List of mathematicians, physicians, and scientists educated at Jesus College, Oxford


is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England. The college was founded in 1571 by Queen Elizabeth I at the request of Hugh Price, a Welsh clergyman, who was Treasurer of St David's Cathedral in Pembrokeshire. The college still has strong links with Wales, and about 15% of students are Welsh. There are 340 undergraduates and 190 students carrying out postgraduate studies. Women have been admitted since 1974, when the college was one of the first five men's colleges to become co-educational. Old members of Jesus College are sometimes known as "Jesubites".
Mathematicians who have studied at Jesus College include Nigel Hitchin, Jonathan Borwein, and Jim Mauldon. David E. Evans is Professor of Mathematics at Cardiff University, and H. W. Lloyd Tanner was Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy at one of its predecessor institutions, the University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire. Several noted individuals from biology, botany and zoology were educated at the college, including the Welsh clergyman Hugh Davies, Edward Bagnall Poulton and James Brontë Gatenby. Frank Greenaway was Keeper of the Department of Chemistry at the Science Museum in London for over 20 years, and the physicist Chris Rapley was director of the museum 2007–2010. Other physicists who are Old Members of the college include Michael Woolfson and Edward Hinds. Edwin Stevens, who studied Natural Science at the college, designed the world's first wearable hearing aid, and Sir Graham Sutton became director-general of the Meteorological Office.
The college had its own science laboratories from 1907 to 1947, which were overseen by the physical chemist David Chapman, a Fellow of the college from 1907 to 1944. At the time of their closure, they were the last college-based science laboratories at the university. They were named the Sir Leoline Jenkins laboratories, after a former principal of the college. Scientific research and tuition became an important part of the college's academic life after the construction of the laboratories. The brochure produced for the opening ceremony noted that the number of science students at the college had increased rapidly in recent years, and that provision of college laboratories would assist the tuition of undergraduates, as well as attracting to Jesus College those graduates of the University of Wales who wished to continue their research at Oxford. One of the college science lecturers had a link with Imperial Chemical Industries ; 17 students joined ICI between the two World Wars, some of whom reached senior levels in the company. The laboratories became unnecessary when the university began to provide centralised facilities for students, and they were closed in 1947.

Alumni

;Abbreviations used in the following tables:
;Degree abbreviations
The subject studied and the degree classification are included, where known. Until the early 19th century, undergraduates read for a Bachelor of Arts degree that included study of Latin and Greek texts, mathematics, geometry, philosophy and theology. Individual subjects at undergraduate level were only introduced later: for example, Mathematics, Natural Science, Jurisprudence, Modern History and Theology. Geography and Modern Languages were introduced in the 20th century. Music had been taught as a specialist subject, rather than being part of the BA course, before these changes; medicine was studied as a post-graduate subject.

Mathematicians

NameMGDegreeNotesRef
19711974MSc, DPhil Mathematics Canadian Rhodes Scholar and mathematician; a professor at the University of Newcastle, Australia, since 2009; formerly a professor at Dalhousie University and Simon Fraser University, Canada
19631966BAProfessor of Mathematical Logic at the University of Leeds
19721975MSc, DPhil MathematicsProfessor of Mathematics at the University of Cardiff; studied as an undergraduate at New College and moved to Jesus College in 1972
18561862BA Mathematics, MA Fellow and Tutor in Mathematics, with a particular interest in analytical geometry
19651968BA MathematicsMathematician working in the field of differential geometry and algebraic geometry; Savilian Professor of Geometry at Oxford
17081716BA 1712
MA 1716
Professor of Mathematics at The College of William and Mary, Virginia ; "Lord Baltimore's Mathematician"
19381947BA Mathematics Studies interrupted by military service during the Second World War, during which he won the Military Cross; a Fellow of Corpus Christi College, Oxford before becoming a professor at Amherst College in the United States
18681873BA Mathematics, BA Natural Science Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy at the University College of South Wales and Monmouthshire
1982?1985BA MathematicsProfessor of Statistics at the University of Warwick since 2007; has a particular research interest in Markov chains
19561962BA Mathematics, DPhil MathematicsFellow of the Royal Society and specialist in probability
19261929BA Mathematics Professor of Mathematics at Aberdeen University, having earlier been the first Junior Research Fellow at Christ Church

Physicians

NameMGDegreeNotesRef
17411749MB, MD Physician and medical lecturer
19191923BA Natural Science May Reader in Medicine at Oxford, consultant physician at the Radcliffe Infirmary
16621666BA, MA, BCL, DCL Chancellor of Llandaff Cathedral, physician and inventor
18661875BA Natural Science, MB, MD Consultant physician at St Thomas' Hospital
1704?1707??Eighteenth-century Welsh physician; also worked with Moses Williams to collect and publish material contained in Welsh language manuscripts; he graduated from the University of Aberdeen and is not recorded in Foster's Alumni Oxonienses
16471647DNGWelsh non-conformist minister, who also worked as a physician
18771881BA Natural Science Public health doctor with a particular interest in sanitation issues

Biologists and other natural scientists

NameMGDegreeNotesRef
18911894BA Natural Science University Reader in Botany, elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1921
19011904??Professor of Zoology at Reading University, founder of the Cole Museum of Zoology
17571762BAWelsh clergyman and botanist, whose main work, Welsh Botanology, was the first to cross-reference the names of plants in Welsh with their scientific names
1873BAMatriculated at New College before transferring to Jesus with a scholarship; a clergyman, headmaster and entomologist who was President of the Incorporated Association of Head Masters and President of the Entomological Society of London
18841888BA Natural Science Invertebrate zoologist and marine biologist
19131920BA Zoology, DPhil Professor of zoology and comparative anatomy at Trinity College, Dublin
16821685DNGNaturalist, botanist, linguist, geographer and antiquary
18851889BA Natural Science Entomologist, noted for his work on the fauna of the islands of Hawaii
18731876BA Natural Science Appointed Hope Professor of Zoology in 1893
19061910BA MathematicsNatural historian, President of the Conchological Society of Great Britain and Ireland and Vice-President of the Linnean Society

Chemists

NameMGDegreeNotesRef
19401948BA Chemistry, DPhil Combustion engineer and Fellow of the Royal Society
19111914BA Natural Science University lecturer in chemistry, college librarian and bursar
19361939BA ChemistryKeeper of the Department of Chemistry at the Science Museum ; Reader in the History of Science at the Davy-Faraday Research Laboratory of the Royal Institution
18901894BA Natural Science Professor of Chemistry at University College, Exeter
19431949BA Chemistry, DPhil Emeritus Professor of Structural Chemistry at the University of Bradford, working in the field of Raman spectroscopy
19291933BA Chemistry, BSc Research chemist at Imperial Chemical Industries
19351937BSc American Rhodes Scholar, who was a chemist and pioneer of polymer science
19111914BA Chemistry Associate Professor in chemistry at the Royal Military College of Science

Physicists

NameMGDegreeNotesRef
19481950DPhilA French physicist
19721979BA Physics, DPhil Physics Physicist and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Sheffield
19681974BA Physics, DPhil Physicist who won the Rumford Medal in 2008 for his work in ultra-cold matter
19481955BA Physics, DPhil Physics Professor of Atmospheric Physics and chair of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
19351938BA Physics Professor of Physics at the University of London, who became Director of the National Museum of Wales
19661969BA PhysicsDirector of the British Antarctic Survey ; Director of the Science Museum
19201924BA Physics Director of the Electrical Research Association, specialising in dielectric research
19441947BA Physics Professor of Theoretical Physics at the University of York

Other scientists

NameMGDegreeNotesRef
19701976BA Engineering Science, DPhilProfessor of Engineering Science at Oxford and Master of St Catherine's College, Oxford
19021906BA Literae Humaniores Educational psychologist
1634??Welsh alchemist, doctor and grammarian
18651869BA Mathematics, BA Natural Science Professor of Mineralogy, Cambridge University
1771DNGDissenting minister and scientist, whose Lectures in Electricity were published in 1794
19381941BA Natural Science Professor of solid-state electronics at the Manchester College of Science and Technology, and leading researcher in the field of semiconductors
19851988?BA MathematicsClimatologist at the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, New York
19271929BA Natural Science Inventor of the world's first wearable hearing aid and a major benefactor to the college, which named its flats in north Oxford "Stevens Close" in his honour
19231927BSc MathematicsDirector-General of the Meteorological Office