2016 in the United Kingdom
Events from the year 2016 in the United Kingdom.
Incumbents
- Monarch – Elizabeth II
- Prime Minister
- * David Cameron
- * Theresa May
- Parliament – 56th
Events
January
- 4 January – As strong winds and heavy rain continue to batter parts of Scotland, more than 30 flood warnings are issued by SEPA.
- 6 January – Labour MPs Jonathan Reynolds and Stephen Doughty quit over the sacking of the shadow Europe minister Pat McFadden, after party leader Jeremy Corbyn reshuffles his shadow cabinet and makes controversial changes within his team.
- 11 January
- *In the aftermath of Jeremy Corbyn's reshuffle of the Labour Party, Shadow Attorney General Catherine McKinnell resigns, citing party infighting, family reasons and the desire to speak in Parliament beyond her legal portfolio.
- *Arlene Foster becomes the first women to lead the Democratic Unionist Party and becomes Northern Ireland First Women First Minister.
- 12 January – junior doctors in England providing non-emergency care strike for 24 hours in a dispute with Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt over pay and working hours.
- 14 January
- *The gang of "brazen burglars" involved in the £14m Hatton Garden jewellery heist, dubbed the "largest burglary in English legal history", face jail after the final three are convicted of involvement.
- *The Metropolitan Police announce that an extra 600 armed officers are to be trained and patrols more than doubled to help counter the threat of a terrorist attack in London.
- 15 January – Tim Peake conducts the first spacewalk by an "official" British astronaut, stepping outside an ISS airlock.
- 20 January – Unemployment rates fall to 5.1%, their lowest level in almost a decade, but figures show that wage growth has slowed.
- 21 January
- *An inquiry finds that the murder of British ex-Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko in 2006 in London was "probably" approved by Russian President Vladimir Putin.
- *Figures show that murders and killings in England and Wales have increased to their highest level for five years, largely due to an abnormally high number of deaths in June when 75 people were killed.
- 28 January – after three weeks of appeals, Camelot receive a "valid claim" for the record breaking £33m Lotto jackpot prize drawn on 9 January.
- 29 January – the last Land Rover Defender rolls off the production line at Solihull, ending 68 years of production.
February
- 1 February – scientists are given the go-ahead by regulators to genetically modify human embryos which were to be destroyed in seven days.
- 3 February – the High Court gives permission for Lord Lucan to be declared dead, and for a death certificate to be issued 42 years after his disappearance.
- 8 February – Storm Imogen hits Britain, causing thousands of power outages and structural damage across the country, along with disruption for many commuters.
- 10 February – junior doctors walk out in their second recent strike over Saturday working arrangements, causing disruption to medical services.
- 12 February – After many years as print newspapers, it is announced that the UK newspapers The Independent and the Independent on Sunday will cease to print and become online-only at the end of March. Its stablemate, the i, will be sold to Johnston Press.
- 16 February – BBC Three becomes the first UK television network to become online only, having broadcast for its final night after 13 years as a television channel.
- 20 February – David Cameron announces that Britain will hold a referendum on the United Kingdom's membership of the European Union on 23 June.
- 21 February – Mayor of London Boris Johnson announces he is to campaign for the UK to leave the European Union.
- 22 February – the pound hits its lowest level against the dollar, falling down as much as 2.4%, in almost seven years amid concerns about a possible exit from the European Union.
March
- 7 March – Official tourist figures for 2015 show the British Museum remains the most popular attraction in the United Kingdom.
- 9 March
- *Four of the gang of "brazen burglars" involved in the Hatton Garden jewellery heist are sentenced to seven years' imprisonment, while a fifth is given six years.
- *Junior doctors strike for the third time over new contracts, with NHS England saying that more than 5,000 operations have been cancelled as a result.
- 16 March – Chancellor George Osborne announces the Budget for 2016 and the year ahead.
- 18 March – Iain Duncan Smith resigns as Secretary of State for Work and Pensions claiming that he came under pressure from the Treasury to "salami slice" welfare, and voicing his objection to £4bn of planned cuts to disability benefits announced in the Budget. Duncan Smith is succeeded in the post by Stephen Crabb.
- 19 March – England win the Six Nations Grand Slam—their first since 2003.
- 21 March – Brian Reader, the ringleader in the Hatton Garden jewellery heist, and the last of the gang to be sentenced, is given more than six years in jail.
- 22 March – Transgender fell-runner Lauren Jeska attempts to murder UK Athletics official Ralph Knibbs, stabbing him multiple times in Birmingham. Jeska had feared her records and ability to compete in women's events would be investigated due to the unfair advantage she had from being born male.
- 23 March – drivers on London Underground's Piccadilly line go on strike for 24 hours over "bullying".
- 28 March – Storm Katie rips through parts of Britain through the Easter weekend and many parts of the country suffer damage. The storm causes disruption with many flights cancelled or diverted as a result.
- 30 March – British steel maker Tata Steel reports that it will sell off its British operations in a move to save money, leaving many thousands of jobs at risk, including those at the large Port Talbot steelworks in Wales.
- 31 March – Prime Minister David Cameron and his fellow MPs cut short their spring break and return to the UK for an emergency meeting on the planned closure of the Tata Steel works.
April
- 1 April – a new National Living Wage comes into force in the United Kingdom, requiring employers to pay all workers over 25 years old at least £7.20 per hour.
- 6 April – the 2016 Dog Microchipping Legislation comes into force, requiring every dog in England, Scotland and Wales to be micro-chipped if they are over eight weeks old..
- 7 April – A junior doctors' strike over pay disputes enters its second day, with over 5,000 operations and procedures being postponed.
- 10 April – English golfer Danny Willett wins the 2016 Masters Tournament, the first time a Briton has won the tournament since Nick Faldo in 1996.
- 13 April – Stoke Gifford Parish Council in Gloucestershire becomes the first council in the UK to charge runners who use one of its parks and those who participate in the weekly park fun run events.
- 14 April – in the final report following the Shoreham Airshow disaster in August 2015, the Civil Aviation Authority tightens the rules of all future airshows over safety fears.
- 15 April – the European Union membership referendum campaign gets underway in the UK as both sides prepare to persuade voters to decide whether they want to leave or remain in the EU when the referendum takes place in June.
- 16 April – thousands of people take part in a protest against austerity cuts in central London, including the Shadow Chancellor, John McDonnell.
- 21 April
- * Welsh Footballer Ched Evans has his 2012 conviction for rape quashed by the Court of Appeal. Evans had been wrongly imprisoned for two and half years, a retrial was ordered to take place in October.
- * Queen Elizabeth II marks her 90th birthday.
- 26 April
- *A jury at a coroner's court in Warrington declares that the victims of the Hillsborough disaster of 1989 were unlawfully killed.
- *Junior doctors go on strike again, this time including those providing emergency care for the first time.
May
- 2 May – for the first time, Leicester City win the Premier League.
- 3 May – thousands of parents illegally take their children out of classes as part of an unprecedented one-day pupils’ “strike” over new, tougher tests for seven-year-olds.
- 5 May – UK local and Police and crime commissioner elections, as well as elections to the Northern Ireland Assembly, Welsh Assembly and Scottish Parliament are held.
- 7 May – the Labour MP Sadiq Khan is sworn in as mayor of London, succeeding Boris Johnson and becoming London's first Muslim mayor.
- 18 May – the government's planned new laws are set out by the Queen in her annual speech, which include a large overhaul on prison laws and support for a spaceport and driverless cars.
June
- 1 June – Archaeologists identify a Roman object found during construction of Bloomberg's new offices in the City of London as the oldest known hand-written document in the United Kingdom, dating back to AD 54.
- 12 June – UEFA threatens to disqualify England from Euro 2016 after "totally unacceptable" violent hooliganism between England and Russia fans during an England-Russia game on 11 June.
- 16 June – Labour MP Jo Cox dies at Leeds General Infirmary after being shot and stabbed as she prepared to hold a meeting with constituents in Birstall, West Yorkshire.
- 21 June – Both sides of the referendum on the UK's membership of the European Union take part in the biggest live debate at Wembley Arena on a special edition of Question Time on the BBC. Panelists include former Mayor of London Boris Johnson, for Leave, and his successor Sadiq Khan for Remain.
- 23 June – a referendum is held in the UK and Gibraltar on the United Kingdom's membership of the European Union, the first of its kind since the 1975 referendum on Britain's membership of the then European Economic Community.
- 24 June
- *The United Kingdom votes to leave the European Union in a vote of 51.9% to 48.1%, in a record voting turnout of 72%. England and Wales vote strongly for leave, while London, Scotland, Northern Ireland and Gibraltar back remain.
- *David Cameron resigns as Leader of the Conservative Party, announcing he is to step down as Prime Minister by October, claiming a "fresh leadership" is needed in the wake of a vote to leave.
- *London's stock market plunges more than 8% in the wake of the result, with the pound falling to its lowest level against the dollar since 1985 as markets react.
- 26 June
- *Several Labour Party shadow cabinet ministers quit, with many more expected, in protest at Jeremy Corbyn's leadership and "lacklustre" referendum campaign. Corbyn issues a statement in response, vowing to stand in any new leadership election and to reshape his shadow cabinet.
- *First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon warns she could persuade the Scottish Parliament to veto the United Kingdom's exit from the European Union.
- 27 June
- *Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne makes a statement to calm the markets, claiming the UK is ready to face the future "from a position of strength" and indicating there won't be an immediate emergency Budget.
- *Ratings agency Standard & Poor's state the referendum result could lead to "a deterioration of the UK's economic performance, including its large financial services sector" as the United Kingdom loses its top AAA credit rating.
- *England are knocked out of UEFA Euro 2016 after losing to Iceland in a disappointing last-16 defeat of 2–1. England manager Roy Hodgson resigns in the wake of the result.
- 28 June – a motion of no-confidence by Labour MPs in leader Jeremy Corbyn is passed by a 172 to 40 vote. However, Corbyn reiterates that he will not resign.
- 30 June – Michael Gove and Theresa May join Stephen Crabb in announcing their candidacies for leadership of the Conservative Party and subsequently Prime Minister. Andrea Leadsom and Liam Fox also confirm their intentions to run, while Boris Johnson, a front runner for the job according to political analysts, surprisingly declares his intentions not to campaign.
July
- 1 July
- *A two-minute silence is observed at 7.28 a.m. throughout the United Kingdom to commemorate the centenary of the Battle of the Somme. The art event We're Here Because We're Here is staged across the U.K. by Jeremy Deller to mark the same event.
- *Wales qualify for the semi-final of Euro 2016 after beating Belgium 3–1, the team's most significant victory since 1958.
- 4 July – United Kingdom Independence Party leader Nigel Farage resigns, saying his "political ambition had been achieved" with the UK voting to leave the European Union.
- 6 July – the Chilcot Inquiry report into the Iraq War is released, more than seven years after the inquiry was first announced, showing that the UK went to war before peaceful options were exhausted, that military action was not the "last resort", ill-prepared troops were sent into battle with inadequate plans for the aftermath, and that the threat from Saddam Hussein was overstated; ultimately rejecting former Prime Minister Tony Blair's case for the 2003 invasion.
- 8 July – women are permitted to serve in close combat roles in the British armed services.
- 10 July – Angela Eagle announces her Labour Party leadership bid against current leader Jeremy Corbyn, triggering a leadership election.
- 11 July – Theresa May is announced as the Conservative Party leader, after Andrea Leadsom withdraws from the leadership election.
- 13 July
- *David Cameron officially tenders his resignation as Prime Minister to the Queen, and is succeeded by his former Home Secretary Theresa May.
- *May subsequently begins to announce her cabinet, with Philip Hammond as the new Chancellor of the Exchequer, Amber Rudd as Home Secretary, Boris Johnson as Foreign Secretary, and David Davis appointed in the new Exiting the European Union Secretary post.
- 18 July – MPs vote to back the renewal of the UK's Trident nuclear weapons programme, in a vote of 472 to 117.
- 24 July – Chris Froome wins the Tour de France for the second year running and third time overall. Froome's victory means that a British rider has won four of the last five editions of the race.
- 28 July – EDF approves investment in the first new nuclear power plant to be built in the UK in 20 years at Hinkley Point, Somerset; however, the government delay a final decision, calling for it to be reviewed by the autumn.
August
- 1 August – Permission is given to enlarge the Yorkshire Dales and Lake District National Parks in northern England.
- 4 August – The Bank of England cuts interest rates from 0.5% to 0.25% – a record low and the first cut since 2009.
- 8 August – a five-day strike by workers on Southern Rail begins, disrupting train services between London, Surrey and Sussex, the longest rail strike in the United Kingdom since 1968.
- 12 August – Mumin Sahin and Emin Ozmen are jailed for a total of 42 years for their part in the UK's largest ever drugs haul, in which 3.2 tonnes of cocaine worth £512 million was seized from a vessel in the North Sea.
- 16 August
- *The radical Islamic cleric Anjem Choudary and his assistant Mohammed Mizahnur Rahman are both found guilty at the Old Bailey of "inviting Islamic State".
- *The world's largest ever wind farm, consisting of 300 turbines producing 1.8 gigawatts of clean energy, is approved for construction off the Yorkshire coast.
- 17 August – the Airlander 10 hybrid airship, the world's largest aircraft at 92 m in length and 38,000 m³ in volume, has its maiden civilian flight in Bedfordshire.
- 21 August – Team GB finish competing at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. They finish second in the medal table, with 27 golds, 23 silvers, and 17 bronze medals; their best Olympic result in over a century.
September
- 1 September – the Francis Crick Institute, Europe's largest biomedical research facility, opens in London.
- 2 September – Nicholas Chamberlain, the Bishop of Grantham becomes the first Church of England bishop to openly declare he is gay and in a relationship.
- 12 September – former Prime Minister David Cameron resigns from the House of Commons.
- 13 September
- *The first Bank of England polymer banknote enters circulation..
- *The UK experiences its hottest September day since 1911, with 34.4 °C recorded in Gravesend, Kent.
- 15 September – the government approves the Hinkley Point C nuclear power plant, which will cost £18bn, and says it will introduce "new safeguards" to future projects.
- 16 September
- *Flash flooding hits parts of England as thunderstorms dump almost half a month's rainfall in some areas overnight.
- *Diane James is elected the new leader of UKIP.
- 24 September – Jeremy Corbyn is re-elected as leader of the Labour Party following an unsuccessful challenge by Owen Smith.
October
- 5 October – Diane James quits as leader of UKIP after only 18 days in the post.
- 6 October – Communities Secretary Sajid Javid approves plans for fracking at Cuadrilla's Preston New Road site in Lancashire, overturning an earlier decision by the local council.
- 12 October – Welsh footballer Ched Evans is cleared of rape in a retrial, having previously been wrongfully convicted for the offence, serving two and half years in prison.
- 25 October – the government approves a third runway at Heathrow Airport. Zac Goldsmith MP for Richmond Park resigns in protest.
November
- 2 November – the High Court in London rules in favour of ClientEarth in their case against the government regarding dangerous levels of air pollution in the UK.
- 5 November – the British tennis player Andy Murray becomes ATP world number one, the first British player of either sex to reach number one in tennis rankings in the modern era.
- 15 November
- *The British Medical Journal backs the legalisation of drugs for the first time, arguing that the "War on Drugs" has failed.
- *The second phase of the high-speed rail line HS2 is confirmed by the government, with lines running from Crewe to Manchester and the West Midlands to Leeds.
- 17 November – Tornadoes affect parts of The Midlands and Wales, causing some damage.
- 23 November – Chancellor Philip Hammond delivers the Autumn Statement to Parliament, announced to be the final such Statement, being replaced by a full Budget in 2017.
- 28 November – Paul Nuttall is elected as UKIP's new leader.
- 29 November – the Investigatory Powers Bill receives Royal Assent.
December
- 7 December – HMS Illustrious, the last, makes its final voyage out of Portsmouth Harbour to a ship recycling company in Turkey.
- 16 December – a riot occurs at HMP Birmingham, described as the worst since the Strangeways prison riot and protest of 1990. Authorities regain control of all four wings after more than 12 hours of disorder involving 600 inmates.
Publications
- Steve Cole's Heads You Die, the second novel in the Young Bond series.
- David Stuart Davies' novel The Ripper Legacy.
- Lindsey Davis' crime novel The Graveyard of the Hesperides.
- Owen Hatherley's The Ministry of Nostalgia.
- Deborah Levy's novel Hot Milk.
- Stuart MacBride's novel In the Cold Dark Ground.
- China Miéville's fantasy novella This Census-Taker.
- Tony Norfield's .
- Beatrix Potter's children's story The Tale of Kitty-in-Boots, discovered after 100 years.
- Terry Pratchett and Stephen Baxter's novel The Long Cosmos.
- Rosa Prince's Comrade Corbyn, the biography of Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.
- Kate Saunders, Brian Sibley, Jeanne Willis, and Paul Bright co-wrote The Best Bear in All the World, the authorised sequel to Winnie-the-Pooh from Egmont.
Deaths
January
- 1 January – Mark B, 45, hip-hop record producer.
- 2 January
- *Matt Hobden, 22, cricketer.
- *Thomas Johnstone McWiggan, 97, aviation engineer.
- *Leonard White, 99, television producer and actor.
- 3 January
- *Olwyn Hughes, 87, literary agent.
- *Peter Powell, 83, kite maker.
- *Tommy Sale, 97, rugby league player.
- 4 January
- *Tom Allin, 28, cricket player.
- *Robert Balser, 88, animator.
- *Colin Butler, 102, entomologist.
- *John Roberts, 69, footballer.
- *Robert Stigwood, 81, band manager and film producer.
- 5 January
- *Sian Blake, 43, actress .
- *Percy Freeman, 70, footballer.
- *Albert Gubay, 87, businessman.
- 7 January
- *Paddy Doherty, 89, Irish civil rights activist.
- *Alan Haven, 80, jazz organist.
- *Sir Christopher Wallace, 73, army general, Commandant Royal College of Defence Studies
- 8 January – Ida Gaskin, 96, teacher and quiz show contestant.
- 9 January
- *Ed Stewart, 74, radio presenter.
- *Gareth Hoskins, 48, architect.
- *Mike McGinnity, football chairman.
- 10 January
- *David Bowie, 69, singer-songwriter, record producer and actor.
- *Anthony Mellows, 79, barrister and academic, Lord Prior of the Order of St John.
- *John Stokes, 70, soldier and mountaineer.
- 11 January
- *Elizabeth Aston, 67, author.
- *Sir Kenneth Corfield, 91, camera engineer, inventor of the Corfield Periflex.
- *John Easter, 70, squash player and cricketer.
- 12 January
- *Robert Black, 68, serial killer and kidnapper.
- *Tommy Mulgrew, 86, footballer.
- *John Stevens, 86, journalist.
- 13 January
- *Brian Bedford, 80, actor.
- *Sir Albert McQuarrie, 98, Scottish politician, MP for East Aberdeenshire and Banff and Buchan.
- *Conrad Phillips, 90, television and film actor.
- *Mike Salmon, 82, racing driver.
- 14 January
- *Glyn W. Humphreys, 61, neuropsychologist.
- *Alan Rickman, 69, actor.
- *Robert Banks Stewart, 84, television writer.
- 15 January
- *Robin Fletcher, 93, academic administrator and Olympic field hockey player.
- *Charles Harbord-Hamond, 12th Baron Suffield, 62, nobleman.
- 17 January
- *Dale Griffin, 67, drummer.
- *Delphine Parrott, 87, immunologist.
- *Angus Ross, 49, darts player.
- 18 January
- *Terence Cook, 88, rugby union and rugby league footballer.
- *Andy Dog Johnson, 57, artist, designer of The The record sleeves.
- *Mike MacDowel, 83, racing driver.
- 19 January
- *Robert M. Carter, 73, marine geologist and climate skeptic.
- *Laurence Lerner, 90, literary critic.
- *Sheila Sim, Lady Attenborough, 93, actress.
- 20 January
- *Stuart Cowden, 90, footballer.
- *Brian Key, 68, politician, MEP for Yorkshire South.
- *George Weidenfeld, Baron Weidenfeld, 96, publisher, philanthropist, and newspaper columnist.
- 21 January
- *Michael Sheringham, literary academic, Marshal Foch Professor of French Literature at Oxford University.
- *Gerald Williams, 86, tennis commentator.
- 22 January
- *Jack Bannister, 85, cricket player and commentator.
- *Tommy Bryceland, 76, footballer.
- *John Dowie, 60, footballer.
- *Ian Murray, 83, Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Argyll and the Isles.
- *Denise Newman, 91, Olympic diver.
- *Cecil Parkinson, Lord Parkinson, 84, Conservative politician and cabinet minister, Secretary of State for Trade and Industry, Energy, and Transport, and Chairman of the Conservative Party.
- *Anthony Simmons, 93, screenwriter and film director.
- *Alec Wishart, 76, musician.
- 23 January
- *Jimmy Bain, 68, bassist.
- *Grahame Hodgson, 79, rugby union player.
- *Hugh Mortimer, 66, diplomat.
- 24 January
- *Christine Jackson, 53, cellist
- *Eric Webster, 84, footballer and football manager.
- *Henry Worsley, 55, adventurer.
- 26 January
- *Black, 53, singer-songwriter.
- *Ray Pointer, 79, footballer.
- 27 January
- *Peter Baker, 84, footballer.
- *Bernard Cookson, 79, cartoonist.
- *John F. G. Howe, 85, air marshal.
- 28 January
- *Tommy O'Hara, 62, footballer.
- *Nigel Peel, 48, cricketer.
- *Nadine Senior, 76, English dance teacher.
- *Dave Thomson, 77, footballer.
- 29 January
- *Gordon Goody, 86, criminal, mastermind of the Great Train Robbery.
- *John Roper, Baron Roper, 80, politician.
- *Donald I. Williamson, 94, biologist.
- 30 January
- *Tony Beard, 79, radio announcer.
- *Frank Finlay, 89, actor.
- 31 January
- *Gillian Avery, 89, children's novelist and historian.
- *Sir Terry Wogan, 77, broadcaster and BBC presenter of the Eurovision Song Contest.
February
- 1 February
- *Francis Ormsby-Gore, 6th Baron Harlech, 61, nobleman.
- *Tom Pugh, 78, cricketer.
- *Sir Peter Whiteley, 95, General in the Royal Marines, Lieutenant Governor of Jersey.
- 2 February – Seth Cardew, 81, studio potter.
- 4 February
- *William Gaskill, 85, theatre director.
- *Harry Glasgow, 76, footballer.
- *Harry Harpham, 61, politician, MP for Sheffield Brightside and Hillsborough.
- *Sir Jeremy Morse, 87, banker and crossword compiler.
- *David Sloan, 74, footballer.
- 6 February
- *Alastair Biggar, 69, rugby union player.
- 8 February
- *John Disley, 87, steeplechase runner, Olympic bronze medallist, and co-founder of the London Marathon.
- *Margaret Forster, 77, novelist and biographer.
- *Norman Hudis, 93, screenwriter.
- 9 February
- *Wayne England, artist.
- *Michael Hanlon, 51, science journalist.
- *Roy Harris, 82, folk singer.
- *Graham Moore, 74, footballer.
- 10 February
- *Ian Cowap, 65, cricketer.
- *Phil Gartside, 63, businessman and football chairman.
- 11 February
- *Les Belshaw, 88, rugby league footballer of the 1950s
- *Sir Timothy Bevan, 88, banker, chairman of Barclays.
- *Peter Wood, 90, theatre director.
- 12 February
- *Barbara Hardy, 92, author.
- *Keith Jeffery, 64, historian.
- 13 February
- *Flakey Dove, 30, racehorse, winner of the 1994 Champion Hurdle.
- *Sir Christopher Zeeman, 91, mathematician.
- *Members of the band Viola Beach killed in a car accident:
- **Jack Dakin, 19, drummer.
- **Kris Leonard, 20, singer and guitarist.
- **Tomas Lowe, 27, bassist.
- **River Reeves, 19, guitarist.
- **Craig Tarry, 32, manager.
- 14 February
- *Ali Brownlee, 56, radio sports broadcaster.
- *Drewe Henley, 75, actor.
- *David Hey, 77, historian.
- *Eric Lubbock, 4th Baron Avebury, 87, politician, MP for Orpington.
- 15 February – Walter McGowan, 73, boxer, world champion.
- 16 February
- *Ronnie Blackman, 90, footballer.
- *Gwyneth George, 95, concert cellist and music academic.
- *Jim Pleass, 92, cricketer.
- 18 February
- *Sir Tony Durant, 88, politician, MP.
- *Brendan Healy, 59, actor and musician.
- *Bruce Lacey, 89, artist and actor.
- *Johnny Miller, 65, footballer.
- *Don Rossiter, 80, footballer and politician.
- 19 February
- *Freddie Goodwin, 82, football player and manager.
- *Sir Anthony Hidden, 79, judge.
- *Sir William O'Brien, 99, admiral, Naval Secretary.
- *Vi Subversa, 80, musician.
- 20 February – Jon Rollason, 84, actor.
- 21 February
- *Eric Brown, 97, test pilot.
- *Roger Chorley, 2nd Baron Chorley, 85, nobleman.
- *Vlasta Dalibor, 94, puppeteer.
- *David Duffield, 84, sports commentator and cyclist.
- *Andrew Herxheimer, 90, physician and clinical pharmacologist.
- *Peter Marlow, 63, news photographer.
- 22 February – Douglas Slocombe, 103, cinematographer.
- 24 February
- *Jim McFadzean, 77, footballer.
- *S. F. C. Milsom, 92, barrister and legal historian.
- 25 February
- *John Chilton, 83, jazz musician and writer.
- *Jim Clark, 84, film editor, Oscar winner.
- 26 February
- *Antony Gibbs, 90, film editor.
- *Michael S. Longuet-Higgins, 90, mathematician and oceanographer.
- 27 February
- *Michael Bowes-Lyon, 18th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne, 58, nobleman and soldier.
- *Dick Bradsell, 56, bartender.
- *Steven Rumbelow, 66, theatre and film director.
- 28 February
- *Paul Colinvaux, 85, ecologist and author.
- *John Cameron, Lord Coulsfield, 81, judge, Senator of the College of Justice.
- *John Jones, 91, author and academic.
- 29 February – Louise Rennison, 64, author.
March
- 1 March
- *Peter Mathias, 88, economic historian.
- *Louise Plowright, 59, actress.
- *Tony Warren, 79, television scriptwriter.
- 2 March
- *Arthur Keily, 94, marathon runner.
- *Paul Webley, 62, educator, president of SOAS, University of London.
- 3 March
- *Lord James Blears, 92, professional wrestler.
- *Anthony Carrigan, 35, academic.
- *Cyril Denis, 71, land developer and hotelier.
- *Andrew Derbyshire, 92, architect.
- *Tony Dyson, 68, film prop designer.
- *John Thomas, 63, guitarist.
- 4 March
- *John Brooks, Baron Brooks of Tremorfa, 88, politician and boxing executive, President of the British Boxing Board of Control and Welsh Sports Hall of Fame.
- *Alistair Stuart, 89, newspaper editor.
- 5 March
- *John Douglas, 21st Earl of Morton, 88, nobleman.
- *John Evans, Baron Evans of Parkside, 85, politician, MP for Newton and St Helens North.
- *Alan Henry, 68, motorsport journalist.
- *Henry Hobhouse, 91, author.
- 6 March
- *Wally Bragg, 86, footballer.
- *Ernest George Mardon, 87, historian.
- 7 March
- *Leonard Berney, 95, military officer, a liberator of Bergen-Belsen.
- *Scott Goodall, 80, comic book writer.
- *Bryan Knights, 72, radio commentator and football broadcaster.
- *Michael White, 80, film and theatre producer, Tony Award-winner, and subject of The Last Impresario.
- 8 March
- *Jack Jones, 90, Olympic water polo player.
- *Sir George Martin, 90, record producer, composer, arranger and engineer, six times Grammy Award winner.
- 9 March
- *Bryan Coombs, 81, academic and shorthand expert.
- *Jon English, 66, musician and actor.
- 10 March
- *Sir Ken Adam, 95, production designer, Oscar winner.
- *Anita Brookner, 87, novelist and art historian, Man Booker Prize winner.
- *Keith Emerson, 71, progressive rock and rock keyboardist.
- 11 March
- *Doreen Massey, 72, geographer.
- *Brenda Naylor, 89, sculptor.
- *Billy Ritchie, 79, footballer.
- 13 March
- *Adrienne Corri, 85, actress.
- *Lord Michael Jones, 68, judge.
- 14 March
- *Sir Peter Maxwell Davies, 81, composer and conductor, Master of the Queen's Music.
- *Lilly Dubowitz, 85, paediatrician.
- 15 March
- *Sylvia Anderson, 88, television producer and voice actress.
- *Asa Briggs, Baron Briggs, 94, historian, codebreaker and life peer.
- *Sebastian Rahtz, 61, digital humanities researcher.
- 16 March
- *Cliff Michelmore, 96, television presenter and producer.
- *Alan Spavin, 74, footballer.
- 17 March
- *Paul Daniels, 77, magician and television presenter.
- *DJ Derek, 73, disc jockey..
- *Sandy McDonald, 78, Church of Scotland minister, Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland.
- *Trevor J. Phillips, 89, educational philosopher.
- 18 March
- *Barry Hines, 76, author.
- *John Urry, 79, sociologist.
- 19 March
- *David Green, 76, cricketer.
- *Jack Mansell, 88, footballer and football coach.
- 20 March
- *Jon Beazley, television executive and producer.
- *Jack Boxley, 84, footballer.
- *Mark Sutton, 46, rugby union player.
- 21 March – Robert McNeill Alexander, 81, zoologist.
- 22 March – Petra Davies, 85, actress.
- 23 March
- *David Blackburn, 76, artist.
- *Sir Richard George, 71, food manufacturer.
- *Desmond McKeown, 79, rugby league player..
- *Sir Peter Moores, 83, businessman, and chairman of Everton.
- 24 March – Brendan Sloan, 67, Gaelic football player.
- 25 March
- *Ken Barr, 83, artist.
- *Terry Brain, 60, animator.
- *David Snellgrove, 95, Tibetologist.
- 26 March
- *Michael MccGwire, 91, foreign policy analyst.
- *Bernard Neal, 93, structural engineer and croquet player.
- 28 March
- *Peggy Fortnum, 96, illustrator.
- *Derek Robertson, 64, football executive.
- 30 March
- *Denys Carnill, 90, field hockey player, Olympic bronze medalist.
- *John King, 77, football player and manager.
- *Andy Newman, 73, pianist.
- 31 March
- *Ian Britton, 61, footballer and manager.
- *Ronnie Corbett, 85, actor and comedian.
- *Sir Robert Finch, 71, Lord Mayor of London.
- *Dame Zaha Hadid, 65, Iraqi-born architect.
- *Denise Robertson, 83, writer and television broadcaster.
- *Jimmy Toner, 92, footballer.
- *Kris Travis, 33, professional wrestler.
- *Douglas Wilmer, 96, actor.
April
- 1 April
- *Alan Carter, 86, civil servant, Director of Immigration of Hong Kong.
- *Tony Whittaker, 81, solicitor and politician.
- 2 April – Gareth Jones, 85, legal academic.
- 3 April
- *John Vane, 11th Baron Barnard, 92, nobleman.
- *Martin Lampkin, 65, motorcycle trials rider.
- *John Waite, 74, footballer.
- 4 April
- *Royston Nash, 82, conductor.
- *Ken Waterhouse, 85, footballer.
- 5 April
- *Henry Hobhouse, 91, journalist and historian.
- *Mick Sullivan, 82, rugby league footballer, world champion.
- 6 April – Sid Nathan, 93, boxer and referee.
- 7 April
- *Adrian Greenwood, 42, art dealer and author.
- *Rachel Johnson, 93, last native of the Scottish island of St Kilda.
- *Garry Jones, 65, footballer.
- *Charles Thomas, 87, archaeologist.
- *Ruth Westbrook, 85, cricket player and coach.
- 8 April
- *Mildred Gordon, 92, politician, MP for Bow and Poplar.
- *Fred Middleton, 85, footballer.
- *David Swift, 85, actor.
- 9 April
- *Patrick J. O'Donnell, 68, academic.
- *Martin Roberts, 48, rugby union player.
- 10 April
- *Howard Marks, 70, cannabis smuggler, writer and campaigner.
- *Adrian St John, 22, cricketer.
- 11 April
- *Emile Ford, 78, singer.
- *Nicholas Gargano, 81, boxer, Olympic bronze medallist.
- *Dame Marion Kettlewell, 102, naval officer, Director of the Wrens.
- 12 April
- *Alan Loveday, 88, violinist.
- *Sir Arnold Wesker, 83, playwright.
- 13 April
- *Srinivas Aravamudan, 54, academic.
- *Steve Quinn, 64, rugby league player.
- *Jock Scot, 64, poet and recording artist.
- *Gareth Thomas, 71, actor.
- *Gwyn Thomas, 79, poet and academic, National Poet of Wales.
- 14 April
- *David Collischon, 78, executive.
- *Martin Fitzmaurice, 75, darts personality.
- *Ted Gundry, 81, radio broadcaster.
- *Sir David MacKay, 48, author, scientist and professor.
- *Phil Sayer, 62, voice artist.
- 15 April
- *Morag Siller, 46, actress.
- *Guy Woolfenden, 78, composer and conductor.
- 16 April
- *Richard Smith, 84, painter.
- *Kit West, 79, special effects artist, Oscar winner.
- 18 April
- *Adrian Berry, 4th Viscount Camrose, 78, peer and journalist.
- *Barry Davies, 71, soldier and extractor of Lufthansa Flight 181 hostages.
- *Karina Huff, 55, actress and television personality.
- *Sir John Leslie, 4th Baronet, 99, aristocrat and media personality.
- 19 April
- *Harry Elderfield, 72, geochemist and professor.
- *Billy Redmayne, 25, motorcycle racer.
- 20 April
- *Cynthia Cooke, 96, nurse, Matron-in-Chief of the Queen Alexandra's Royal Naval Nursing Service.
- *Guy Hamilton, 93, film director.
- *Avril Henry, 81, academic.
- *Victoria Wood, 62, comedian and actress.
- *Jack Tafari, 69, activist.
- 21 April – John Walton, Baron Walton of Detchant, 93, peer.
- 22 April
- *David Beresford, 68, journalist.
- *John Lumsden, 55, footballer.
- *Sir Denys Wilkinson, 93, nuclear physicist.
- 23 April
- *Patrick George, 92, painter.
- *Sir Richard Parsons, 88, diplomat, Ambassador to Hungary, Spain and Sweden.
- *Maurice Peston, Baron Peston, 85, peer, politician and economist.
- 26 April – Mark Farmer, 53, actor.
- 27 April
- *Harold Cohen, 87, computer artist.
- *Angela Flanders, 88, perfumer.
- *Herta Groves, 96, milliner.
- 28 April
- *Sir Edward Ashmore, 96, Royal Naval officer, First Sea Lord.
- *Jenny Diski, 68, writer.
- *Barry Howard, 78, actor.
- 29 April
- *Tim Bacon, 52, restaurateur and actor.
- *Alyson Bailes, 67, diplomat, ambassador to Finland.
- *Dave Robinson, 67, footballer.
- 30 April
- *Sir Harry Kroto, 76, chemist, winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
- *Phil Ryan, 69, keyboardist.
May
- 1 May – Richard Gilpin, 76, Anglican vicar, Archdeacon of Totnes.
- 2 May
- *Basil Blackshaw, 84, artist.
- *Jonathan Cainer, 58, astrologer.
- *Richard Davis, 66, radio astronomer.
- *Paul McDowell, 84, actor and singer.
- *Roger Millward, 68, rugby league player.
- 3 May – Kristian Ealey, 38, actor and musician.
- 4 May
- *Sir Jack Baer, 91, art dealer.
- *Michael Caborn-Waterfield, 86, businessman.
- 5 May – Matt Irwin, 36, photographer.
- 6 May
- *Lakshmi Holmström, 81, author and translator.
- *Chris Mitchell, 27, footballer.
- 7 May
- *John Krish, 92, film director.
- *George Ross, 73, footballer.
- 8 May – Sir Iain Glidewell, 91, jurist, Lord Justice of Appeal.
- 9 May
- *Comply or Die, 17, thoroughbred racehorse, winner of the 2008 Grand National.
- *Gareth Gwenlan, 79, television producer.
- *Bill MacIlwraith, 88, playwright and screenwriter.
- *Dennis Nineham, 94, theologian.
- *John Warr, 88, cricketer.
- 10 May
- *Sally Brampton, 60, writer and magazine editor.
- *Sarah Corp, 41, television news producer.
- *Nicholas Fisk, 92, children's author.
- 11 May
- *Seb Adeniran-Olule, 20, rugby union player.
- *Bobby Carroll, 77, footballer.
- *David King, 73, graphic designer, art collector and writer.
- *Joe Temperley, 86, jazz saxophonist.
- 12 May – Sidney Brazier, 96, army bomb disposal officer.
- 14 May
- *Tony Barrow, 80, press officer.
- *John Coyle, 83, footballer.
- *Malachi Mitchell-Thomas, 20, motorcycle racer.
- *Kenneth Painter, 71, archaeologist and curator.
- 15 May – Bobby McIlvenny, 89, footballer.
- 16 May
- *Sir Gavyn Farr Arthur, 64, judge, Lord Mayor of London.
- *Anthony Bird, 85, Anglican priest and academic.
- *Ken Cameron, 74, trade unionist.
- *John O. Hughes, 97, football administrator.
- *David Rendel, 67, politician, MP for Newbury.
- 18 May
- *Ethel Bush, 100, police officer.
- *Adrian Flowers, 89, photographer.
- 19 May
- *George Forty, 88, army officer and author.
- *Hugh Honour, 88, art historian.
- *Donald Snelgrove, 91, Anglican clergyman, Bishop of Hull.
- 20 May
- *Malvina Cheek, 100, war artist.
- *Audrey Purton, 90, Women's Royal Army Corps officer.
- 21 May
- *Jane Fawcett, 95, codebreaker at Bletchley Park during the Second World War, and key figure in the sinking of the Bismarck.
- *Sir Denys Henderson, 83, businessman, chairman of ICI.
- *Alan Lewis, 61, footballer.
- *Chris Meek, 86, racing driver and businessman, owner of Mallory Park.
- 24 May – Burt Kwouk, 85, actor.
- 25 May
- *Ian Gibson, 73, footballer.
- *Peggy Spencer, 96, dancer.
- *John Webster, 60, theologian.
- 27 May – Henrietta Phipps, 84, landscape gardener.
- 28 May
- *Patrick Neill, Baron Neill of Bladen, 89, barrister and life peer.
- *Edward O'Hara, 78, politician, MP for Knowsley South.
- 29 May
- *Alan Devereux, 75, actor.
- *Edward Morris, 75, art historian.
- *Berrick Saul, 91, economist and academic administrator.
- 31 May
- *James Campbell, 81, historian.
- *Carla Lane, 87, television writer.
- *Peter Owen, 89, publisher.
- *Pam Royds, 91, publisher.
June
- 1 June
- *John Taylor, 87, Anglican clergyman and theologian, Bishop of St Albans.
- *Alan Wise, 63, record producer.
- 2 June – Sir Tom Kibble, 83, physicist.
- 3 June – Dave Swarbrick, 75, folk musician and singer-songwriter.
- 4 June
- *Annie Castledine, 77, theatre director.
- *Nicky Jennings, 70, footballer.
- *Sir Brian McGrath, 90, courtier, private secretary to the Duke of Edinburgh.
- *Alan Rathbone, 57, rugby league player.
- 6 June
- *Harry Gregory, 72, footballer.
- *John Charles Harding, 2nd Baron Harding of Petherton, 88, army officer and peer.
- *Sir Peter Shaffer, 90, playwright and screenwriter, Tony Award winner.
- 7 June
- *Johnny Brooks, 84, footballer.
- *Peter Jost, 95, mechanical engineer.
- 8 June – Michael Manser, 87, architect.
- 9 June
- *Hamza Ali, 20, cricketer.
- *Bernard Shrimsley, 85, newspaper editor.
- 10 June – Alex Govan, 86, footballer.
- 11 June
- *Donald Carr, 89, cricketer.
- *Alberto Remedios, 81, operatic tenor.
- 12 June
- *Rodney Leach, Baron Leach of Fairford, 82, banker and politician.
- *Tom Leppard, 80, tattooed man.
- 14 June
- *Ronan Costello, 17, rugby league player.
- *Henry McCullough, 72, guitarist.
- 15 June
- *Bob Holman, 79, academic and community worker.
- *Harry Moule, 94, cricketer.
- 16 June – Jo Cox, 41, politician, MP for Batley and Spen, assassinated.
- 17 June
- *Audrey Disbury, 82, cricketer.
- *Sam Beaver King, 90, political activist, Mayor of Southwark, co-founder of the Notting Hill Carnival.
- *Tenor Fly, rapper and ragga vocalist.
- 19 June – Bob Williamson, 67, songwriter and comedian.
- 21 June
- *Karl Dallas, 85, journalist, author and campaigner.
- *Bryan Edwards, 85, footballer.
- 22 June
- *David J. Hickson, 85, organizational theorist.
- *Harry Rabinowitz, 100, composer and conductor.
- 23 June – Peter Morley, 91, filmmaker.
- 24 June – Steven Hancock, 58, Olympic kayaker and business executive.
- 25 June
- *Percy Beake, 99, WWII fighter pilot.
- *Patrick Mayhew, Baron Mayhew of Twysden, 86, barrister and politician, Secretary of State for Northern Ireland.
- 28 June – Freddie Gilroy, 80, bantamweight boxer, Olympic bronze medallist.
- 30 June
- *Geoffrey Hill, 84, poet.
- *Gordon Murray, 95, television producer and puppeteer.
July
- 1 July
- *Tom Boulton, 90, anaesthetist.
- *Robin Hardy, 86, film director.
- 2 July
- *Caroline Aherne, 52, comedian, writer and actress.
- *Euan Lloyd, 92, film producer.
- *Harold "H" Nelson, 88, cycling coach.
- *Robert Nye, 77, poet.
- 3 July
- *Michael Beaumont, 22nd Seigneur of Sark, 88, aristocrat.
- *Jimmy Frizzell, 79, footballer and football manager.
- *John Middleton, 59, footballer.
- 4 July – Geoffrey Shovelton, 80, opera singer and illustrator.
- 5 July
- *Beatrice de Cardi, 102, archaeologist.
- *John Baillie-Hamilton, 13th Earl of Haddington, 74, peer.
- *David Jones, 66, politician, member of the States of Guernsey.
- *Brian White, 59, politician, MP for North East Milton Keynes.
- *Victor P. Whittaker, 97, biochemist.
- 6 July – Matthew Evans, Baron Evans of Temple Guiting, 74, politician and publisher.
- 7 July
- *Sally Beauman, 71, author.
- *James Gilbert, 93, television producer.
- *John O'Rourke, 71, footballer.
- 8 July
- *Frank Dickens, 84, cartoonist.
- *William Lucas, 91, actor.
- *Cicely Mayhew, 92, diplomat.
- *Jackie McInally, 76, footballer.
- *Paddy Phelan, 78, cricketer .
- 9 July
- *Gladys Hooper, 113, supercentenarian, oldest living person in the United Kingdom.
- *Ray Spencer, 82, footballer.
- 10 July – David Stride, 58, footballer.
- 11 July – Elaine Fantham, 83, classicist.
- 13 July – George Allen, 84, footballer.
- 14 July – Michael J. Elliott, 65, newspaper and magazine editor.
- 15 July
- *Helen Bailey, 51, author.
- *Peregrine Eliot, 10th Earl of St Germans, 75, peer and festival founder.
- 18 July
- *Richard Budge, 69, businessman.
- *John Hope, 67, footballer.
- *Les Stocker, 73, wildlife expert, founder of Tiggywinkles.
- 19 July
- *Tom McCready, 72, footballer.
- *John Pidgeon, 69, writer and broadcaster.
- *Anthony D. Smith, 76, historical sociologist.
- 20 July – Jim Pressdee, 83, cricketer.
- 21 July
- *John Garton, 74, Anglican prelate, Bishop of Plymouth.
- *Des Rea, 72, boxer.
- *J. O. Roberts, 84, actor.
- 23 July
- *Kate Granger, 34, physician and fundraiser.
- *Sir David Goodall, 84, diplomat, British High Commissioner to India.
- 24 July – Keith Gemmell, 68, musician.
- 25 July
- *Tom Clegg, 81, television and film director.
- *Eric Kuhne, 64, architect.
- 26 July
- *Roye Albrighton, 67, rock guitarist and singer.
- *Anne Balfour-Fraser, 92, film producer.
- *Maggie Macdonald, 63, singer in Scottish Gaelic.
- *Sylvia Peters, 90, continuity announcer and actress.
- *Dave Syrett, 60, footballer.
- 28 July
- *Norman Guthkelch, 100, paediatric neurosurgeon.
- *Patrick Jourdain, 73, bridge player and journalist.
- 29 July – Ken Barrie, 83, voice actor and singer.
- 31 July
- *Gwynn ap Gwilym, 61, author.
- *Bill Holdsworth, 87, cricketer.
August
- 1 August
- *Dai Dower, 83, flyweight boxer.
- *Sir Derek Oulton, 89, civil servant, Permanent Secretary of the Lord Chancellor's Department and Clerk of the Crown in Chancery.
- 2 August
- *Jonathan Borwein, 65, mathematician.
- *Tony Chater, 86, communist activist and newspaper editor.
- *John Fox, 87, cricketer.
- *Neil Wilkinson, 61, footballer.
- 3 August – Russell Coughlin, 56, footballer.
- 5 August
- *David Attwooll, 67, poet and publisher.
- *Sir Robin Chichester-Clark, 88, politician, MP for Londonderry.
- *Joe Davis, 75, footballer.
- *Harold Hillman, 85, scientist.
- *Sir Leonard Peach, 83–84, civil servant, Chief Executive of the NHS.
- *John Alan Robinson, 86, philosopher, mathematician and computer scientist.
- 6 August
- *Alan Dossor, 74, theatre director.
- *Kenneth Durham, 62, educationalist, headmaster of University College School.
- *Mel Slack, 72, footballer.
- *Samuel Robin Spark, 78, artist.
- 7 August
- *Jack Sears, 86, race and rally driver.
- *Peter Stein, 90, legal scholar.
- *Roy Summersby, 81, footballer.
- 8 August – Edward Daly, 82, Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Derry.
- 9 August
- *Gerald Grosvenor, 6th Duke of Westminster, 64, peer, Army major-general and billionaire property developer.
- *Bob Kiley, 80, public transport planner, Commissioner of Transport for London.
- 11 August
- *Roly Bain, 62, priest and clown.
- *Charles Bawden, 92, Mongolist.
- *David Enthoven, 72, music manager and record label founder.
- 12 August
- *Keith Blunt, 77, football coach.
- *Sir Swinton Thomas, 85, judge.
- 13 August
- *Kenny Baker, 81, actor.
- *Patricia English, 84, actress.
- 14 August
- *Neil Black, 84, oboist.
- *Robert Goff, Baron Goff of Chieveley, 89, judge and law lord.
- 15 August
- *Dalian Atkinson, 48, footballer.
- *Ieuan Roberts, 66, political activist.
- 17 August
- *John Ellenby, 75, computer scientist.
- *Barry Myers, 79, advertising filmmaker.
- 18 August – Michael Napier Brown, 79, actor, theatre director and playwright.
- 19 August
- *Trevor Baker, 94, meteorologist.
- *Peter Blundell Jones, 66–67, architect and architectural historian.
- *Colin O'Brien, 76, photographer.
- *Danus Skene, 72, politician.
- 20 August
- *Brian Rix, 92, actor and activist.
- *Tom Searle, 28, metalcore guitarist.
- 21 August
- *Sir Antony Jay, 86, broadcaster, director and writer.
- *Derek Smith, 85, jazz pianist.
- *Rab Stewart, 54, footballer.
- 22 August
- *Michael Leader, 78, actor.
- *Gilli Smyth, 83, singer.
- 23 August – Dennis Hackett, 87, journalist and editor.
- 25 August
- *Dame Margaret Anstee, 90, diplomat, Director-General of the UN Office in Vienna.
- *G. Spencer-Brown, 93, polymath.
- 26 August
- *Graham Cairns-Smith, 74–75, scientist.
- *J. Alec Motyer, 91, biblical scholar.
- *Michael Phillips, ice dancer.
- *Martyn Quayle, 57, politician, member of the House of Keys.
- 27 August
- *Alan Cuthbert, 84, pharmacologist.
- *Alan Smith, 77, footballer.
- 28 August – Ken Purchase, 77, politician, MP for Wolverhampton North East.
- 29 August
- *Harry Jepson, 96, rugby league administrator.
- *Reg Matthewson, 77, footballer.
- 30 August – Dave Durie, 85, footballer.
- 31 August
- *David H. Trump, 85, archaeologist.
- *Brian Wildsmith, 86, artist and illustrator of children's books.
- *Miles Vaughan Williams, 98, pharmacologist.
September
- 1 September – Frans ten Bos, 79, rugby union player.
- 2 September
- *David Morgan, 56, journalist.
- *Eileen Younghusband, 95, WW2 air officer and author.
- 4 September
- *David Jenkins, 91, Anglican cleric and theologian, Bishop of Durham.
- *Melvyn Pignon, 86, field hockey player.
- 5 September
- *George McLeod, 83, footballer.
- *Max Murray, 80, footballer.
- *Donald Ranvaud, 62, journalist and film producer.
- 7 September
- *Emlyn Davies, 94, rugby union player.
- *Ken Higgs, 79, cricketer.
- *Dave Pacey, 79, footballer.
- 8 September
- *Sir Trevor Jones, 89, politician.
- *Bert Llewellyn, 77, footballer.
- *John Watts, 69, politician, MP for Slough.
- 9 September
- *Sylvia Gore, 71, football player and manager.
- *Lord Littlebrook, 87, midget wrestler.
- 11 September
- *Beryl Crockford, 66, rower, world champion.
- *Gavin Frost, 86, Wiccan author.
- 12 September
- *Gerry Haywood, 69–70, darts player.
- *Hidayat Inayat Khan, 99, composer and conductor.
- 13 September
- *Denis Atkins, 77, footballer.
- *Matt Gray, 80, footballer.
- *Jonathan Riley-Smith, 78, historian.
- 14 September
- *Lady Caroline Faber, 93, aristocrat.
- *Richard Whittington-Egan, 91, writer and criminologist.
- *Gareth F. Williams, 61, author.
- 18 September
- *Stephanie Booth, 70, hotelier.
- *Sir Nicholas Fenn, 80, diplomat, High Commissioner to India.
- 20 September
- *Bernard Bergonzi, 87, literary scholar.
- *Alan Cousin, 78, footballer.
- *Jim Semple, 81, businessman.
- 21 September – Jack Rawlings, 93, footballer.
- 23 September – David Coleman, 73, footballer.
- 24 September
- *Mel Charles, 81, footballer.
- *James Crowden, 88, Olympic rower, Lord Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire.
- 25 September
- *Hughie Jones, 89, Anglican rector, Archdeacon of Loughborough.
- *Sir Patrick Sissons, 71, professor of medicine.
- 26 September
- *Don Brothwell, 82–83, archaeologist.
- *Jackie Sewell, 89, footballer.
- 27 September
- *Ronald King Murray, Lord Murray, 94, politician and jurist, Lord Advocate.
- *Paddy O'Flaherty, 73, broadcaster.
- *Mike Taylor, vocalist.
- 28 September – Graham Hawkins, 70, footballer and football manager.
- 29 September
- *Terence Brady, 77, writer, and actor.
- *Ann Emery, 86, actress.
- *Anthony Ryle, 89, doctor.
- 30 September
- *Gordon Borrie, Baron Borrie, 85, lawyer and life peer.
- *Michael Casswell, 53, guitarist.
- *Victor Munden, 88, cricketer..
- *Mike Towell, 25, professional boxer.
October
- 1 October – David Herd, 82, footballer.
- 2 October
- *Steve Byrd, 61, guitarist.
- *Mary Hesse, 91, academician and educator.
- *Sir Neville Marriner, 92, conductor and founder of the Academy of St Martin in the Fields.
- *Thomas Round, 100, opera singer.
- 3 October
- *Anthony Goodman, 80, historian.
- *Andrew Vicari, 84, painter.
- 4 October
- *Caroline Crawley, singer and musician.
- *Stephen de Mowbray, 91, counter-intelligence officer.
- *Merfyn Jones, 85, footballer.
- 5 October – Rod Temperton, 66, keyboardist and songwriter..
- 6 October
- *Peter Denton, 70, footballer.
- *Alan Hodgson, 64, cricketer.
- *Tony Mottram, 96, tennis player.
- *Mike Tomkies, 88, nature writer.
- 7 October
- *Anne Pashley, 80, athlete and opera singer, Olympic silver medalist.
- *Wolfgang Suschitzky, 104, photographer and cinematographer.
- *Alistair Urquhart, 97, author and soldier in the Gordon Highlanders during World War II.
- 8 October
- *Dickie Jeeps, 84, rugby union player and administrator.
- *Michael Horace Miller, 88, RAF air commodore.
- 9 October
- *Angus Grant, 49, fiddler.
- *Sir Anthony Grant, 91, politician, MP for Harrow Central, and Cambridgeshire South West.
- *David Konstant, 86, Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Leeds.
- 10 October
- *Gerry Gow, 64, footballer.
- *Graham C. Greene, 80, publisher.
- *Drew Nelson, 60, solicitor, politician, and Grand Secretary of the Grand Orange Lodge of Ireland.
- *Eddie O'Hara, 80, footballer.
- *Ellis T. Pritchard, 84, Sailor.
- 11 October
- *Peter Reynolds, 58, composer.
- *Ewen Whitaker, 94, astronomer.
- 12 October
- *Mark Fisher, 57, pop musician.
- *Leo Harrison, 94, cricketer.
- 13 October – William Gilbert Chaloner, 87, palaeobotanist.
- 14 October
- *Jean Alexander, 90, actress.
- *John Mone, 87, Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Paisley.
- 15 October
- *Colin George, 87, actor and director.
- *John Spanswick, 83, cricketer.
- 16 October
- *Valerie Hunter Gordon, 94, inventor of the disposable nappy.
- *Molly Rose, 95, World War II aviator.
- 17 October – George Peebles, 80, footballer.
- 18 October
- *Dave Colclough, 52, professional poker player.
- *Alan Collins, 88, sculptor.
- *Mike Daniels, 88, jazz trumpeter and bandleader.
- *Marianne de Trey, 102, potter.
- *Huw Jones, 82, Anglican clergyman, Bishop of St. David's.
- *William McKelvey, 82, politician, MP for Kilmarnock and Loudoun.
- *Sir Sigmund Sternberg, 95, philanthropist, businessman and Labour Party donor.
- 19 October
- *Mark Birch, 67, jockey.
- *Rough Quest, 30, racehorse, winner of the 1996 Grand National.
- *Norman Sherry, 91, author.
- *Gary Sprake, 71, footballer.
- *Sammy Smyth, 91, footballer.
- 20 October – Benedict Read, 71, art historian.
- 21 October
- *Dave Cash, 74, radio presenter.
- *Roy Jennings, 84, footballer.
- *Richard Nicoll, 39, fashion designer.
- *Raine Spencer, Countess Spencer, 87, socialite and politician.
- 22 October
- *Martin Aitchison, 96, illustrator.
- *Steve Dillon, 54, comic book artist.
- *Gordon Hamilton, 50, climate scientist.
- 23 October
- *Pete Burns, 57, singer-songwriter.
- *Jimmy Perry, 93, actor and scriptwriter.
- 24 October
- *Benjamin Creme, 93, artist, author and esotericist.
- *Roland Dobbs, 91, physicist.
- 25 October – Howard Davies, 71, theatre and television director.
- 27 October
- *Brian Hill, 75, footballer.
- *David Nash, 77, rugby union player.
- *Bobby Wellins, 80, jazz saxophonist.
- 29 October
- *Raymond Gilmour, 56 or 57, undercover agent, infiltrated INLA and PIRA..
- *Dave Lanning, 78, sports commentator.
- 30 October – Jack Braughton, 95, Olympic long distance runner.
- 31 October
- *Victor Cannings, 97, cricketer.
- *Jimmy Gray, 90, cricketer.
- *Ray Mabbutt, 80, footballer.
- *Lionel Morrison, 81, journalist and trade unionist.
November
- 1 November
- *Bap Kennedy, 54, singer-songwriter.
- *Martin Leach, 59, automotive executive.
- 5 November
- *John Carson, 89, actor.
- *Giles Waterfield, 67, art historian and curator.
- 6 November
- *Roddy Evans, 81, rugby union player.
- *Mick Granger, 85, footballer.
- *Thomas Martyn, 69, rugby league player.
- 7 November
- *Thomas Gardner, 93, footballer.
- *Sir Jimmy Young, 95, singer and radio broadcaster.
- 8 November – Ian Cowan, 71, footballer.
- 9 November
- *Jack Bodell, 76, heavyweight boxer, British champion.
- *Branse Burbridge, 95, World War Two fighter pilot.
- *Martin Stone, 69, guitarist and bookseller.
- 11 November
- *Sir Ralph Kohn, 88, medical scientist.
- *Sir Aubrey Trotman-Dickenson, 90, chemist.
- 12 November – Louis Devereux, 85, cricketer.
- 13 November
- *Don Rutherford, 79, rugby union player.
- *Sir Mota Singh, 86, judge.
- *Denys Smith, 92, racehorse trainer.
- 15 November
- *Bobby Campbell, 60, footballer.
- *Ken Grieve, 74, television director.
- 16 November – Len Allchurch, 83, footballer.
- 17 November – Steve Truglia, 54, stuntman.
- 18 November
- *Jerzy Cynk, 91, aviation historian.
- *Paul Newbold, 71, econometrist.
- 19 November – David Turner-Samuels, 98, barrister.
- 20 November
- *Sally Grace, 78, actress and voice teacher.
- *Tim Heald, 72, author and journalist.
- 22 November – Craig Gill, 44, rock drummer.
- 23 November
- *Joe Lennon, 80–81, Gaelic footballer.
- *Andrew Sachs, 86, actor.
- 24 November
- *Michael Abbensetts, 78, playwright.
- *Paul Futcher, 60, footballer.
- 25 November
- *David Hamilton, 83, photographer.
- *Margaret Rhodes, 91, writer and cousin of Elizabeth II.
- *Thomas Taylor, Baron Taylor of Blackburn, 87, Labour politician.
- 26 November – David Provan, 75, footballer.
- 27 November
- *Bernard Gallagher, 87, actor.
- *Valerie Gaunt, 84, actress.
- *John Mansfield, 108, oldest man in the United Kingdom.
- 28 November – Sir John Swire, 89, businessman.
- 29 November
- *Joe Dever, 60, author.
- *Duncan B. Forrester, 83, theologian.
- *Norman Oakley, 77, footballer.
- 30 November – Leonard of Mayfair, 78, hairdresser.
December
- 1 December
- *Micky Fitz, punk singer.
- *Barry Lloyd, 63, cricketer.
- 2 December
- *Coral Atkins, 80, actress.
- *Jean Stead, 90, journalist.
- 3 December – Arthur Latham, 86, politician, MP for Paddington North and Paddington, Leader of the London Borough of Havering.
- 4 December
- *Lady Moyra Browne, 98, nursing administrator.
- *Peter Latham, 91, air marshal.
- *Patricia Robins, 95, novelist.
- 6 December
- *Dave MacLaren, 82, football player and manager.
- *Peter Vaughan, 93, actor.
- 7 December
- *Brian Bulless, 83, footballer.
- *Ian Cartwright, 52, footballer.
- *Alex Johnstone, 55, politician, MSP for North East Scotland.
- *Greg Lake, 69, singer and musician.
- *Helen Roseveare, 91, Christian missionary.
- *Romilly Squire of Rubislaw, 63, heraldic artist.
- *Allan Stewart, 74, politician, MP for East Renfrewshire, and Eastwood.
- 8 December
- *Gareth Griffiths, 85, rugby union player.
- *Peter Jackson, 90, animal conservationist and journalist.
- *Dame Sheila Quinn, 96, nurse, President of the Royal College of Nursing.
- *Fred Secombe, 98, Church in Wales priest and writer.
- *Sir Alan Urwick, 86, diplomat and public servant, Ambassador to Egypt, High Commissioner to Canada, Serjeant-at-Arms of the House of Commons.
- 10 December
- *Peter Brabrook, 79, footballer.
- *A. A. Gill, 62, writer and restaurant critic.
- *Ian McCaskill, 78, television weatherman and meteorologist.
- *Tommy McCulloch, 82, footballer.
- 11 December
- *Valerie Gell, 71, singer and guitarist.
- *Charlie McNeil, 53, footballer.
- *John Moffat, 97, Royal Navy pilot during the Second World War and veteran of the sinking of the Bismarck.
- *Michael Nicholson, 79, journalist and war correspondent.
- 12 December
- *Mark Fisher, 57, pop musician.
- *Gustav Jahoda, 96, psychologist.
- *Jim Prior, Baron Prior, 89, politician, Secretary of State for Northern Ireland and Employment.
- *Walter Swinburn, 55, jockey.
- 14 December
- *Bernard Fox, 89, actor.
- *Sir Dudley Smith, 90, politician, MP for Brentford and Chiswick and Warwick and Leamington.
- *Jeremy Summers, 85, film and television director.
- 15 December
- *Albert Bennett, 72, footballer.
- *Dave Shepherd, 87, jazz clarinetist.
- 18 December
- *Rachel Owen, 48, academic and printmaker.
- *Jack V. Lunzer, 92, industrial diamond merchant and museum curator.
- 19 December
- *Lionel Blue, 86, rabbi, journalist and broadcaster.
- *Annette Karmiloff-Smith, 78, neuroscientist.
- *Sir John Oakeley, 8th Baronet, 84, Olympic yachtsman.
- *Christopher Young, 71, rugby league player.
- 20 December
- *Patrick Jenkin, Baron Jenkin of Roding, 90, politician, Secretary of State for Social Services, Industry, and Environment.
- *Dame Frances Patterson, 62, judge.
- 21 December
- *Deddie Davies, 78, actress and musician.
- *John Gwilliam, 93, rugby union player.
- *Bob Jeffery, 81, Anglican priest, Dean of Worcester.
- *Nigel Nicholls, 78, civil servant, Clerk of the Privy Council.
- 22 December
- *John Buckingham, 76, jockey.
- *Philip Saville, 86, actor, television director and screenwriter.
- 23 December
- *John Aitchison, 90, statistician.
- *Robert Hinde, 93, zoologist, Master of St John's College, Cambridge.
- *Piers Sellers, 61, astronaut and meteorologist.
- *George Thompson, 88, politician, MP for Galloway.
- 24 December
- *Richard Adams, 96, author.
- *Rick Parfitt, 68, singer, songwriter and guitarist.
- *Liz Smith, 95, actress.
- 25 December
- *Lady Marion Fraser, 84, music educator.
- *John Sedgwick Gregson, 92, George Cross recipient.
- *George Michael, 53, singer and songwriter.
- *John Nike, 81, businessman.
- 26 December – Mary Wondrausch, 93, artist and potter.
- 29 December
- *Matt Carragher, 40, footballer.
- *John Kelly, 84, boxer.
- *Norman Rimmington, 93, footballer.
- 30 December
- *Allan Williams, 86, businessman and promoter.
- *Tommy Wisbey, 86, criminal, participant in the Great Train Robbery.
- 31 December – Sir Dennis Faulkner, 90, officer in the Royal Navy.