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List of presidents of Queens' College, Cambridge

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of presidents of Queens' College, Cambridge. While the head of most colleges are called masters, the head of Queens' College, Cambridge, has been called the president since 1448.[1] Below is the list of presidents that have served the college:

Name Portrait Dates Notes
Andrew Dokett 1448–1484 English churchman and academic
Thomas Wilkynson 1484–1505 Vicar, Canon of Ripon
John Cardinal Fisher 1505–1508 Catholic Bishop of Rochester; executed by Henry VIII for refusing to accept him as head of the Church of England in 1535,
canonised in 1935. Namesake of the Fisher Building.
Robert Bekensaw 1508–1519 English churchman and academic
John Jenyn 1519–1525 Cleric
Thomas Forman 1525–1527 Rector of All Hallows, London. Early Reformer.
William Frankleyn 1527–1529 English churchman, dean of Windsor
Simon Heynes 1529–1537 Theologian. Early reformer.
William May 1537–1553,
1559–1560
Theologian and dean of St Paul's Cathedral; his report saved the Cambridge colleges from dissolution under Henry VIII
William Glyn 1553–1557 Also Bishop of Bangor
Thomas Pecocke 1557–1559 Theologian
John Stokes 1560–1568 Also Archdeacon of York
William Chaderton 1568–1579 Later Bishop of Chester and Bishop of Lincoln
Humphrey Tyndall 1579–1614 Theologian, Dean of Ely and Archdeacon of Stafford
John Davenant 1614–1622 Later Bishop of Salisbury
John Mansell 1622–1631 Churchman, theologian, philosopher
Edward Martin 1631–1644,
1660–1662
Sent the college silver to King Charles I; imprisoned in the Tower of London by Oliver Cromwell;
restored to presidency under Charles II
Herbert Palmer 1644–1647 Puritan and member of the Westminster Assembly; installed as President by Cromwell
Thomas Horton 1647–1660 Theologian; removed by the restoration of the monarchy
Anthony Sparrow 1662–1667 Later Bishop of Exeter and Bishop of Norwich
William Wells 1667–1675 Archdeacon of Colchester
Henry James 1675–1717 Theologian, Regius Professor of Divinity.
John Davies 1717–1732 Clergyman and classicist.
William Sedgwick 1732–1760 Clergyman and academic.
Robert Plumptre 1760–1788 Clergyman and academic.
Isaac Milner 1788–1820 Clergyman, mathematician, inventor, abolitionist.
Lucasian Professor of Mathematics and Dean of Carlisle.
Henry Godfrey 1820–1832 Clergyman and academic.
Joshua King 1832–1857 Mathematician, Lucasian Professor of Mathematics.
George Phillips 1857–1892 Clergyman, mathematician, scholar of Semitic languages.
William Magan Campion 1892–1896 Clergyman and mathematician.
Herbert Edward Ryle 1896–1901 Theologian, Hulsean Professor of Divinity.
Later Bishop of Exeter, Bishop of Winchester and Dean of Westminster
Frederic Chase 1901–1906 Theologian, Norrisian Professor of Divinity.
Later Bishop of Ely.
Thomas Cecil Fitzpatrick 1906–1931 Clergyman and physicist. Namesake of Fitzpatrick Hall in Cripps Court.
John Archibald Venn 1931–1958 Economist and government advisor. Son of the logician John Venn.
Arthur Armitage 1958–1970 Barrister and government advisor. Namesake of the Armitage Room above Fitzpatrick Hall.
Sir Derek Bowett 1970–1982 International lawyer, Whewell Professor of International Law.
Lord Oxburgh 1982–1988 Geologist and geophysicist
Sir John Polkinghorne 1988–1996 KBE; FRS; physicist and theologian; extensive writer on science-faith relations;
Templeton Prize 2002; member of General Synod
Lord Eatwell 1997–2020 Economist, previously chief economic adviser to Neil Kinnock and chairman of the British Library;
Opposition Spokesman for the Treasury in the House of Lords.
Mohamed A. El-Erian 2020 – Economist, previously Chief Executive Officer at PIMCO

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Presidents". Queens' College, Cambridge. Retrieved 24 November 2023.