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List of Scholars Of Trinity College Dublinreport

  • Lenny Abrahamson (Mental and Moral Science, 1988), Oscar-nominated film director. (Arts and Entertainment)

  • Samuel Beckett (Modern Languages, 1926), dramatist and Nobel laureate. (Arts and Entertainment)

  • Jack Gleeson (Philosophy and Theology, 2012), actor best known for Game of Thrones. (Arts and Entertainment)

  • Claire Hennessy (History and English, 2007), writer and editor. (Arts and Entertainment)

  • Declan Kiberd (Modern Languages and Literature, 1971), writer and academic. (Arts and Entertainment)

  • Caoimhín Ó Raghallaigh (Theoretical Physics, 1999), fiddler. (Arts and Entertainment)

  • Micheal O'Siadhail (Celtic Languages, 1966), Poet. (Arts and Entertainment)

  • Abie Philbin Bowman (History and English, 2002), comedian and journalist. (Arts and Entertainment)

  • Matthew Pilkington (Classics, 1721), satirist and art historian. (Arts and Entertainment)

  • Norman Rodway (Classics, 1948), actor. (Arts and Entertainment)

  • Sally Rooney (English, 2011), novelist. (Arts and Entertainment)

  • James White (Classics, 1778), historical novelist. (Arts and Entertainment)

  • James David Bourchier (Classics, 1871), Balkans correspondent for The Times, advisor to Tzar Ferdinand of Bulgaria. (Broadcasting and Journalism)

  • Douglas Gageby (Modern Languages, 1940), editor of The Irish Times. (Broadcasting and Journalism)

  • Mary Mulvihill (Natural Sciences, 1979), science journalist and broadcaster. (Broadcasting and Journalism)

  • Donal Donovan (Economics and Social Studies, 1972), former Deputy Director of the International Monetary Fund, member of the Irish Fiscal Advisory Council and expert on financial crises. (Economics and Public Policy)

  • George Alexander Duncan (Classics, 1920), economist and Pro-Chancellor of the University of Dublin. (Economics and Public Policy)

  • Francis Ysidro Edgeworth (1865), economist who made significant contributions to the methods of statistics and founding editor of The Economic Journal. (Economics and Public Policy)

  • W. M. Gorman (Mathematics, 1943), economist and mathematician. The Gorman Prize, for the highest grades in the MSc in Economics at Trinity, is named in his honour. (Economics and Public Policy)

  • John Kells Ingram (Mathematics, 1840), economist, poet, and mathematician. (Economics and Public Policy)

  • Morgan Kelly (Economic and Social Studies 1982), economist and economic historian. Probably most note-worthy predictor of the Irish economic crisis and the Irish property bubble; he wrote on ECB and Irish Government response to it. (Economics and Public Policy)

  • Philip R. Lane (Economics and Social Studies, 1989), Chief Economist of the European Central Bank. Previously Governor of the Central Bank of Ireland and current holder of the Whately Chair of Political Economy. (Economics and Public Policy)

  • Ronan C. Lyons (Economics and Social Studies, 2000), Assistant Professor of Economics at Trinity College Dublin, author of Daft.ie Report, and columnist for the Sunday Independent. (Economics and Public Policy)

  • Michael McMahon (Economics and Social Studies, 1998), Professor of Economics at Oxford University and Fellow of St. Hugh's College. (Economics and Public Policy)

  • Colm O'Reardon (Economics and Social Studies, 1990), former economic policy advisor to Tánaiste Eamon Gilmore. (Economics and Public Policy)

  • Kevin O'Rourke (Economics and Mathematics, 1982), Chichele Professor of Economic History, All Souls College, Oxford. (Economics and Public Policy)

  • James Auchmuty (Modern History and Political Science, 1929), historian, wartime MI6 propagandist, inaugural vice-chancellor, University of Newcastle, Australia. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • George Berkeley (Classics, 1702), philosopher. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • J. B. Bury (Classics, 1879), Byzantine scholar, Regius Professor of Modern History at Cambridge University and mentor to Steven Runciman. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • Mary Elmes (Modern Literature (French and Spanish), 1931), Irish aid worker that was honoured as Righteous Among the Nations for saving the lives of more than 200 Jewish children during the Second World War. She also won the gold medal at Trinity. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • R. F. Foster (History and Political Science, 1969), historian. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • Edward Hincks (Classics, 1810), Assyriologist and orientalist. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • Norman Jeffares (Classics, 1941), literary scholar. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • Heather Jones (History and English Literature, 1998), World War I expert and Associate Professor of International History, London School of Economics. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • Bartholomew Lloyd (Classics, 1790), classicist, mathematician and Provost of Trinity College Dublin. Father of Humphrey Lloyd, also a scholar and Provost of Trinity. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • George Green Loane (Classics, 1889), classical scholar (Humanities and Political Science)

  • John V. Luce (Classics, 1939), classical scholar. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • F. S. L. Lyons (Modern History and Political Science, 1943), historian and Provost of Trinity College Dublin. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • John Pentland Mahaffy (Classics, 1857), classical scholar and polymath. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • R. B. McDowell (Modern History and Political Science, 1936), historian. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • Vivian Mercier (Modern Languages, 1938), literary critic. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • Annette Jocelyn Otway-Ruthven (Modern History and Political Science, 1929), medieval historian and Lecky Professor of History at Trinity College Dublin, 1951–1981. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • Franc Sadleir (Classics, 1794), Regius Professor of Greek and later Provost of Trinity College Dublin. Advocate for Catholic emancipation. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • Brendan Simms (History, 1986), Professor of the History of International Relations, Cambridge University. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • William Bedell Stanford (Classics, 1929), senator and Regius Professor of Greek, Trinity College Dublin. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • Robert Walsh (Classics, 1794), historian, writer, clergyman and physician. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • Calder Walton, historian and current Ernest May Fellow in History and Policy, Harvard Kennedy School of Government. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • James Whitelaw (Classics, 1769), historian, writer, statistician and philanthropist. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • George Newenham Wright (Classics, 1812), writer and clergyman. (Humanities and Political Science)

  • Ernest Alton (Classics, 1894), Irish politician, university professor, and Provost of Trinity College Dublin. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Francis Blackburne (Classics, 1801), Lord Chancellor of Ireland. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Roy Bradford (Modern Languages, 1940), Ulster Unionist Party MP. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Isaac Butt (Classics, 1832), Irish nationalist MP and barrister. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Declan Budd (Modern History and Political Science, 1964), High Court judge. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Richard Collins, Baron Collins (Classics, 1861), Anglo-Irish lawyer and judge. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Conor Cruise O'Brien (Modern Languages, 1937), politician, writer and academic. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Gerald FitzGibbon (Classics, 1858), renowned Irish barrister and judge. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • William Greatrakes (Classics, 1744), barrister and supposed author of the Letters of Junius, which openly criticised the government of King George III. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Dodgson Hamilton Madden (1860), Irish Unionist Party MP. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Denis Caulfield Heron (Classics, 1845), lawyer barred from taking up his scholarship due to his Catholicism. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Michael Joseph Hogan – Irish lawyer and Chief Justice of Hong Kong (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Sir James Hogg, 1st Baronet (Classics, 1808), Conservative MP, director and chairman of the East India Company. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Hugh Law (Classics, 1837), Lord Chancellor of Ireland. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • James Anthony Lawson (Classics, 1836), lawyer, judge and Attorney-General for Ireland. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Brian Lenihan Jnr (Legal Science, 1979), politician and former Minister for Finance during the Irish economic downturn. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Rory Montgomery (History, 1979), civil servant and former Ambassador of Ireland to France and the European Union. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Dermot MacDermot (Modern Languages, 1927), former British Ambassador to Indonesia and Thailand, Prince of Coolavin. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • David Norris (English Literature and Language, 1965), senator, gay rights activist and former presidential candidate. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Louis Perrin (Classics, 1799), Whig MP, barrister and close friend of Robert Emmet. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Mary Robinson (Legal Science, 1965), former President of Ireland and United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Owen Sheehy-Skeffington (Modern Languages, 1929), senator. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Sir Edward Sullivan, 1st Baronet (Classics, 1843), Irish lawyer and Liberal MP. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • William Thrift (Mathematics, 1890), Irish politician, university professor, and Provost of Trinity College Dublin. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • John Edward Walsh (Classics, 1835), barrister, Conservative MP and Attorney-General for Ireland. Son of Robert Walsh, also a scholar. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • Arthur Wolfe, 1st Viscount Kilwarden (Classics, 1755), politician and Lord Chief Justice of Ireland. (Law, Politics and Government)

  • William Allman (Classics, 1795), botanist. (Mathematics and Science)

  • Robert Stawell Ball (Mathematics, 1859), astronomer. (Mathematics and Science)

  • John Casey (Mathematics, 1861), mathematician specialising in Euclidean geometry. (Mathematics and Science)

  • David Conlon (Mathematics, 2001), combinatorist. (Mathematics and Science)

  • Mervyn A. Ellison (Experimental Science, 1930), astronomer and authority on solar flares. (Mathematics and Science)

  • Adrian Hill (Medicine, 1978), vaccinologist and director of the Jenner Institute. (Mathematics and Science)

  • Humphrey Lloyd (Classics, 1818), physicist and Provost of Trinity College Dublin. Son of Bartholomew Lloyd, also a scholar and Provost of Trinity. (Mathematics and Science)

  • Jones Quain (Classics, 1814), anatomist. (Mathematics and Science)

  • Thomas Romney Robinson (Classics, 1808), astronomer and physicist. Awarded his scholarship aged fourteen. (Mathematics and Science)

  • Robert Henry Scott (Classics, 1853), meteorology and President of the Royal Meteorological Society. (Mathematics and Science)

  • David J. Simms (Mathematics, 1952), mathematician. (Mathematics and Science)

  • John Lighton Synge (Mathematics, 1919), mathematician and physicist. (Mathematics and Science)

  • John Sealy Townsend (Mathematics, 1888), mathematical physicist. (Mathematics and Science)

  • Anthony Traill (Mathematics, 1858), Provost of Trinity College Dublin. (Mathematics and Science)

  • Henry Ussher (Classics, 1759), astronomer. (Mathematics and Science)

  • Ernest Walton (Mathematics, 1924), physicist and Nobel Prize winner. (Mathematics and Science)

  • William Arthur Watts (Modern Languages, 1950), botanist and Provost of Trinity College Dublin. (Mathematics and Science)

  • Trevor West (Mathematics, 1958), mathematician and senator. (Mathematics and Science)

  • Barbara Gertrude Yates (Mathematics, 1940) mathematician. (Mathematics and Science)

  • Theophilus Bolton (Classics, 1695), Church of Ireland bishop. (Religion)

  • Roger Boyle (Classics, 1638), Church of Ireland bishop. (Religion)

  • William Daniel (Classics, 1594), Church of Ireland archbishop. One of the first appointed scholars. (Religion)

  • Charles D'Arcy (Mathematics, 1880), Church of Ireland Archbishop of Dublin. (Religion)

  • Patrick Delany (Classics, 1704), theologian. (Religion)

  • Thomas Elrington (Classics, 1778), Church of Ireland bishop, theologian, mathematician and Provost of Trinity College Dublin. (Religion)

  • David F. Ford (Classics, 1968), Regius Professor of Divinity, Cambridge University. (Religion)

  • Stanley Gower (Classics, 1621), puritan minister and member of the Westminster Divines. (Religion)

  • Charles Graves (Classics, 1832), Church of Ireland bishop, president of the Royal Irish Academy and noted mathematician. (Religion)

  • Robert Perceval Graves (Classics, 1830), Irish biographer and clergyman (Religion)

  • George Hamond (Classics, 1637), ejected nonconformist minister. (Religion)

  • Arthur Kenney (Classics, 1793), Church of Ireland clergyman. (Religion)

  • Richard Frederick Littledale (Classics, 1852), Church of Ireland clergyman. (Religion)

  • Richard Mant (Classics, 1794), Church of Ireland bishop. (Religion)

  • Henry McAdoo (Modern Languages, 1936), Church of Ireland clergyman. (Religion)

  • Mortimer O'Sullivan (Classics, 1813), Church of Ireland convert and clergyman, Orange Order member. (Religion)

  • William Reeves (Classics, 1833), Church of Ireland bishop and antiquary. (Religion)

  • Philip Skelton (Classics, 1726), Church of Ireland clergyman and writer. (Religion)

  • George Simms (Classics, 1930), Church of Ireland Archbishop of Dublin. (Religion)

  • Edward Smyth (Classics, 1678), Church of Ireland bishop. (Religion)

  • Joseph Stock (Classics, 1759), Church of Ireland bishop. (Religion)

  • William Tisdall (Classics, 1692), Church of Ireland clergyman and writer. (Religion)

  • James Ussher (Classics, 1594), Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland. One of the first appointed scholars. (Religion)

  • Hugo MacNeill (Economic and Social Studies, 1979), former Irish rugby international and British and Irish Lions player. (Sports)

  • Louise Moriarty (Engineering, 2000), Irish racing cyclist. (Sports)

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About This Tool

Trinity College Dublin, located in the Irish capital, Dublin, is a world class institution modelled on the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge and commissioned by the 1592, the Elizabeth I of England. With a history of more than 400 years, it is the oldest university in Ireland and one of the eight classical universities in the UK and Ireland. Among the most advanced majors are biomedical, computer science, and classical studies.

And the school produces a large number of outstanding alumni each year, who have a place in the world. The excellence of these students can not be separated from the vigorous cultivation of many scholars in the school. The list of scholars recorded in this random tool is 119. They come from different major, have different specialty, but all pour blood for the student’s growth. With this generator, you can also find references to academics’areas of expertise, tenure, past achievements, etc.

Click the "Display All Items" button and you will get a list of Scholars of Trinity College Dublin.

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