List of University of Sydney people
This is a list of notable staff, graduates and non-graduate former or current students of the University of Sydney.
Alumni or academic
Government, politics and law
- Royalty –
- The King of Tonga – Taufa'ahau Tupou IV
- Princess of Swaziland – Sikhanyiso Dlamini
- Governors-General of Australia
- Sir John Kerr
- Sir William Deane
- Prime Ministers of Australia
- Deputy Prime Ministers of Australia
- Judge of the International Court of Justice
- Sir Percy Spender
- Chief Justices of the High Court of Australia
- Sir Samuel Griffith
- Sir Garfield Barwick
- Sir Anthony Mason
- Murray Gleeson
- Justices of the High Court of Australia
- Sir Edmund Barton
- Richard O'Connor
- Albert Piddington
- Sir George Rich
- Dr H. V. Evatt
- Sir Edward McTiernan
- Sir Dudley Williams
- Sir Frank Kitto
- Sir Alan Taylor
- Sir Victor Windeyer
- Sir Cyril Walsh
- Sir Kenneth Jacobs
- Lionel Murphy
- Sir William Deane
- Mary Gaudron
- Michael McHugh
- Michael Kirby
- William Gummow
- Dyson Heydon
- Susan Crennan
- Virginia Bell
- State governors and Territory Administrators
- Sir Roden Cutler (NSW)
- Sir James Rowland (NSW)
- Dame Marie Bashir (NSW)
- Sir Alan Mansfield (Qld)
- Richard Butler (Tas)
- Sir James Plimsoll (Tas)
- Tom Pauling (NT)
- Peter Coleman (NF)
- Sir Jack Keith Murray (Papua and New Guinea)
- Premiers of New South Wales
- Other Premiers and Chief Ministers
- George Thorn (QLD)
- Clare Martin (NT)
- Chief justices of the Supreme Court of New South Wales and Lieutenant-Governor of New South Wales
- Chief justices of the Supreme Court of Queensland
- Chief justices of Supreme Court of Western Australia
- Sir Lawrence Jackson
- Solicitors-General of Australia
- Sir Maurice Byers
- Ministers for Foreign Affairs
- Sir Percy Spender
- Sir Garfield Barwick
- Sir Nigel Bowen
- Lord mayors of the City of Sydney
- Sir Emmet McDermott
- Nelson Meers
- Jeremy Bingham
- Frank Sartor
- Lucy Turnbull
- Clover Moore
- Lord mayors of the City of Westminster
- Kevin Gardner
- Presidents of the United Nations General Assembly
- Dr H. V. Evatt
- Members of the House of Lords
- Aboriginal leaders
- Other notable Federal politicians – Kerry Bartlett, Chris Bowen, Lionel Bowen, Bob Brown, Ross Cameron, Craig Emerson, Laurie Ferguson, Martin Ferguson, Jennie George, Joe Hockey, Tom Hughes, Ros Kelly, Peter King, Andrew Laming, Mark Latham, Robert McClelland, Daryl Melham, Tsebin Tchen, Danna Vale.
- Other political figures
- Akhilesh Yadav – 20th Chief Minister of Uttar Pradesh, a state in India with a population of 200 million.
- Dave Sharma – youngest ever Australian diplomat, becoming Ambassador to Israel at the age of 36.
- Martin Indyk – former U.S. Ambassador to Israel, special assistant to U.S. President Bill Clinton and senior director of Near East and South Asian Affairs at the United States National Security Council
- Natalie Bennett – Leader of the Green Party of England and Wales
- Catherine West – Labour Party politician in the United Kingdom
- Public servants
- Tony Cole – thirteenth Secretary of the Department of the Treasury
- Ewart Smith
- Philip Flood – former Secretary of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
- Judge of the United States District Court
Academia
- Brian L. Byrne – social scientist known for research in psycholinguistics; Emeritus professor at the University of New England
- Sir Robert Madgwick – first Vice-Chancellor of the University of New England; two-term Chairman of the Australian Broadcasting Commission; Director of the Australian Army Education Service during World War II
- Elizabeth Bannan – educationist awarded the Walter Beavis prize and the Jones medal
Business and industry
- Mark Scott – CEO of Australian Broadcasting Corporation
- Angus Harris – Co-CEO of Harris Farm Markets
- Fred Hilmer – CEO of University of New South Wales
- Philip Corne – CFO of Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton fashion group USA until taking up the current position as CEO of Louis Vuitton Oceania[1]
- Yanis Varoufakis – Finance Minister of Greece; taught at the University for 12 years[2]
- Timothy Potts – Director of the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles
- Matt Barrie – CEO of Freelancer.com
- Jeni Klugman – Director of the Human Development Report Office, United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)
- Tom Waterhouse – bookmaker; CEO of William Hill Australia
- Michael Patsalos-Fox – Chairman of McKinsey & Co in America
- John Grill – billionaire, CEO of WorleyParsons
- Margaret Gardner – CEO of Monash University
- Malcolm Turnbull – politician, lawyer, investment banker, prominent republican
- Michael Spence – Vice-Chancellor and Principal of University of Sydney
- James Wolfensohn – President of the World Bank (1995–2005)
- Paul Ramsay – billionaire, philanthropist
- Allan Moss – Managing Director/CEO of Macquarie Bank (1993–2008)
- Glenn Stevens – Governor of the Reserve Bank of Australia
- Sir David Higgins – CEO of Network Rail
- Michael Hintze – billionaire, philanthropist; former Head of U.K. Trading and Head of European emerging markets trading at Goldman Sachs
- Cameron Clyne – CEO of National Australia Bank (2009–2014)
- David S. Clarke – Chairman of Macquarie Bank (1985–2007)
- Kevin McCann – Chairman of Macquarie Bank
- John Mulcahy – CEO of Suncorp-Metway Ltd (2003–2009)
- Gina Rinehart – billionaire, the richest woman in the world
- Jim Millner – former Chairman of Washington H. Soul Pattinson
- Paul Kelly – Editor-at-Large of The Australian
- Ryan Junee – founder and CEO of Omnisio and Inporia
Science and technology
- Presidents of the Royal Society
- Robert May, Baron May of Oxford – former president of The Royal Society; Chief Scientific Adviser to HM Government
- The Executive Director of IEEE
- E. James Prendergast – former Vice President and Chief Technology Officer for DuPont Electronic & Communication Technologies
- Presidents of the Australian Academy of Science
- Sir Rutherford Robertson
- Professor Arthur Birch
- Professor David Craig
- Sir Gustav Nossal
- Professor Brian Anderson
- Dr Jim Peacock
- Chief Scientists of Australia
- Jim Peacock – former President of Australian Academy of Science
- Michael Pitman
- World Food Prize Laureate
- Sanjaya Rajaram – Head of Wheat Programme from 1976 to 2001 at International Maize and Wheat Improvement Centre (CIMMYT), once referred as"the greatest present-day wheat scientist in the world," by Norman Borlaug
- Nobel Laureates
- Sir Robert Robinson (academic) – Nobel Prize for Chemistry (1947)
- Sir John Eccles – Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine (1963)
- Sir Bernard Katz – Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine (1970)
- Sir John Cornforth – Nobel Prize for Chemistry (1975)
- John Harsanyi – Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (1994)
- Crafoord Laureates
- Robert May, Baron May of Oxford Biosciences 1996
- Edwin Ernest Salpeter Astronomy 1997
- Economists, statisticians, mathematicians
- Trevor Swan – the Swan in the Solow-Swan Model
- Graeme Segal – FRS, Lowndean Professor of Astronomy and Geometry; Fellow of St John’s College, Cambridge (1990–1999)[3]
- Peter Gavin Hall – Professor of Statistics at University of California, Davis
- Pat Moran – made significant contributions to probability theory and its application to population and evolutionary genetics
- Kelvin Lancaster – creator of the theory of the second best and "A New Approach to Consumer Theory"; John Bates Clark Professor of Economics at Columbia University
- Steven N. Evans – Professor of Statistics at University of California, Berkeley
- Eugene Seneta – co-inventor of the Variance-gamma distribution
- Richard M. Hain – Professor of Mathematics at Duke University
- Robert Griffiths – FRS, Professor of Mathematical Genetics at University of Oxford
- Yew-Kwang Ng – economist at Monash University
- Jan Kmenta – Professor Emeritus of Economics at University of Michigan
- George Foster – Paul L. and Phyllis Wattis Professor of Management at Stanford University
- Stephen Donald – professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Texas at Austin
- Justin Wolfers – economist at Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business
- John Romalis – economist at University of Chicago Booth School of Business
- Richard Holden – economist at the MIT Sloan School of Management
- Dennis A. Ahlburg – President of Trinity University; previously dean of the Leeds School of Business at the University of Colorado at Boulder and professor of human resources at Carlson School of Management at the University of Minnesota
- Michael J. Hiscox – Clarence Dillon Professor of International Affairs, Harvard University
- Francis G. Vella – Edmond Villani Professor of Economics at Georgetown University
- Bruce McKern – economist at Stanford University; Director of the Stanford Sloan Master’s Program 2001–2007 at Stanford Graduate School of Business
- Environmental scientists
- Nerilie Abram – climate scientist
- Computer scientists
- Michael Georgeff – AAAI Fellow, Director of the Australian Artificial Intelligence Institute
- John S. Gero – AAAI Fellow; has held visiting and permanent appointments at MIT, UC-Berkeley, UCLA, Columbia and CMU in the USA,at USYD and UTS in Australia, at Strathclyde and Loughborough in the UK
- Rick Jelliffe – inventor of the Schematron schema language
- Andrew Tridgell – co-inventor of the rsync algorithm; author of and contributor to the Samba file server
- John Lions – author of Lions' Commentary on UNIX 6th Edition, with Source Code, commonly known as the Lions Book
- Ross Quinlan – AAAI Fellow; highly cited scholar and a pioneer in decision theory
- Vaughan Pratt – ACM Fellow; pioneer in computer science; Professor Emeritus at Stanford University
- Rod Johnson – best-selling author; expert in Java/Java EE; founder of the Spring Framework
- Jia Dong – CEO of Red Flag Software, producer of Red Flag Linux, the current most used Linux system in Asia and the current third most used Linux system in the world; CEO of Asianux
- Ken Thompson– co-creator of unix; Turing Award recipient[4]
- Veterinary and agricultural scientists
- Sir Ian Clunies Ross – Chairman Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
- William Allen CBE – Professor of Equine Reproduction at Cambridge Veterinary School
- William Beveridge – Professor of Animal Pathology and Director of the Institute of Animal Pathology at Cambridge University from 1947 to 1975
- Alan Wilton – named the 1994 Australian Science Communicators Unsung Hero of Science; whilst not strictly a veterinary scientist, his research identified rogue genes in Australian cattle dogs; also identified the genes responsible for CL and TNS afflictions in border collies; played a leading role in setting up a DNA sequencing facility that ultimately led to the establishment of the Ramaciotti Centre for Gene Function Analysis at the University of NSW
- Hugh McLeod Gordon – veterinary parasitologist
- Dr Ross Perry – Australia’s first registered avian veterinarian; first to study and name Psittacine Beak and Feather Disease, for which he was co-discoverer of viral infection agent[5]
- Wesley Whitten – veterinary scientist whose research led to breakthroughs in infertility treatment in humans; in 1993 he was awarded the Marshall Medal from the Society for the Study of Fertility and in 1996 the Pioneer Award of the International Society for Embryo Transfer; discovered the synchronisation of the oestrus cycle of female mice exposed to the pheromones in male mouse urine, known as the Whitten effect; developed the Whitten medium, which facilitates culturing mammalian eggs and developing embryos[6]
- Professor Charles MacKenzie AO, Michigan State University – significant contributor to filarial disease eradication in the peoples of Equatorial Africa[7]
- Gordon McClymont – agricultural scientist, ecologist, and educationist; foundation chair of the Department of Rural Science at the University of New England; originator of the term "sustainable agriculture"
- Astronauts
- Paul D. Scully-Power – first Australian astronaut
- Philip K. Chapman
- Greg Chamitoff
- Oceanographers
- Anthony Haymet – Director of Scripps Institution of Oceanography[8]
- Explorers
- Griffith Taylor – Antarctic explorer; Professor of Geography at the University of Chicago; founder of the Geography department at the University of Toronto
- Sir Douglas Mawson – geologist and Antarctic explorer
- Sir Edgeworth David – geologist and Antarctic explorer
- Engineers, physicists, scientists, inventors
- Noel Hush – FRS, winner of the 2007 Welch Award in Chemistry
- Ezio Rizzardo – FRS, inventor of reversible addition-fragmentation chain transfer (RAFT) technology
- Neville Thiele – co-inventor of Thiele/Small parameters
- Richard H. Small – co-inventor of Thiele/Small parameters
- Robert May, Baron May of Oxford – previous Chairman of the University Research Board and Professor of Zoology at Princeton University
- Edwin Ernest Salpeter – known for his contributions to astronomy; Professor of Physics, Emeritus at Cornell University
- Bernard Mills – FRS, inventor of the Mills Cross Telescope
- Herbert Huppert – FRS, Professor of Theoretical Geophysics and Foundation Director, Institute of Theoretical Geophysics, Cambridge University since 1989; Fellow of King's College, Cambridge since 1970
- Bruce Bolt – pioneer of engineering seismology; Professor of Earth and Planetary Science at the University of California, Berkeley
- Ruby Payne-Scott – first female radio astronomer
- Ronald N. Bracewell – Lewis M. Terman Professor of Electrical Engineering, Emeritus at Stanford University
- Paul Klemens – emeritus professor of physics at University of Connecticut, leading American theoretical physicist whose life work is honoured by the triennial award of the Klemens Medal in Phonon Physics
- Dr John Bradfield – designer of the Sydney Harbour Bridge
- David Warren – inventor of the Black Box (flight data recorder)
- Graeme Clark – inventor of the bionic ear implant
- Eric Davis (1923–2009), who perfected the technology, now applied globally, for preserving food and drink in containers and casks
- John O'Sullivan – winner of 2009 Prime Minister's Prize for Science (the nation's top science award); an originator of wireless technology, credited with the invention of WiFi[9] earning hundreds of millions of dollars in royalties.
- Bryan Gaensler – previously an associate professor of astronomy at Harvard University, now an ARC Federation Fellow at the University of Sydney
- Ronald Ernest Aitchison – solid-state physicist and electronics engineer
- Richard Makinson – physicist notable for his contributions to amorphous semiconductors
- Anthony Weiss – McCaughey Professor in Biochemistry and Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry, for discoveries on human elastic materials that accelerate the healing and repair of arteries, skin and 3D human tissue components.
- Archaeologists
Medicine
- Professor John Mattick AO FAA – Executive Director of the Garvan Institute of Medical Research in Sydney, whose research led to the discovery of the function of non-coding DNA
- Professor Alan O. Trounson – President of the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine
- Professor David Hunter – Dean for Academic Affairs, Harvard School of Public Health
- Professor Dame Valerie Beral AC (graduated with first-class honours in both medicine and surgery, 1969) – epidemiologist; Fellow of the Royal Society; Head of Cancer Epidemiology Unit at the University of Oxford and Cancer Research UK since 1989; leader of a survey that established hormone replacement therapy as a major cause of increased breast cancer rates in western nations[10]
- Professor Virginia L. Hood – President of American College of Physicians
- Sir Michael Marmot – President of British Medical Association, Professor of Epidemiology and Public Health at University College London, has conducted ground-breaking studies into stroke
- Sir Archibald Collins – President of British Medical Association in Australia[11]
- Sir John Eccles – 1963 Nobel Laureate in Medicine or Physiology "for discoveries concerning the ionic mechanisms involved in excitation and inhibition in the peripheral and central portions of the nerve cell membrane"
- Sir Bernard Katz – 1970 Nobel Laureate in Medicine or Physiology "for discoveries concerning the humoral transmittors in the nerve terminals and the mechanism for their storage, release and inactivation"
- Stephen W. Kuffler – "father of modern neuroscience"
- Professor Maxwell Bennett- proved that nerve terminals on muscles release transmitter molecules, rather than just the noradrenaline and acetylcholine that were previously known
- Sir Henry Harris FRS – Regius Professor of Medicine at Oxford; first demonstrated the existence of tumour-suppressing genes
- Sir Norman Gregg – identified rubella in early pregnancy as a human teratogen
- Professor Jacques Miller FRS – discoverer of the function of the thymus (the last major organ of the human body whose function remained unknown)
- Sir Brian Windeyer – Vice-Chancellor of London University 1969–72; Professor of Radiology at London University 1942–69[12]
- Sir Gustav Nossal FRS – immunologist, discoverer of the "one cell-one antibody" rule, which states that each B lymphocyte, developed in bone marrow, secretes a specific antibody in response to an encounter with a specific foreign antigen
- Dr Gerald Lawrie – American heart surgeon and pioneer in the surgical treatment of valvular heart disease; performed the first mitral valve repair using the daVinci robotic surgical system; Methodist Hospital Michael E. Debakey Professor of Cardiac Surgery at Baylor College of Medicine
- Raymond Dart – anatomist and anthropologist, known for his discovery in 1924 of a fossil (first ever found) of Australopithecus africanus (extinct hominid closely related to humans)
- Dr. Mark C Lidwell – co-inventor of artificial pacemaker
- Dr. Edgar H Booth – co-inventor of artificial pacemaker
- Professor Graeme Clark FRS – inventor of cochlear ear implant
- Professor Colin Sullivan – inventor of the Continuous Positive Airflow Pressure (CPAP) mask
- Dr. George Kossoff – co-inventor of the first ultrasound scanner
- Professor Robert Clancy – developer of first oral vaccine for acute bronchitis
- Professor John Prineas – discoverer of how brain and spinal cord myelin is destroyed in multiple sclerosis
- Professor Donald Metcalf FRS – his research revealed the control of blood cell formation
- Dr Anna Donald (1966–2009) – pioneer and advocate of evidence-based medicine
- Professor Marshall Edwards – discoverer of maternal hyperthermia as a human teratogen
- Dr William McBride – obstetrician, who in 1961 first warned the medical world against thalidomide as a human teratogen
- Professor Samy Azer – Professor of Medical Education; international medical educator
- Dr John Hunter – Challis Professor of Anatomy at age 24 years whose brilliant career, achieving international recognition, was cut short by fever just two years later
- Dr Victor Chang AC (1936–1991) – a pioneer of modern heart transplantation
- Dr Max Lake OAM (1924–2009) – Australia's first specialist hand surgeon
- Dr Nikos Athanasou – Professor of Musculoskeletal Pathology at Oxford University and Greek-Australian novelist
- Dr John Diamond – developer of Behavioral Kinesiology (now called Life-Energy Analysis), a system based upon applied kinesiology, incorporating the emotions
- Professor Patrick McGorry – Australian of the Year 2010
- Professor Earl Owen – microsurgery pioneer whose institute has trained hundreds of Asian doctors
- Wirginia Maixner – director of neurosurgery at the Royal Children's Hospital in Melbourne. Graduated from the University of Sydney in 1986
- Robert Kavanaugh – dentist and George Cross recipient
- Mitchell Notaras – graduate who funded the $1.1 million Mitchel J Notaras Scholarship for Colorectal Medicine at the University of Sydney
- Professor Geoff White – vascular surgeon; perfected new surgical methods and devices that vastly improved the survival rates of patients and replaced intrusive open surgery, sometimes with day procedures[13]
- Professor Sir Brian Windeyer – Professor of Therapeutic Radiology at Middlesex Hospital Medical School, University of London; Vice-Chancellor of the University of London
- Professor Roland Stocker – scientist in the field of redox biology
- June Lascelles – microbiologist, pioneer in microbial photosynthesis
- Dr Marnie Blewitt – molecular biologist, scientist in the field of epigenetics
- Grace Boelke – general practitioner; one of the first two female graduates in medicine from the University of Sydney
- Katie Louisa Ardill, OBE – first woman to be appointed as a divisional surgeon in New South Wales; among the first female doctors when she joined the British Expeditionary Forces in Egypt in 1915
- Grace Cuthbert-Browne, MBE – doctor and Director of Maternal and Baby Welfare in the New South Wales Department of Public Health, 1937–1964
- Mavis Sweeney (1909–1986) – hospital pharmacist
- Dr Claudia Bradley, MBE (1909–1967) – pharmacist, paediatrician, orthopaedist
- Janet Carr (1933–2014) – physiotherapist
- Errol Solomon Meyers, prominent Brisbane doctor and one of the founding fathers of the University of Queensland School of Medicine
Armed services
- Lieutenant General Sir Iven Mackay – leader of the 6th Australian Division in the Libya Campaign
- Lieutenant General Sir Mervyn Brogan – Chief of the General Staff
- Lieutenant General James Legge – Chief of the General Staff
- Major-General Sir Victor Windeyer
- Lieutenant General Sir Carl Jess
- Lieutenant General Sir Frank Berryman
- Major-General David Engel – Chief of Materiel
- Brigadier Sir Frederick Chilton – led the Sydney Anzac Day March in his 100th year
- Major-General Greg Melick[14]
- Air Vice Marshal Bruce Short[15]
- Major-General Sir Ivan Dougherty
- Major-General John Broadbent CBE[16]
- Major-General Paul Brereton AM RFD – Head Cadet, Reserve and Employer Support Division
- Major-General W B "Digger" James AC AO(Mil) MBE MC – Director-General of Army Medical Services
- Major-General William Watson – Director-General of Army Medical Services
- Major-General Frederick Maguire – Director-General of Army Medical Services
- Captain Gordon King – commando leader awarded the Distinguished Service Order for action at the Battle of Kaiapit[17]
- Lieutenant-General Sir Robert Drew – Director-General of Army Medical Services (United Kingdom)
- Rear-Admiral Alec Doyle – Chief of Construction RAN
- Rear-Admiral Darryl Lynam – Director General of Fleet Maintenance RAN
- Air Vice Marshal Ian Esplin DFC, Royal Air Force
- Air Vice Marshal Colin Hingston AM[18]
- Air Vice Marshal David Morgan AO OBE[18]
- Air Vice Marshal Rodney Noble AO[18]
- Air Vice Marshal Glen Reed[18]
- Air Vice Marshal Neil Smith AM MBE[18]
- Air Vice Marshal Ian Sutherland AO[18]
- Air Vice Marshal Ernest Hey CB CBE[18]
- Air Vice Marshal Michael Helsham AO DFC[18]
- Air Vice Marshal Brian Graf AO[18]
- Air Vice Marshal Desmond Douglas OBE DFC[18]
- Air Vice Marshal Joseph Dietz[18]
- Air Vice Marshal William Collins AO[18]
- Air Vice Marshal Lyndon Compton AO OBE[18]
- Air Vice Marshal Christopher Deeble AM CSC[18]
- Victoria Cross recipients:
Arts, literature and media
- David Malet Armstrong – Challis Professor of Philosophy, 1964–91
- Millicent Armstrong (1888–1973) – playwright and farmer who wrote primarily about the experiences of country life in early 20th century Australia; graduated BA with first class honours in English in 1910
- Sandy Edwards – photographer
- Oliver Feltham – philosopher, best known for his English translation of Alain Badiou's Being and Event
- Margaret Clunies Ross – McCaughey Professor of English Language and Early English Literature, Director of the Centre for Medieval Studies
- Professor Peter Cunich – Department of History at the University of Hong Kong
- Professor Jill Ker Conway – previously Vice-President of the University of Toronto and President of Smith College; Visiting Professor in MIT's program in Science, Technology, and Society; serves on the boards of Nike, Merrill Lynch, and Colgate-Palmolive; chairman of Lend Lease Corporation
- Professor Peter Godfrey-Smith – professor of philosophy at Harvard University
- Germaine Greer – feminist
- Professor Michael Halliday – creator of the systemic functional grammar, an internationally influential grammar model
- Michael Hannan – composer, pianist, and musicologist[19]
- Professor Niall Lucy – writer and scholar, best known for his work on Jacques Derrida and deconstruction
- Dr. Timothy Potts – known for his directorship of the Fitzwilliam Museum, Kimbell Museum, and National Gallery of Victoria, and for his writings on the art and archaeology of the ancient Near East and Mediterranean
- Geoffrey Robertson – human rights lawyer
- Georgina Wilson – model, host of Asia's Next Top Model
- Professor Roger Woodward – Foundation Director at California State University in San Francisco, School of Music & Dance; pianist and musician, AC, Chevalier des arts et des lettres, OM (Pol), Gloria Artis (Pol)
- Actors – John Bell, Rose Byrne, John Flaus, Dolph Lundgren, Jacqueline Fernandez
- Architects – John Andrews, designer of CN Tower, Toronto, Canada, the tallest concrete structure in the world and often listed as one of the seven wonders of the modern world, Philip Cox, Andrea Nield,[20] Eleanor Cullis-Hill
- Broadcasters – Phillip Adams, Ray Martin, Adam Spencer
- Journalists – Richard McGregor, Lillian Roxon, Clive James, Robert Hughes, Bob Ellis
- Comedians – The Chaser (Charles Firth, Dominic Knight, Andrew Hansen, Chas Licciardello, Julian Morrow, Craig Reucassel, Chris Taylor), Tom Gleeson
- Opera singers – Dame Joan Sutherland, Yvonne Kenny
- Novelists – Kimberley Starr, Clive Stephen Barry, Nikos Athanasou, Dymphna Cusack, Kate Grenville, Jeni Mawter, Kimberley Starr, Dora Birtles, Jennifer Rowe
- Poets – Christopher Brennan, A. D. Hope, Les Murray, Geoffrey Lehmann
- Film directors – Jane Campion, Peter Weir, Bruce Beresford
- Pulitzer Prize winners – Geraldine Brooks for March (2006)
Religion
- Roman Catholic Bishops
- Anthony Fisher – Archbishop of Sydney
- John Satterthwaite – Bishop of Lismore
- William Wright – Bishop of Maitland-Newcastle
- Roman Catholic Priests
- Father Joseph Patrick Slattery, C.M., physicist, radiologist, pioneer in the field of radiography in Australia
- Church of England Bishops (Australia)
- Sir Marcus Loane – Archbishop of Sydney
- Peter Jensen – Archbishop of Sydney
- Donald Robinson – Archbishop of Sydney
- Peter Watson – Archbishop of Melbourne
- Geoffrey Cranswick – Bishop of Tasmania
- Ian Shevill – Bishop of Newcastle
- Arthur Green – Bishop of Ballarat
- Henry Burgmann – Bishop of Canberra and Goulburn
- Clive Kerle – Bishop of Armidale
- Glenn Davies – Bishop of North Sydney
- Edwin Davidson – Bishop of Gippsland
- Neville Chynoweth – Bishop of Gippsland
- Robert Forsyth – Bishop of South Sydney
- Anthony Howard Nichols – Bishop of North West Australia
- Leo Ash – Bishop of Rockhampton
- George Cranswick – Bishop of Gippsland
- David Garnsey – Bishop of Gippsland
- Church of England Bishops (International)
- Dudley Foord – Presiding Bishop of the Church of England in South Africa
- Eric Gowing – Bishop of Auckland
- William Hilliard – Bishop of Nelson
- Neville Langford-Smith – Bishop of Nakuru (Kenya)
- Henry Newton – Bishop of New Guinea
- Chen Fah Yong – Assistant Bishop of Sabah[21][22]
- Edward Wilton – Bishop of Northern Melanesia (New Guinea)
- George Chambers – First Bishop of Central Tanganyika
- Chairman of the Congregational Union of England and Wales
- Reverend Professor Hubert Cunliffe-Jones
- Coptic Orthodox Bishops
- Dr. Anba Suriel – Bishop of Melbourne (Coptic Orthodox)
Sport
- Australian Rugby Union Captains (This is not limited to members of the Sydney University Football Club but reflects the scope of the title of the article – University of Sydney people.)
- Herbert Moran
- Tom Lawton, Snr
- John Solomon
- Alex Ross
- Dick Tooth
- Phil Hardcastle
- Johnnie Wallace
- Michael Hawker
- Nick Farr-Jones
- Phil Waugh
- Ken Catchpole[23]
- Stirling Mortlock[24]
- John Thornett[25]
- Peter Johnson[26]
- Dean Mumm[27]
- Canoeing
- Jessica Fox – French-born Australian slalom canoer, Olympic silver (K-1 slalom), world championships bronze (C-1)[28]
- Chess
- Zhao Zong-Yuan – youngest Australian to become a chess Grandmaster; current Australian Chess Champion
- Dual Internationals
- Roger Cornforth – rugby union and water polo[29]
- Scott Gourley – rugby union and rugby league
- Otto Nothling – rugby union and cricket
- Johnny Taylor – rugby union and cricket
- 'Snowy' Baker – rugby union, diving, boxing, swimming and polo[30]
- Kevin Ryan – rugby union and rugby league[31]
- Ellyse Perry – cricket and football
- World record holders
- Jack Metcalfe – competing on Sydney University Oval on 14 December 1935, set a new world record in the triple jump, leaping 15.78 metres
- Nigel Barker – holder of Australia's first athletics world record, in the 400 yards
- Notable
- John Treloar – first Australian to reach final of Olympic Games 100 metres sprint
- Brendon Cook – international race car driver
- Caitlin De Wit – wheelchair basketball player
Staff
- College staff
- Quentin Bryce – Principal of The Women's College, University of Sydney, 1997–2003; later Governor-General of Australia
- Roger Vaughan – Rector of St John's College, University of Sydney, 1874–1877; later archbishop of Sydney
- Academic staff
- John Anderson – Challis Professor of Philosophy
- Charles Badham – Professor of Classics and Logic
- John Burnheim – Professor of General Philosophy
- Gregory Chamitoff – adjunct professor; later astronaut
- James Crawford – Challis Professorship of International Law and Dean of the Faculty of Law; later justice of the International Court of Justice
- Robert Gilbert – Professor of Chemistry and Founding Director of the Key Centre for Polymer Colloids
- Enoch Powell – Professor of Greek; later British politician
- Leo Radom – Professor of Computational Chemistry
- John Smith – Professor of Chemistry and Experimental Physics
- James Stewart – Professor of Near Eastern Archaeology
- Julius Stone – Challis Professor of Jurisprudence and International Law
- Yanis Varoufakis – senior lecturer in economics; later Finance Minister of Greece during the Greek Debt Crisis of 2015
- George Winterton – Professor of Constitutional Law
- William Noel Benson – Demonstrator in the Department of Geology
- William A. Foley – Professor of Linguistics; co-developer of Role and Reference Grammar
Administration
Chancellors
The chancellor is elected by the fellows and presides at Senate meetings. In 1924, the executive position of vice-chancellor was created, and the chancellor ceased to have managerial responsibilities. Until 1860, the chancellor was known as the provost.
- 1851–1854: Edward William Terrick Hamilton
- 1854–1862: Sir Charles Nicholson
- 1862–1865: The Hon. Francis Lewis Shaw Merewether
- 1865–1878: The Hon. Sir Edward Deas Thomson
- 1878–1895: The Hon. Sir William Montagu Manning
- 1895–1896: The Hon. Sir William Charles Windeyer
- 1896–1914: The Hon. Sir Henry Normand MacLaurin
- 1914–1934: The Hon. Sir William Cullen
- 1934–1936: Sir Mungo William MacCallum
- 1936–1941: The Hon. Sir Percival Halse Rogers
- 1941–1964: Lt-Col. Sir Charles Bickerton Blackburn
- 1964–1970: Sir Charles George McDonald
- 1970–1990: Sir Hermann David Black
- 1990–1991: Sir James Rowland
- 1991–2001: Emer. Professor Dame Leonie Kramer
- 2001–2007: Justice Kim Santow
- 2007–2012: Professor Marie Bashir
- 2013–present: Belinda Hutchinson
Vice-Chancellors
The vice-chancellor serves as the chief executive officer of the university, and oversees most of the university's day-to-day operations, with the chancellor serving in a largely ceremonial role. Before 1924, the vice-chancellors were fellows of the university, elected annually by the fellows. Until 1860, the vice-chancellor was known as the vice-provost. Since 1955, the full title has been Vice-Chancellor and Principal.
- 1851–53: Sir Charles Nicholson
- 1854–62: The Hon. Francis Merewether
- 1863–65: The Hon. Sir Edward Deas Thomson KCMG CB
- 1865–69: The Hon. John Hubert Plunkett
- 1869–83: The Rev. Canon Robert Allwood
- 1883–86: The Hon. Sir William Charles Windeyer
- 1887–89: The Hon. Sir Henry Normand MacLaurin
- 1889–91: The Hon. Sir Arthur Renwick
- 1891–92: Henry Chamberlain Russell
- 1892–94: His Honour Judge Alfred Paxton Backhouse
- 1895–96: The Hon. Sir Henry Normand MacLaurin
- 1896–99: His Honour Judge Alfred Paxton Backhouse
- 1900–02: The Hon. Sir Arthur Renwick
- 1902–04: The Hon. Mr Justice Archibald Henry Simpson
- 1904–06: Sir Philip Sydney Jones
- 1906–08: Sir Arthur Renwick
- 1909–11: The Hon. Sir William Portus Cullen KCMG
- 1911–14: His Honour Judge Alfred Paxton Backhouse
- 1914–17: Frank Leverrier KC
- 1917–19: Cecil Purser
- 1919–21: The Hon. Sir David Gilbert Ferguson
- 1921–23: Frank Leverrier
- 1923–24: Cecil Purser
- 1924–28: Professor Sir Mungo William MacCallum
- 1928–47: Sir Robert Strachan Wallace
- 1947–67: Emeritus Professor Sir Stephen Henry Roberts
- 1967–81: Professor Sir Bruce Rodda Williams
- 1981–90: Professor John Manning Ward
- 1990–96: Professor Donald McNicol
- 1996 (acting): Professor Derek John Anderson
- 1996–2008: Professor Gavin Brown
- 2008–present Dr Michael Spence
References
- Williams, Bruce. Liberal education and useful knowledge: a brief history of the University of Sydney, 1850–2000, Chancellor's Committee, University of Sydney, 2002. ISBN 1-86487-439-2
- Inspiring leaders at Women's College
- Governor returns to College
- ↑ http://sydney.edu.au/alumni/sam/march2014/phillip-corne.shtml. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ http://sydney.edu.au/business/news/2015/former_business_school_lecturer_takes_on_worlds_toughest_job. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ http://www.all-souls.ox.ac.uk/people.php?personid=63
- ↑ http://menetekel.e-technik.fh-muenchen.de/skripten/unix/medal.html
- ↑ http://budgiehealth.com/tag/teaching-budgies-to-talk
- ↑ Obituary in SMH 7 June 2010
- ↑ http://sydney.edu.au/alumni/about/awards/2008-c-mackenzie.shtml
- ↑ Who's Who in Australia 2011 page 996
- ↑ "WATCH: 5G WiFi Will Help Integrate Wireless Networking Into Everyday Lives". The Huffington Post.
- ↑ Sydney Morning Herald of 14 June 2010
- ↑ "Obituaries". Canadian Medical Association Journal 73 (5): 418. 1955. PMC 1826314.
- ↑ "Who Was Who 1991–95" page 604
- ↑ Obituary Sydney Morning Herald 6 February 2012
- ↑ "Who’s Who in Australia 2010" page 1476
- ↑ "Who’s Who in Australia 2010" page 1947
- ↑ Obituary in Sydney Morning Herald 16 November 2006
- ↑ Obituary in Sydney Morning Herald of 15 July 2010
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Air Vice-Marshals, RAAF Air Power Development Centre.
- ↑ Slonimsky, Nicolas and Kuhn, Laura (2001). "Hannan, Michael (Francis)". Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians. Schirmer Books. ISBN 9780028655253. Online version retrieved 16 November 2015 (subscription required).
- ↑ "News | The University of Sydney". sydney.edu.au. Retrieved 2015-09-13.
- ↑ http://www.ctca.org.au/en_staff_and_lecturers.php
- ↑ http://www.sydneyanglicans.net/news/stories/malaysian_bishop_gives_sydney_vision/
- ↑ Ken played exclusively for the Randwick Club but graduated Master of Science from Sydney University
- ↑ Stirling played exclusively for the Gordon Club but graduated Bachelor of Science from Sydney University
- ↑ Graduate in Science and Engineering; played for Sydney University Club but member of Northern Suburbs Club at time of Australian captaincy
- ↑ Played for Sydney University Club but member of Randwick Club at time of Australian captaincy
- ↑ Captained Australia in non-test matches in 2009
- ↑ http://www.jta.org/2012/08/05/news-opinion/world/jewish-australian-kayaker-jessica-fox-takes-silver-medal
- ↑ Graduated in Arts, played rugby for Northern Suburbs Club
- ↑ http://www.surfresearch.com.au/1982_Symonds_Maroubra_SLSC.html http://www.sahof.org.au/hallOfFame/memberProfile/index.php?memberID=338&memberType=athlete
- ↑ Graduated in Law but did not play for any Sydney University Club