This is a list of notable people affiliated with Trinity College at Oxford University, England. It includes former students, current and former academics and fellows, as listed in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography or another available source. The overwhelming maleness of this list is explained by the fact that for over 90% of its history (from its foundation in 1555 until 1979), Trinity was an all-male institution.
Former students
Academics and explorers
Scientists, engineers and mathematicians
Artists and broadcasters
Business
Clergy and theology
Diplomats, civil servants and colonial administrators
Lawyers
Military
Politicians
Sports people
- Andrew Comrie-Picard, X Games medallist and Hollywood stuntman
- Simon Danielli, rugby union player for Ulster and Scotland
- Walter Henderson, Olympic athlete
- Frederic Hugh Lee (1855âÂÂ1924), Trinity College matriculant (1874), England rugby international and Registrar of the Court of Arches
- Constantine Louloudis, rower, bronze medallist in the 2012 Summer Olympics and gold medallist in the 2016 Summer Olympics
- Bevil Rudd, Olympic athlete
- Bonnie St. John, medal-winning Paralympic skier
- Henry Melvin 'Dinghy' Young, RAF pilot and rower in the 1938 Boat Race
Miscellaneous
Journalists
Fictional characters
Fictional former students include Jay Gatsby, the title character of F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1925 novel The Great Gatsby who attends Trinity briefly after World War I, and Tiger Tanaka, an ally of James Bond in Ian Fleming's 1964 novel You Only Live Twice who receives a first in PPE before World War II.
Recent books in which Trinity features prominently are:
Fellows
- John Michael Hammersley (1920âÂÂ2004), mathematician
- Sir Cyril Hinshelwood (1897âÂÂ1967), physical chemist; Nobel laureate
- Sir Henry Stuart Jones (1867âÂÂ1939), classicist
- Martin Kemp (born 1942), art historian
- Ronald Knox (1888âÂÂ1957), theologian
- Hans Adolf Krebs (1900âÂÂ1981), biologist; Nobel laureate
- David Lambert Lack (1910âÂÂ1973), evolutionary biologist
- Michael Maclagan (1914âÂÂ2003), historian
- Rodney Robert Porter (1917âÂÂ1985), biochemist; Nobel laureate
- Sir Edwin Southern (born 1938), molecular biologist
- Sir Ronald Syme (1903âÂÂ1989), ancient historian
- Gail Trimble (born 1982), classicist
- Thomas Warton (1728âÂÂ1790), historian and poet
Presidents
The head of Trinity College, Oxford, is titled the president.
16th century
17th century
18th century
19th century
20th century
21st century
References