\n*[[Andreas Embirikos]] – poet\n*[[Charles Finger]] – author\n*[[C. S. Forester]] – historical novelist\n*[[John Fraser (novelist, poet)|John Fraser]] – novelist and poet\n*[[W. S. Gilbert|Sir W. S. Gilbert]] – one half of [[Gilbert and Sullivan]]{{cite web|url=http://www.kcl.ac.uk/about/history/people/keats.html|title=Famous King's writers|author=[[King's College London]]|year=2005|access-date=16 January 2008}}\n*[[Tariq Goddard]] – novelist\n*[[Bea Gonzalez]] – novelist and lecturer\n*[[Bill Griffiths (poet)|Bill Griffiths]] – poet\n*[[Radclyffe Hall]] – poet and author\n*[[Thomas Hardy]] – novelist and poet\n*[[Eileen Hayes]] – author, columnist\n*[[Constance Heaven]] – novelist and actress\n*Dame [[Susan Hill]] – novelist\n*[[Molly Holden]] – poet\n*[[Africanus Horton]] – writer\n*[[Susan Howatch]] – author\n*[[Simon Ings]] – novelist\n*[[Christopher Isherwood]] – novelist\n*[[Storm Jameson]] – novelist\n*[[B. S. Johnson]] – novelist\n*[[Nihan Kaya]] – novelist\n*[[John Keats]] – [[Romanticism|Romantic]] poet\n*[[Garry Kilworth]] – novelist\n*[[Charles Kingsley]] – novelist\n*[[Henry Kingsley]] – novelist\n*[[Hanif Kureishi]] – [[Whitbread Award]]-winning author and screenwriter\n*[[Katherine Langrish]] – author\n*[[Molly Lefebure]] – writer\n*[[Marina Lewycka]] – novelist\n*[[Thomas Macknight]] – biographer\n*[[Sabrina Mahfouz]] – poet and playwright\n*[[Menon Marath]] – novelist\n*[[Alexander Masters]] – [[Whitbread Award]]-winning author and screenwriter\n*[[W. Somerset Maugham]] – novelist and playwright\n*[[Ronald Brunlees McKerrow]] – Shakespearean biographer\n*[[James Miller (novelist)|James Miller]] – novelist\n*[[Henry Morley]] – writer and academic\n*[[Michael Morpurgo|Sir Michael Morpurgo]] – writer\n*[[Desidério Murcho]] – writer\n*[[Lawrence Norfolk]] – novelist\n*[[Kathleen Nott]] – novelist and poet\n*[[Ann Pilling]] – author and poet\n*[[Barry Pilton]] – novelist and screenwriter\n*[[Ross Raisin]] – novelist\n*[[Vernon Richards]] – anarchist editor and author\n*[[Anne Ridler]] – poet\n*[[Michael Roberts (writer)|Michael Roberts]] – poet, writer and broadcaster\n*[[John Ruskin]] – author, poet, artist, art critic and social critic\n*[[John Ralston Saul]] – writer\n*[[Frederick George Scott]] – poet\n*[[Anne Sebba]] – writer\n*[[Khushwant Singh]] – writer and Member of the Indian [[Rajya Sabha]]\n*[[Elizabeth Smart (author)|Elizabeth Smart]] – novelist and poet\n*[[Jon Hunter Spence]] – [[Jane Austen]] scholar\n*[[John Stammers]] – poet and writer\n*[[Leslie Stephen|Sir Leslie Stephen]] – author and mountaineer\n*[[Robin Stevens (author)|Robin Stevens]] – children's author\n*[[Rosemary Timperley]] – novelist\n*[[Frederick Augustus Voigt]] – writer\n*[[David Watmough]] – novelist, playwright and academic\n*[[Michael White (author)|Michael White]] – writer\n*[[Virginia Woolf]] – novelist and essayist\n*[[Sylvia Wynter]] – writer\n",{"template":{"target":{"wt":"Div col end","href":"./Template:Div_col_end"},"params":{},"i":1}}]}" id="mwCdY"> Dannie Abse – writer and poet John Adair – author Alfred Ainger – biographer and critic Lyman Andrews – poet Sir Edwin Arnold – poet and journalist William Beal – religious writer Stephen Benatar – author Ronan Bennett – novelist and screenwriter Tamasin Berry-Hart – novelist Sir Walter Besant – novelist, historian and academic Shahbano Bilgrami – novelist and poet Alain de Botton – writer, philosopher and television producer Patrick Braybrooke – literary critic Paula Broadwell – biographer of David Petraeus Charles Brookfield – playwright and actor Anita Brookner – Booker Prize-winning novelist Sir Arthur C. Clarke – science fiction writer and inventor Helen Cresswell – children's author and screenwriter Quentin Crisp – writer Sir George Webbe Dasent – writer Mike Dash – writer and journalist Ebou Dibba – novelist Alison Dolling – writer Jane Draycott – poet Maureen Duffy – novelist, poet and screenwriter [48] Andreas Embirikos – poet Charles Finger – author C. S. Forester – historical novelist John Fraser – novelist and poet Sir W. S. Gilbert – one half of Gilbert and Sullivan [57] Tariq Goddard – novelist Bea Gonzalez – novelist and lecturer Bill Griffiths – poet Radclyffe Hall – poet and author Thomas Hardy – novelist and poet [57] Eileen Hayes – author, columnist Constance Heaven – novelist and actressDame Susan Hill – novelist [48] Molly Holden – poet Africanus Horton – writer Susan Howatch – author Simon Ings – novelist Christopher Isherwood – novelist Storm Jameson – novelist B. S. Johnson – novelist Nihan Kaya – novelist John Keats – Romantic poet [57] Garry Kilworth – novelist Charles Kingsley – novelist Henry Kingsley – novelist Hanif Kureishi – Whitbread Award-winning author and screenwriter Katherine Langrish – author Molly Lefebure – writer Marina Lewycka – novelist Thomas Macknight – biographer Sabrina Mahfouz – poet and playwright Menon Marath – novelist Alexander Masters – Whitbread Award-winning author and screenwriter W. Somerset Maugham – novelist and playwright Ronald Brunlees McKerrow – Shakespearean biographer James Miller – novelist Henry Morley – writer and academic Sir Michael Morpurgo – writer Desidério Murcho – writer Lawrence Norfolk – novelist Kathleen Nott – novelist and poet Ann Pilling – author and poet Barry Pilton – novelist and screenwriter Ross Raisin – novelist Vernon Richards – anarchist editor and author Anne Ridler – poet Michael Roberts – poet, writer and broadcaster John Ruskin – author, poet, artist, art critic and social critic John Ralston Saul – writer Frederick George Scott – poet Anne Sebba – writer Khushwant Singh – writer and Member of the Indian Rajya Sabha Elizabeth Smart – novelist and poet Jon Hunter Spence – Jane Austen scholar John Stammers – poet and writer Sir Leslie Stephen – author and mountaineer Robin Stevens – children's author Rosemary Timperley – novelist Frederick Augustus Voigt – writer David Watmough – novelist, playwright and academic Michael White – writer Virginia Woolf – novelist and essayist [48] Sylvia Wynter – writerMedia, entertainment, film and theatre Impressionist and comedian Rory Bremner (BA, 1984) Oscar-winning actress Greer Garson (BA, 1926)Further information: List of RADA alumni [58] [59] Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje – actor Andrew Alexander – actor Sheila Atim – actress [60] Juliet Aubrey – actress Michael Barry – BBC executive Emily Berrington – actress Georgina Bouzova – actress Rory Bremner – impressionist Herbert Brenon – film director Sue Carpenter – television presenter Nazrin Choudhury – screenwriter Bijan Daneshmand – actor and film director Gregory de Polnay – actor Leonard Fenton – actor Graeme Garden – actor and comedian Greer Garson – actress Sacha Gervasi – screenwriter Edmund Gwenn – actor Janice Hadlow – Controller of BBC Two Jason Hall – playwright Aiysha Hart – actress Sean Holmes – theatre director Sir Barry Ife – Principal of Guildhall School of Music and Drama Derek Jarman – film director Boris Karloff – actor Henry Kemble – actor Ella Marchment – opera director Jamila Massey – actress Jez Nelson – broadcaster Sir Allan Powell – Chairman of the BBC (1939–1946) Clifford Rose – actor Tom Rosenthal – actor and comedian Ashraf Safdar – actor and journalist Banita Sandhu – Bollywood actress [61] Darwin Shaw – actor Ceri Sherlock – Welsh theatre and film director Robert J. Sherman – American theatre songwriter Jane Tranter – BBC executive Bree Turner – actress Sir Charles Wyndham – actorJournalistsEditors Christian Broughton – editor of The Independent Cyril Kenneth Bird – editor of Punch and cartoonist John Delane – editor of The Times Sydney Jacobson, Baron Jacobson – editor of The Sun Baxter Langley – editor of the Morning Star Hargreaves Parkinson – editor of The Financial Times Farrah Storr – editor of Cosmopolitan (UK) Other journalists Antoine Allen – ITV News reporter Anita Anand – journalist Ruaridh Arrow – journalist and film maker Martin Bashir – journalist Lisa Brennan-Jobs – journalist, daughter of Steve Jobs Sana Bucha – journalist & anchor David Bond – sports journalist Michael Bukht – radio executive James Chau - journalist and UN goodwill ambassador Benjamin Cohen – Channel 4 News correspondent Jane Corbin – BBC Panorama journalist Charlet Duboc – journalist Ayesha Durgahee – journalist Gwynne Dyer – journalist and military historian Sean Fletcher – journalist Daniel Ford – journalist, novelist and military historian Matthew Halton – journalist Ellie Harrison – BBC journalist Georgina Henry – journalist [62] George Hills – journalist Cecil Hunt – journalist Francine Lacqua – Bloomberg Television anchor Sophie Long – BBC News journalist Diana Magnay – Sky News journalist Jonathan Maitland – journalist Ira Mathur – journalist Chapman Pincher – journalist Claire Rayner – journalist and agony aunt Roger Royle – radio broadcaster John Sandes – journalist and author Isa Soares - CNN news anchor and journalist Nicholas Stuart – journalistMusicians Grammy Award-winning conductor Sir John Eliot Gardiner (CAMS, 1966) Golden Globe-winning composer Michael Nyman (BMus, 1971) Filiz Ali – pianist and musicologist Peter Asher – musician and record producer Sir Harrison Birtwistle – composer Fiona Brice – violinist Ming Bridges – singer David Bruce – composer Steven Burke – video game music composer and sound designer John Deacon – bassist for the rock band Queen Francesco Cilluffo – conductor and composer Suzannah Clark – Professor of Music at Harvard University Suzi Digby – conductor and musician DJ Cuppy – Forbes-listed, award-winning musician and DJ Anne Dudley – Oscar-winning composer John Evan – keyboardist for Jethro Tull David Fallows – musicologist Harold Fraser-Simson – composer Dai Fujikura – composer Sir John Eliot Gardiner – conductor JB Gill – singer with British boyband JLS, now a farmer and broadcaster Raja Kashif – singer Daniel Leech-Wilkinson – musicologist Levina – singer Simon Lole – musician Andy Mackay – saxophonist for Roxy Music Davitt Moroney – musicologist, harpsichordist and organist Alice Martineau – singer and songwriter John Moran – musician and musicologist Mixmaster Morris – DJ Chris Newman – composer Michael Nyman – composer and musicologist Kele Okereke – Bloc Party vocalist and guitarist Alec Palao – musician, musicologist, writer and producer Roger Parker – musicologist John Porter – record producer Surendran Reddy – composer and pianist Jean-Baptiste Robin – composer and organist Adnan Sami – musician David Satian – composer Andrew Schultz – composer Shanon Shah – singer Gilli Smyth – musician who performed with Gong amongst others Jeremy Summerly – conductor Dobrinka Tabakova – composer Howard Talbot – composer and conductor Jeffrey Tate – conductor Jeremy Thurlow – composer Edward Top – composer Errollyn Wallen – composer Billy Werner – singer and songwriter Yiruma – composer & pianist Justin Hayward Young – lead singer of The Vaccines Artists and photographers Pegaret Anthony – watercolourist Vanessa Bell – painter Albert Bruce-Joy – sculptor Joseph Crawhall III – artist Tristram Ellis – painter Peter Henry Emerson – photographer Cyril Wiseman Herbert – painter Ronald Moody – sculptor Richard Mosse – photographer Robyn O'Neil – artist Angela Verren – artist Moritz Waldemeyer – technical designer Sophia Wellbeloved – artistBusiness and economics Oil magnate and philanthropist Calouste Gulbenkian Company founders Rakesh Aggarwal – entrepreneur and founder of Escentual.com Allen Law – CEO and co-founder of Park Hotel Group Sanjeev Kanoria – Chairman and co-founder of Advinia HealthCare Walter Bagot – co-founder of Woods Bagot Kartikeya Sharma – founder of ITV Network Walter Owen Bentley – founder of Bentley Motors Christian Candy – businessman (real estate) and founder of CPC Group William Foyle – founder of Foyles bookshop Jane Tranter – founder of Bad Wolf Sam Instone – businessman and founder of AES International Klaus Heymann – entrepreneur and founder of Naxos Records Johnny Hon – founder of the Global Group Isabel dos Santos – Africa's richest woman and its first female billionaire, co-founder of Unitel Nathaniel Rothschild, 5th Baron Rothschild – founder of Atticus Capital Sir Alliott Verdon Roe – founder of Avro Naveen Selvadurai – co-founder of Foursquare Stephen Streater – founder of Eidos Priyanka Gill – co-founder of Good Glamm Group Sir David Tang – businessman and founder of Shanghai Tang fashion chain Alvin Yeo – co-founder of WongPartnership CEOs and business people Alex Beard – Chief Executive of the Royal Opera House Harriet Green – CEO of IBM Asia Pacific, former CEO of Thomas Cook Group John Blundell Maple – English business magnate and owner of Maple & Co. Victor Dzau – President and CEO of Duke University Medical Center Peter McCormick – Chairman of The Football Association (FA) Chris Cleverly – CEO of Made in Africa Foundation Kevon Glickman – CEO of RuffNation Records Nazrin Hassan – CEO of Cradle Fund Moazzam Ilyas – Chairman of Port Qasim Authority Edward G. Jefferson – CEO and Chairman of DuPont corporation Sara Rashid – President of Kurdistan Save the Children Katherine Elizabeth Fleming – CEO of J. Paul Getty Trust William Tritton – Chairman of William Foster & Co. Calouste Gulbenkian – Oil magnate and philanthropist Eurfyl ap Gwilym – Deputy Chairman of the Principality Building Society and Plaid Cymru politician Omar Ishrak – Chairman & CEO of Medtronic Richard G.R. Evans - Philanthropist and owner of Truro City F.C. Yvonne Lui - Hong Kong businesswoman and philanthropist Sir Deryck Maughan – CEO of Salomon Brothers Steve Mogford – CEO of United Utilities Harsha Abeywickrama – Chairman of Bank of Ceylon Eric Nicoli – CEO of EMI Toyin Ajayi – CEO of Cityblock Health Sir Ronald Norman – Chairman of Teesside Development Corporation Nneka Onyeali-Ikpe – CEO of Fidelity Bank Nigeria Eva Kwok – CEO of Amara International Investment Corporation, former CEO of Saskatchewan Polytechnic Mohammad Musa – Chairman of Mongla Port Authority Sir Edward Packard – Chairman of Fisons Tim Pryce – CEO of Terra Firma Capital Partners Gilbert Szlumper – General Manager of the Southern Railway (UK) Rory Tapner – CEO of Coutts Ruth McKernan – CEO of Innovate UK Richard Goatley – CEO of Middlesex County Cricket Club Sir William Tritton – inventor of the tank and Chairman & Managing Director of Fosters of Lincoln Lawrence Urquhart – Chairman of BAA Marcus Weldon – President of Bell Labs Mallory Evan Wijesinghe – Chairman of Ceylon Hotels Corporation; chairman of the Colombo Stock Exchange Douglas Carswell – CEO of Mississippi Center for Public Policy Dev Pragad – CEO of Newsweek Sania Nishtar – CEO of GAVI Lucy Chappell – CEO of National Institute for Health and Care Research Heidi Baker – CEO of Iris Global Wendy Piatt – CEO of Gresham College Kirsten Bodley – CEO of Institute of Asset Management Neo Kian Hong – CEO of SMRT Corporation Sport Four-time Olympic medal winner Dame Katherine Grainger (PhD, 2013) Harry Gem, inventor of the lawn tennis Jo Ankier – athlete Dina Asher-Smith – Olympic medal-winning sprinter Paul Bennett – Olympic gold medal-winning rower Barry Davies – sports commentator Tom Edgar – GT4 British racing driver Ayoola Erinle – England rugby player Harry Gem – inventor of lawn tennis Dame Katherine Grainger – Olympic gold medal-winning rower Frances Houghton – Olympic gold medal-winning rower Thomas Hollingdale – Welsh international rugby player Adam Khan – racing driver Imani-Lara Lansiquot – Olympic medal-winning sprinter Corinna Lawrence – fencer Zoe Lee – Olympic medal-winning rower Jayne Ludlow – women's footballer Laviai Nielsen – sprinter Edward Pegge – Welsh international rugby player Leigh Richmond Roose – Welsh international footballer Chris Sheasby – England rugby player Annabel Vernon – Olympic medal-winning rower Kieran West – Olympic gold medal-winning rowerArchitects Sir Banister Fletcher, President of the Royal Institute of British Architects Guy Maxwell Aylwin – architect Walter Bagot – architect Edward Middleton Barry – architect Frederick Pepys Cockerell – architect Sir William Emerson – President of the Royal Institute of British Architects Sir Banister Fletcher – architect Alfred Giles – architect John Alfred Gotch – President of the Royal Institute of British Architects Richard Phené Spiers – architect John Whichcord Jr. – architectEngineers Famous civil engineer Sir John Wolfe-Barry, whose project was the building of the now iconic London Tower Bridge Mustafa Al-Bassam – software engineer and privacy activist Sir William Anderson – President of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers Henry Marc Brunel – civil engineer and son of Isambard Kingdom Brunel Henry Brogden – civil engineer William Clark – civil engineer and inventor Edward Cruttwell – civil engineer Henry Deane – engineer Sir John Dewrance – mechanical engineer and inventor Sir Douglas Fox – civil engineer Walter Katte – civil engineer Sir William Henry Preece – President of the Institution of Civil Engineers Kawal Rhode - Biomedical Engineer Bill Strang – aerospace engineer Julian Tolmé – civil engineer Thomas Walker – civil engineer Mark Whitby – civil engineer Sir John Wolfe-Barry – civil engineerEducators John William Adamson – first Master of the Department for the Training of Teachers Sir William Atkinson – educator Edward Ernest Bowen – author of the Harrow School song Timothy Hands – Master of Magdalen College School Albert Mansbridge – educator Alan Smithers – educationalistOther Sir Ivison Macadam, KCLSU President in 1922 and became the Founding President of the UK's National Union of Students Thomas Armitage, founder of the Royal National Institute of the Blind (RNIB) Asma al-Assad – the wife of the deposed Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and former First lady of Syria. Thomas Armitage – founder of the RNIB William Baker – stylist Nick Barratt – genealogist and Director of Senate House Library in the University of London Doyne Bell ― antiquary [63] Roshonara Choudhry – Islamic terrorist convicted of the attempted murder of MP Stephen Timms in 2010 [64] Sir William Coxen, 1st Baronet – Lord Mayor of London Harry Dagnall – philatelist Alex Dodoo – Ghanaian academic, pharmacist and Director General of Ghana Standards Authority Frederic Sutherland Ferguson – bibliographer Peter Fox – University of Cambridge librarian Harry Golombek – chess grandmaster Bob Halstead – scuba diver Sir Walter Howell – civil servant Leonard Hussey – explorer Dame Agnes Jekyll – philanthropist Sir Harry Johnston – explorer Helen Joseph – anti-apartheid activist Sia Koroma – First Lady of Sierra Leone Sir Ivison Macadam – first President of NUS and Director-General of Chatham House Sir Joseph Pilling – civil servant Hudson Stuck – explorer Sir Francis Wyatt Truscott – Lord Mayor of London Elizabeth Wilmshurst – civil servantReferences 1 2 3 4 "Connect, Give, Benefit". Alumni & Fundraising. King's College London. Retrieved 15 February 2016. ↑ O'Neill, Terry (2006). The Bahamas Speed Weeks. Veloce Publishing Ltd. p. 353. ISBN 978-1845840181 . Retrieved 31 March 2013. ↑ "Faculty of Social Science & Public Policy and Global Institutes" (PDF). King's College, London. Retrieved 23 August 2017. ↑ Smith, Helena (8 January 2009). "Obituary: Tassos Papadopoulos". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 March 2013. ↑ "Glafcos Clerides - obituary". The Telegraph. Retrieved 15 February 2016. ↑ "Glafkos Ioannou Clerides". Archived from the original on 4 August 2012. Retrieved 16 January 2008. ↑ "Petr Pavel: Ukraine supporter and military hero who swept to the Czech presidency". Euronews . 28 January 2023. Retrieved 29 January 2023. ↑ "Change of Governor of the Falklands Islands". gov.uk. 30 June 2017. Retrieved 5 August 2017. ↑ Listowel, W. F. A critical history of the main currents of modern aesthetics (Thesis). Senate House Libraries. Retrieved 15 February 2016. ↑ ‘DAVIS, Lt Gen. Edward Grant Martin’, Who's Who 2015, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2015 ↑ Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience. p. 471. Retrieved 15 February 2016. ↑ Esposito, John L (2004). The Oxford Dictionary of Islam – Abdul-Rahman al-Bazzaz. Oxford University Press, USA. p. 40. ISBN 978-0-19-512559-7 . Retrieved 15 February 2016. ↑ Mackay, James (21 December 2012). Michael Collins: A Life. Random House. ISBN 978-1780575025. ↑ "Famous alumni". King's College London. Retrieved 23 December 2008. ↑ "H.E. Dr. Marouf al-Bakhit". The University of Jordan. Retrieved 15 February 2016. ↑ "Biography of Marouf al-Bakhit" . Retrieved 22 December 2008.(subscription required) ↑ "International Women's Day". News, events & features. King’s College London. Retrieved 15 February 2016. ↑ "Iurie LEANCA, Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Foreign Affairs and European Integration | Iurie LEANCĂ, Minister of Foreign Affairs and European Integration | Government of Republic of Moldova". Archived from the original on 3 November 2012. Retrieved 19 September 2018. ↑ "Court Building to be named in honour of Sir Lee Llewellyn Moore on National Heroes Day". Office of the Prime Minister of the Government of St. Kitts & Nevis. Archived from the original on 24 November 2011. Retrieved 31 March 2013. ↑ "Gun-Munro, Sir Sydney Douglas (1916 - 2007)". The Royal College of Surgeons of England. Retrieved 15 February 2016. ↑ Rake, Alan (2001). African Leaders: Guiding the New Millennium. Scarecrow Press. p. 201. ISBN 0810840197. ↑ Editors of the American Heritage Dictionaries (2005). The Riverside dictionary of biography. Houghton Mifflin. p. 670. ISBN 978-0618493371 . Retrieved 31 March 2013. ↑ "Martin Bourke". Who's Who.(subscription required) ↑ "Britain's nuclear arms control policy in the context of Anglo- American relations 1957-68 / John Patrick George Freeman". Senate House, London . Retrieved 31 December 2017. ↑ Wolfgang, M. E. & Lambert, R. D. (1977). Africa in Transition. American Academy of Political and Social Science. p. 204. ↑ ‘FRANCOIS, Rt Hon. Mark (Gino)’, Who's Who 2016, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2016 ↑ "Gagan Mohindra MP (Conservative) | OBV". ↑ ‘POWELL, Lucy Maria’, Who's Who 2016, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2016 ↑ ‘SIDDIQ, Tulip, (Mrs C. W. St J. Percy)’, Who's Who 2016, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2016 ↑ ‘THOMAS, Gareth Richard’, Who's Who 2016, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2016 ↑ "George Carey – 103rd Archbishop of Canterbury". The Archbishop of Canterbury. Archived from the original on 10 November 2013. Retrieved 31 March 2013. ↑ ‘ROWLANDS’, Who's Who 2016, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2016 ↑ "Douglas Carswell". Archived from the original on 8 October 2013. ↑ ‘LEWIS, Brandon’, Who's Who 2016, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2016 ↑ ‘POULTER, Dr Daniel Leonard James’, Who's Who 2016, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2016 ↑ ‘STREETER, Gary Nicholas’, Who's Who 2016, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2016 ↑ ‘WARBURTON, David John’, Who's Who 2016, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2016 ↑ "Former Judges". Supreme Court of India. Retrieved 3 March 2017. ↑ "The Honourable Sir Justice Syed Shah Mohammed Quadri". Hc.ap.nic.in. Retrieved 3 March 2017. ↑ "High Court of Gujarat". Gujarathighcourt.nic.in. Retrieved 3 March 2017. ↑ L, Klemen (1999–2000). "Air Chief Marshal Sir Richard Edmund Charles Peirse". Forgotten Campaign: The Dutch East Indies Campaign 1941–1942. ↑ "Comment - The College Newsletter" (PDF). King's College London . Retrieved 9 March 2017. ↑ ‘GALTON, Sir Francis’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2016; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ↑ "Dr Georgios Samaras". www.kcl.ac.uk. Retrieved 9 April 2023. ↑ "Professor Keith Campbell". The Daily Telegraph. London. 11 October 2012. ↑ "Obituaries: Professor Tony Pawson". The Daily Telegraph . 15 August 2013. Retrieved 21 March 2016. ↑ "Notable Alumni" (PDF). King's College London. 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 August 2007. Retrieved 16 January 2008. 1 2 3 4 "Notable Alumni". News & features. King's Alumni Community. Retrieved 15 February 2016. ↑ Needham, Joseph (December 1962). "Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins, O.M., F.R.S. (1861–1947)". Notes and Records of the Royal Society. 17 (2). The Royal Society: 117–162. doi: 10.1098/rsnr.1962.0014 . JSTOR 531218. S2CID 145795016.(subscription required) ↑ ‘STEPTOE, Patrick Christopher’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2016 ↑ "Professor Peter Higgs". King's College London. Retrieved 12 September 2013. ↑ "Biography of the Chief Rabbi Lord Sacks". Office of the Chief Rabbi. Archived from the original on 1 April 2013. Retrieved 31 March 2013. ↑ "Desmond Tutu". King's College London. Retrieved 31 March 2013. ↑ ‘WINCHESTER, Bishop of’, Who's Who 2016, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2016 ↑ ‘SALISBURY, Bishop of’, Who's Who 2016, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2016 ↑ TRURO, Bishop of’, Who's Who 2016, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2016 1 2 3 King's College London (2005). "Famous King's writers" . Retrieved 16 January 2008. ↑ "RADA: An introduction". Royal Academy of Dramatic Art. Retrieved 20 May 2016. ↑ "King's College London Dates and Locations". King's College London. Retrieved 20 May 2016. ↑ Arthey, Rachelle, ed. (2020). "Class notes". In Touch. King's College London. Retrieved 10 April 2020. ↑ Waheed, Alia (30 March 2018). "Banita Sandhu – the London undergrad moonlighting as a Bollywood star". The Guardian . Retrieved 27 November 2019. ↑ "Former Guardian deputy editor Georgina Henry dies aged 53", The Guardian, 7 February 2014 ↑ Sir George Scharf, "Mr. Doyne C. Bell" (obituary) in The Athenaeum , No. 3154, 7 April 1888 ↑ Rayner, Gordon; Bingham, John (2 November 2010). "Stephen Timms stabbing: how internet sermons turned quiet student into fanatic". The Daily Telegraph. London.External linksList of alumni of King's College London at Wikipedia's sister projects Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource King's College London student lists v t e King's College London University of London Academicfaculties Business School Dental Institute Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience Faculty of Arts and Humanities Faculty of Natural & Mathematical Sciences Faculty of Life Sciences & Medicine School of Law Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery Faculty of Social Science & Public Policy Departments,centresand divisions Centre for Children and Adolescents Centre for the History of Science, Technology and Medicine Department of Classics Department of Digital Humanities Department of International Development Department of Philosophy Department of War Studies Digital Classicist International Centre for Prison Studies Liddell Hart Centre for Military Archives Maurice Wohl Clinical Neuroscience Institute MRC SGDP Centre Randall Division of Cell and Molecular Biophysics School of Education, Communication and Society Wolfson Centre for Age-Related Diseases Twins Early Development Study People Principal: Shitij Kapur Chairman of the Council: Christopher Geidt, Baron Geidt Dean: Ellen Clark-King Visitor: Archbishop of Canterbury Academics List of notable alumni List of chaplains List of deans Buildingsand places Guy's Campus Gordon Museum of Pathology Museum of Life Sciences Strand Campus Bush House King's College London Chapel King's Building Maughan Library Somerset House East Wing King George III Museum Student life Macadam Cup Reggie the Lion Roar News newspaper Boat Club Rugby Club Rugby Club (Guy's, Kings and St Thomas') Students' Union (KCLSU) Tolstoy Cup AffiliatesMedical Evelina London Children's Hospital Francis Crick Institute Guy's Hospital King's Health Partners King's College Hospital South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust Bethlem Royal Hospital Lambeth Hospital Maudsley Hospital St Thomas' Hospital University Hospital Lewisham Other Golden triangle King's College London Mathematics School King's College School Royal Academy of Dramatic Art Russell Group Thomas Young Centre Other Academic dress of King's College London Aldwych tube station Associateship of King's College Chelsea College of Science and Technology Coat of arms of King's College London Creighton Lecture History Inkha King's College London Business King's College London–UCL rivalry Queen Elizabeth College Roman Baths, Strand Lane Third-oldest university in England debate Category Commons Wikisource Wikinews This page is based on this Wikipedia article Text is available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license; additional terms may apply.Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.
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