Charles Smith (b Huntingdon, 11 May 1844; d Cambridge 13 November 1916) [1] was a 20th-century British academic. [2]
Smith was educated at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge. [3] He became a Fellow of Sidney Sussex in 1868; Tutor in 1875; and Master in 1890. He was Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge from 1895 to 1897. [4]
Isaac Todhunter FRS, was an English mathematician who is best known today for the books he wrote on mathematics and its history.
Robert Woodhouse was a British mathematician and astronomer.
Norman Macleod FerrersD.D. was a British mathematician and university administrator and editor of a mathematical journal.
Sir John Frank Charles Kingman is a British mathematician. He served as N. M. Rothschild and Sons Professor of Mathematical Sciences and Director of the Isaac Newton Institute at the University of Cambridge from 2001 until 2006, when he was succeeded by David Wallace. He is known for developing the mathematics of the Coalescent theory, a theoretical model of inheritance, which is fundamental to modern population genetics.
Asa Briggs, Baron Briggs was an English historian. He was a leading specialist on the Victorian era, and the foremost historian of broadcasting in Britain. Briggs achieved international recognition during his long and prolific career for examining various aspects of modern British history. He became a life peer in 1976.
Richard Reynolds (1674–1743) was an English bishop of Lincoln.
Richard Minshull or Minshall was an English academic, Master of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge from 1643.
Richard Vincent Penty, FREng is a British engineer and academic. He is the current Master of Sidney Sussex College and Professor of Photonics at the University of Cambridge.
Edward Pearson (1756–1811) was an English academic and theologian, Master of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge from 1808.
The Very Revd John Frankland was an 18th-century academic and Dean in the Church of England.
William Savage was an English academic.
George Arthur Weekes was a 20th-century British academic.
Edward Anthony Beck was a British academic in the last third of the 19th century and the first decades of the 20th.
William Chafy served as Master of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge from 1813 until his death.
John Davie, D.D. was an academic in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
William Elliston, D.D. was an academic in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
John Adams, D.D. was an academic in the eighteenth century.
Joseph Craven was an 18th-century academic.
Bardsey Fisher was an 18th-century academic.
James Johnson (1640-1704) was an academic in the last decades of the 17th century and the first of the 18th.