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List of people associated with Somerville College, Oxford

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List of people associated with Somerville College, Oxford
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The following is a list of notable people associated with Somerville College, Oxford, including alumni and fellows of the college. This list consists almost entirely of women, due to the fact that Somerville College was one of the first two women's colleges of the University of Oxford, admitting men for the first time in 1994.[1] The college and its alumni have played a very important role in feminism.

Somervillians include prime ministers Margaret Thatcher and Indira Gandhi, Nobel-Prize-winning scientist Dorothy Hodgkin, television personalities Esther Rantzen and Susie Dent, reformer Cornelia Sorabji, writers Marjorie Boulton, Vera Brittain, A. S. Byatt, Susan Cooper, Penelope Fitzgerald, Alan Hollinghurst, Winifred Holtby, Nicole Krauss, Iris Murdoch and Dorothy L. Sayers, politicians Shirley Williams, Margaret Jay and Sam Gyimah, socialite Lady Ottoline Morrell, Princess Bamba Sutherland and her sister, philosophers G. E. M. Anscombe, Patricia Churchland, Philippa Foot and Mary Midgley, psychologist Anne Treisman, archaeologist Kathleen Kenyon, actress Moon Moon Sen, soprano Emma Kirkby and numerous women's rights activists. It has educated at least 29 dames, 18 heads of Oxbridge colleges, 11 life peers, 11 MP's, 4 Olympic rowers,[2] 3 of The 50 greatest British writers since 1945,[3] 2 prime ministers, 2 princesses, a queen consort, a first lady, and a Nobel laureate.

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Firsts

Somervillians have achieved a good number of "firsts", internationally, nationally and at Oxford University. The most distinguished are the first woman Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Margaret Thatcher, the first and only British woman to win a Nobel Prize in science Dorothy Hodgkin, and the first woman to lead the world's largest democracy Indira Gandhi, Prime Minister of India for much of the 1970s. Others include Cornelia Sorabji, first female lawyer in India and first Indian national to study at any British university; Anne Warburton, first female British ambassador; Constance Coltman, Britain's first woman to be an ordained Anglican minister; Shriti Vadera, Baroness Vadera, first woman to head a major British bank and chair the Royal Shakespeare Company; Evelyn Sharp, Baroness Sharp, first female permanent secretary, and Carys Bannister, first female neurosurgeon in the UK.

More information Other firsts include: ...
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Alumni

Activists and feminists

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Lettice Fisher
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Gurmehar Kaur
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Sheila Lochhead
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Elizabeth Anne Reid
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Eleanor Rathbone
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Margaret Mackworth, 2nd Viscountess Rhondda

Architects

Archivists

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Alice Prochaska

Artists

Authors

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Marjorie Boulton
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Vera Brittain
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A. S. Byatt
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Nicole Krauss
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Dorothy L. Sayers

Children's writers

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Susan Cooper

Playwrights

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Margaret Kennedy

Poets

Business & finance people

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Cindy Gallop
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Shriti Vadera, Baroness Vadera

Civil servants and diplomats

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Alyson Bailes
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Emma Sky

Education

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Julia Huxley
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Agnes de Selincourt
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Hilda D. Oakeley

Oxbridge heads of houses

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Margery Fry
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Onora O'Neill, Baroness O'Neill of Bengarve

Fictional

Film and theatre

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Moon Moon Sen

Health professionals

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Helen Muir
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June Raine

Journalism

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Rachel Sylvester

Historians

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Jane Caplan
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Emma Rothschild
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Kate Williams
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Clair Wills

Classicists and archaeologists

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Averil Cameron
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Miriam T. Griffin
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Kathleen Kenyon
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Joyce Reynolds

Medievalists

Law

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Cornelia Sorabji
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Amy Wax

Linguistics and literature

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Susie Dent
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Janet Dean Fodor

Music

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Emma Kirkby

Other

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Marion Wilberforce
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Sunethra Bandaranaike

Philosophers

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Patricia Churchland
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Mary Midgley

Politicians

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Thérèse Coffey
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Sam Gyimah
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Shirley Williams, Baroness Williams of Crosby

Conservatives

Labour

International

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Margaret Ballinger

Psychology and psychiatry

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Anne Treisman

Radio and television

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Esther Rantzen
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Fasi Zaka

Religion

Missionaries

Royalty and nobility

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Lady Ottoline Morrell
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Bamba Sutherland
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Raja Zarith Sofiah

Scientists

  • Jane Kirkaldy (1869–1932), one of the first women to obtain first-class honours in the natural sciences; contributed greatly to the education of the generation of English women scientists
  • Margaret Seward MBE (1864–1939), first Oxford female student to be entered for the honour school of Mathematics; one of the first two female chemistry students at Oxford; earliest chemist on staff at the Royal Holloway (of which she was a founding lecturer); pioneer woman to obtain a first class in the honour school of Natural Science
  • Premala Sivaprakasapillai Sivasegaram (1942), Sri Lankan engineer, regarded as the country's first female engineer; acknowledged as one of twelve female change-makers in Sri Lanka by the parliament

Biologists

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Marian Dawkins
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Angela McLean
Botanists

Chemists

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Julia Higgins
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Barbara Low

Earth scientists

Mathematicians

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Kathleen Ollerenshaw
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Caroline Series

Physicists

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Joanna Haigh

Social scientists

Anthropologists

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Katherine Routledge

Economists

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Alison Wolf, Baroness Wolf of Dulwich

Sports

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Sophie Le Marchand
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Smit Singh

Rowers

Spies

Translators

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Anthea Bell
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Fellows & staff

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Perspective
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G. E. M. Anscombe
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Mary Archer
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Tony Bell
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Helen DeWitt
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Alan Hollinghurst
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Patricia Kingori
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Chris Lintott
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Bertha Phillpotts
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Charles Spence
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Rajesh Thakker
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Doreen Warriner
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Kevin Warwick
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Dorothy Maud Wrinch

Honorary fellows

Notable honorary fellows (excluding alumni) are Simon Russell Beale, Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit, Venkatraman Ramakrishnan, Nancy Rothwell, and Kiri Te Kanawa. Notable foundation fellows are Charles Powell, Baron Powell of Bayswater, and Wafic Saïd.

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Principals

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Emily Penrose

The first principal of Somerville Hall was Madeleine Shaw-Lefèvre (1879–1889). The first principal of Somerville College was Agnes Catherine Maitland (1889–1906) when in 1894 it became the first of the five women's halls of residence to adopt the title of 'college', the first of them to appoint its own teaching staff, the first to set an entrance examination, and the first to build a library. She was succeeded by classical scholar Emily Penrose (1906–1926), who established the Mary Somerville Research Fellowship in 1903 which was the first to offer women in Oxford opportunities for research. Alumnae Margery Fry (1926–1930), Helen Darbishire (1930–1945), Janet Vaughan (1945–1967), Barbara Craig (1967–1980) and Daphne Park, Baroness Park of Monmouth (1980–1989) also served as Principal of Somerville College.

The current principal is Janet Royall, Baroness Royall of Blaisdon.[122] She succeeded Alice Prochaska at the end of August 2017.[122]

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Rejected offers

Notable people who did not or could not accept an offer to study or conduct research at Somerville include Elizabeth Alexander, Christabel Bielenberg, Emmy Noether, Olwen Rhys, Alison Settle, and Elisabeth de Stroumillo.

References

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