and clergyman, served as dean of St Paul's
  • David Pearce, Utilitarian philosopher, founder of the World Transhumanist Association
  • Thomas Traherne, English poet, clergyman, theologian, and religious writer
  • Dom Illtyd Trethowan, English priest, philosopher and author
  • William Whittingham, English Biblical scholar and religious reformer, dean of Durham

Mathematicians, medics and scientists edit

Educators edit

Artists and writers edit

 
Sir William Golding

Broadcasters and entertainers edit

 
William Webb Ellis, allegedly the inventor of rugby football

Musicians edit

  • Mylo (Myles MacInnes), Scottish electronic musician and record producer

Sports people edit

 
Walter Woodgate, Boat Race winner, eight-time Henley Regatta champion and inventor of the coxless four

Other people in public life edit

Fellows and Principals edit

 
The Rev. Thomas Adams
 
John Foxe
 
Sir Otto Kahn-Freund
 
Simon Schama

Principals edit

The current principal is John Bowers.

Honorary Fellows edit

 
Michael Palin

Other persons associated with Brasenose edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Women at Oxford | University of Oxford". www.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  2. ^ Langdon, Julia (24 February 2015). "Jeremy McMullen obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 May 2015.
  3. ^ "Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire", in The Journal of Roman Studies 40 (1950), p. 189
  4. ^ "Paul Pester". Businessweek. Retrieved 11 June 2014.[dead link]