In addition to the many fine portraits that adorn Univ鈥檚 Hall 鈥 details of which can be found on our page 鈥 College has a large number of noteworthy portraits elsewhere across our main site.
Further information on many of those whose portraits are listed below can be found on the website.
The Portraits
John Albery聽(1936鈥2013). Fellow of Univ 1963鈥78, and Master 1989鈥97 (Artist: Daphne Todd)
An eminent scientist (the first FRS to become Master), Albery also had a literary bent, writing sketches for That Was the Week That Was. Note: there is currently no entry for John Albery in the ODNB.
Sir John Eldon Bankes (1854鈥1946), Undergraduate of Univ, matriculated 1872 (Artist: John St Helier Lander)
Bankes, as his name suggests, was a great-grandson of the great Lord Chancellor John Scott, Lord Eldon, who had been an undergraduate and Fellow at Univ a century earlier. Bankes got a rowing Blue while at Univ, and then followed his ancestor into the law. He was made a Judge in 1910, and in 1915 was appointed a Lord Justice of Appeal, which post he held until he retired in 1927. In his entry in the ODNB Bankes is praised as 鈥渁 careful, clear-headed, and able lawyer鈥. He was also a devoted churchman, and helped draft the constitution of the Church in Wales when it was disestablished in 1920.
Sir Simon Bennet (c. 1584鈥1631), Undergraduate of Univ, matriculated 1602 (Artist: Anon.)
Bennet came from a prosperous family with London links. Many of his relatives had extensive commercial interests, and some of them (including his father-in-law) invested in the East India and Virginia Companies. He himself seems to have lived a quiet life, and made a baronet in 1627. Bennet had no children, and on his death, made a remarkable bequest to his old College, apparently because of his affection for his old tutor, Charles Greenwood. He left us a large tract of woodland in Northamptonshire, instructing that the timber be chopped down to pay for a new quadrangle, and the land then turned over to farming, to be rented out to support new Fellows and new Scholars. The timber sales paid for the construction of over half of our Main Quad, and rent from the newly created farmland endowed four Fellowships and four Scholarships. Thus Simon Bennet joins John Radcliffe as one of the College鈥檚 most generous benefactors of any age.
Robin Butler, Lord Butler of Brockwell, and Jill, Lady Butler (Artist: Benjamin Sullivan)
Robin Butler, Lord Butler of Brockwell, came up to Univ as an undergraduate in 1957, and was our Master in 1998鈥2008. On leaving Univ, Butler joined the Civil Service, first working in the Treasury. As a Private Secretary he worked at various times for Edward Heath, Harold Wilson and Margaret Thatcher, and then in 1988鈥98 he served as Cabinet Secretary, working with Margaret Thatcher once again, and then with John Major and Tony Blair. This portrait was commissioned to mark Lord Butler鈥檚 retirement as Master, and is unique among such official portraits in that it includes his wife Jill, as a tribute to her deep involvement in the life of the College.
Four sons of the 3rd Marquess of Salisbury (Artist: F H S Shepherd)
Robert Gascoigne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury (1830鈥1903), Chancellor of Oxford and Prime Minister, chose to send four of his sons to Univ in the 1880s, namely James (1861鈥1947), later 4th Marquess of Salisbury, in 1880, William (1863鈥1936), in 1882, Robert (1864鈥1958), later Viscount Cecil of Chelwood, in 1883, and Hugh (1869鈥1956), later Baron Quickswood, in 1887. William took holy orders, and became Bishop of Exeter in 1916, while his brothers entered politics. James and Hugh became prominent Conservative politicians, and Robert worked for the League of Nations, receiving the Nobel Peace Prize in 1937. This painting of the brothers depicts them in Lord Salisbury鈥檚 study in Hatfield House, and was given to the College in 1928 by our then Master, Sir Michael Sadler (who later encouraged the College to commission a conversation piece of himself and the Fellows from Shepherd). On the picture the brothers are, from left to right, Hugh, Robert, James, and William.
Portrait of Thomas and John Cockman and some Fellows of 182t福利 (Artist: Benjamin Ferrers)
Thomas Cockman, Undergraduate of Univ, matriculated 1691, Fellow 1701鈥13 and Master 1722鈥45, had a turbulent start to his Mastership. His election in 1722 was disputed by half the Fellows, and the College had no effective leadership until 1729, when a formal Visitation declared Cockman undisputed Master. In this conversation piece, Thomas sites in the middle of the group, holding a snuff box, while the figure on the left-hand edge, looking out at the viewer, is his brother John, who had come up to Univ in 1699, and had steadfastly supported his brother. The other figures are presumably the five Fellows who took Cockman鈥檚 side during the dispute. The painting was probably commissioned by John Cockman, as a celebration of his brother鈥檚 victory, and shows the brothers with the Fellows who stood by Thomas through thick and thin. The painting was handed down through John鈥檚 descendants, but came up for sale in 2008 and was purchased by the College.
Horace, Lord Davey (1833鈥1907), Undergraduate of Univ, matriculated 1852, and then Fellow of Univ 1856鈥64 (Artist: Solomon J Solomon)
Davey won a considerably reputation as a Chancery lawyer, but went on to be a Liberal MP, serving as Solicitor-General in Gladstone鈥檚 brief government of 1886, and then became Lord Justice of Appeal in 1893 and then a Lord of Appeal in Ordinary in 1894. The ODNB says of him: 鈥渁rguably the very greatest barrister of his day, Davey was certainly also one of the greatest judges.鈥
Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester (1532鈥88) Chancellor of the University of Oxford 1564鈥88 (Artist: attr. Sir William Segar)
Favourite and long-serving minister to Elizabeth I, Dudley was never an undergraduate or Fellow of Univ, but on his deathbed he did become a benefactor to us (the presence there of William James, our Master in 1572鈥84, might have had something to do with this). Dudley bequeathed to Univ some property in Wales to support two scholarships. Unfortunately, he had to admit in his will that 鈥淭his fee farm I know not the name of it鈥, and it took several years for the College to make good its claim. The farms were in a remote area of Montgomeryshire, and we sold them in 1920. Percy Shelley was a Leicester Scholar.
Edward Hales (1670鈥90), Undergraduate of Univ, matriculated 1684 (Artist: Anon.)
Hales was an important figure in 1680s Univ, after Obadiah Walker converted to Catholicism. His father, Sir Edward Hales, another Catholic convert, was an important figure in James II鈥檚 fight to defend Catholicism, for he became Lieutenant both of Dover Castle and of the Tower of London. Walker was very proud of having Edward Jr. at Univ, because he chose him to give two major speeches, the first in February 1687 when the statue of James was installed in the Main Quad, the second in September 1687, to welcome James himself when he visited the College (the last visit by a reigning monarch to the College until 1999). After James II was deposed, Edward stayed loyal to him: he was killed fighting for James at the battle of the Boyne in 1690. This portrait was given to the College in 1898 by Rev. R. C. Hales, a descendant of the family.
Stephen Hawking (1942鈥2018), Undergraduate of Univ, matriculated 1959 (Artist: Yolanda Sonnabend)
Stephen Hawking was one of the most famous scientists of his age, renowned for his work on cosmology, in particular the study of black holes, and he served as Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at Cambridge from 1979鈥2009. He accomplished this work, however, despite the fact that, soon after moving from Oxford to Cambridge to do postgraduate work, he was struck down with a type of motor neurone disease, and given only a short time to live. He conquered his increasingly debilitating illness with remarkable determination, even when he was confined to a wheelchair and required a computerised voice synthesiser. He published many books and articles, but his most famous book is undoubtedly his best-selling A Brief History of Time, published in 1988. A film about Hawking鈥檚 life, The Theory of Everything came out in 2014. Hawking himself was played by Eddie Redmayne, who won an Oscar for his performance.
Edward Herbert, Lord Herbert of Cherbury (1583鈥1648), Undergraduate of Univ, matriculated 1596 (Artist: Anon., after William Larkin)
Herbert was an archetypal Renaissance man: as a young man he travelled around Europe, briefly serving as a soldier; he became a diplomat, being appointed English ambassador to Paris in 1619; but he was also a man of letters, publishing books on philosophy and history. He had a very fine personal library, but unfortunately gave it all to Jesus College. In his autobiography he talks about his time at Oxford, and in particular about the studied he thought appropriate to an undergraduate. This portrait was given to the College in 1934 by Gerald Yeo (matriculated 1884).
Gordon Hewart, 1st Viscount Hewart (1870鈥1943), Undergraduate of Univ, matriculated 1887 (Artist: John St. Helier Lander)
Hewart was a draper鈥檚 son from Bury, who attended Manchester Grammar School, and it seems that, once up at Oxford, he feared that his Lancashire accent was a handicap, and altered it accordingly. He entered the law, and served as Lord Chief Justice of England in 1922鈥40. Sadly, the ODNB observes that 鈥渉is period as lord chief justice was not distinguished鈥, and that, on the bench, he 鈥渨as frequently boorish and rude to counsel鈥.
Harry Melvill (1866鈥1931), Undergraduate of Univ, matriculated 1884 (Artist: Jacques-Emile Blanche)
Melvill was something of a man-about-town in the 1890s, who knew a great many artists, musicians, and writers in London and Paris at that time, but – unusually for the portraits in our collection – this painting is perhaps less important for its subject than for its painter. Jacques-Emile Blanche (1861鈥1942) was one of the leading portraitists of his age, painting such major figures as Proust, Debussy, Nijinsky, James Joyce and Virginia Woolf. This painting, which is dated 1904, was shown for a while in the Tate Gallery, but by 1938 was in the possession of Melvill鈥檚 brother. It came to the College at an unknown date after that.
Sir John Richardson聽(1771鈥1841). Undergraduate of Univ, matr. 1789 (Artist: Thomas Phillips).
He was Puisne Judge of Common Pleas in 1818鈥24. He later moved to Malta for health reasons, and drafted a law code for that island.
Sir Michael Sadler and the Fellows of 182t福利, 1934 (Artist, F H S Shepherd)
Sir Michael Sadler, educationalist and pioneering collector of modern art, was Master of Univ from 1923-34. He was the first outsider to be elected to the post since 1692. Just before his retirement as Master, Sadler was invited, like his two predecessors, to sit for an official portrait, but he declined this offer, suggesting instead that the College commission a conversation piece of himself and the Fellows of the College. The painting is set in the Winter Common Room, and it shows the Master and Fellows as if they are taking a break from a College meeting. The sitters are as follows:
Back row: David Lindsay Keir (Fellow 1921鈥39), Ernest Ainley Walker (Fellow 1903鈥38), A. D. 鈥淒uncs鈥 Gardiner (Fellow 1927鈥48), G. D. H. Cole (Fellow 1925鈥44), John Maud (Fellow 1929鈥39 and Master 1963鈥76), Arthur Goodhart (Fellow 1931鈥51 and Master 1951鈥63), and John Wild (Fellow 1933鈥45 and Master 1945鈥51).
Front row: Edmund Bowen (Fellow 1922鈥65), Arthur Poynton (Fellow 1894鈥1935 and Master 1935鈥7), Sir Michael Sadler, A. S. L. Farquharson (Fellow 1899鈥1942), Edgar Carritt (Fellow 1898鈥1945), George Hope Stevenson (Fellow 1906鈥49) and Kenneth Leys (Fellow 1908鈥42).
In later years, several observers noted Shepherd鈥檚 apparent percipience in putting three future Masters of the College (Wild, Goodhart and Maud) standing next to each other.
Horace Waddington (1834鈥1930), undergraduate of Univ, matriculated 1853 (Artist, G Thompson)
On leaving Univ, he joined the Department of Education, working first as an Examiner and then an Inspector, eventually taking charge of the Guildford district, until he retired in 1894. He endowed a Classics Scholarship at Univ, but also bequeathed us a collection of ancient coins, on condition that they may be placed in the Ashmolean Museum on revokable deposit. The portrait was given by Waddington鈥檚 widow in 1930.
John Wild (1904鈥92), Fellow and Chaplain of Univ, 1933鈥45, and Master 1945鈥51 (Artist: Barrington Bramley)
Wild came to Univ as our Chaplain having served as a curate in Newcastle. During the Second World War, when our Master, Sir William Beveridge, was taken up with his activities in Whitehall, not least the writing of the Beveridge Report, John Wild was appointed Vice-Master, and played a crucial role in keeping the College going. He was undoubtedly elected Master in 1945 because of this work. In 1951, Wild was promoted to become Dean of Durham, a post he held until 1973. He is affectionately remembered by those who knew him for his kindness of character.
Group portrait of (left to right) Bill Sykes, Sir Peter Strawson, George Cawkwell, and Hartmut Pogge von Strandmann, (Artist: Daphne Todd – who also did the portrait of in the Hall)
Apparently, Todd was at a College Feast when she saw these four Fellows, and was struck by the idea of painting a set of heads of them. They are Bill Sykes (Fellow and Chaplain 1978鈥2005), Sir Peter Strawson (Philosophy Fellow 1948鈥68), George Cawkwell (Ancient History Fellow 1949鈥87), and Hartmut Pogge von Strandmann (History Fellow 1977鈥2005).

















