List of Old King's Scholars explained
This is a list of some notable former pupils of The King's School, Canterbury, known as Old King's Scholars (abbreviated as OKS). The term King's Scholar referred to the few boys who, by their academic ability at a very young age, won scholarships to King's.
Art
Business
- Sir Ian Cheshire (born 1959), chairman of Barclays UK and former CEO of Kingfisher plc
- Sir Nicholas Lyons (born 1958), financier and 694th Lord Mayor of London
- Charles Powell, Baron Powell of Bayswater, KCMG (born 1941), diplomat, businessman and foreign policy adviser to Margaret Thatcher
- Sir Hugh Robertson (politician) (born 1962), chairman of the British Olympic Association and the Camelot Group, former MP for Faversham and Mid Kent, Minister of State, and Minister for Sport
Engineering, science and medicine
Film, television and theatre
- Derek Bond (1920-2006) actor
- Oz Clarke (born 1949), wine writer and television presenter and broadcaster
- Charles Frend (1909 - 1977), film director and editor
- David Gower (born 1957), cricket commentator, former cricketer and captain of the England cricket team
- John Lloyd (born 1951), television and radio comedy writer and producer
- Leslie Mitchell (1905 - 1985), British radio and television announcer
- Christopher Neame (writer/producer) (1942-2011), film producer and screenwriter
- Michael Powell (1905 - 1990), filmmaker
- Sir Carol Reed (1906 - 1976), film director
- Tom Ward (born 1971), film, stage and television actor
- Antony Worrall Thompson (born 1951), restaurateur, celebrity chef, television presenter and radio broadcaster
History and philosophy
- Catherine Conybeare (born 1966), academic and philologist
- Hugh Honour (1927 - 2016), art historian
- Jeremy Lawrance (born 1952), linguist and historian
- Thomas Linacre ( - 1524), humanist scholar and physician
- Walter Pater (1839 - 1894), essayist, literary and art critic, fiction writer and humanist
- George Sale, (1697 - 1736), Orientalist scholar and solicitor
- Alan Watts (1915 - 1973), writer and philosopher
- William Wyse[2] (1860 - 1929), classical scholar
Literature
- Sebastian Barker (1945 - 2014), poet
- Richard Boys (1785 - 1867), Anglican clergyman, chaplain on St. Helena and author
- Oz Clarke (born 1949), wine writer and television presenter and broadcaster
- Michael Cordy, novelist
- David Edwards (1929 - 2018), former Dean of Norwich, Speaker's Chaplain, Sub-Dean at Westminster Abbey, Dean of Southwark and author
- Patrick Leigh Fermor (1915 - 2011), author, scholar and soldier
- James Hamilton-Paterson (born 1941), poet and novelist
- John Wesley Harding (born 1965), singer-songwriter and author
- Dyneley Hussey (1893 - 1972), war poet, journalist and critic
- Alaric Jacob (1909 - 1995), writer, journalist and war correspondent
- John Lloyd (born 1951), television and radio comedy writer and producer
- Edward Lucie-Smith (born 1933), writer, poet, art critic and curator
- John Lyly (c1553 - 1606), playwright, courtier and parliamentarian
- Christopher Marlowe (1565 - 1593), playwright and poet
- Somerset Maugham (1874 - 1965), playwright, novelist and short story writer
- Tristan McConnell, journalist
- Michael Morpurgo (born 1943), author, poet, playwright and librettist
- Walter Pater (1839 - 1894), essayist, literary and art critic, fiction writer and humanist
- Anthony Price (1928 - 2019), author
- Shoo Rayner (born 1956), children's author and illustrator
- Edmund de Waal (born 1964), artist, potter and author
- Sir Hugh Walpole (1884 - 1941), novelist
- Alan Watts (1915 - 1973), writer and philosopher
Military
Music
- Stephen Barlow (born 1954), conductor and former Artistic Director of the Buxton Festival
- Simon Carrington (born 1942), conductor, musician, and former founding member of The King's Singers
- Harry Christophers (born 1953), conductor
- John Wesley Harding (born 1965), singer-songwriter and author
- William Lewarne Harris (1929-2013), composer and teacher
- Andrew Marriner (born 1954), former principal clarinettist of the London Symphony Orchestra
- George Miles (1913 - 1988), organist
- Christopher Seaman (born 1942), conductor
- Stephen Varcoe (born 1949), classical singer
Politics
- Charles Abbott, 1st Baron Tenterden (1762 - 1832), barrister and judge
- Natascha Engel (born 1967), former MP for North East Derbyshire
- Catherine Fall, Baroness Fall, political advisor and former Downing Street Chief of Staff under David Cameron
- Tristan Garel-Jones (1941 - 2020), former MP for Watford
- George Gipps (1790 - 1847), Governor of New South Wales
- Fairfax Luxmoore (1876 - 1944), barrister and judge who sat as Lord Justice of Appeal
- Anthony Parsons (1922 - 1996), diplomat, former British ambassador to Iran, and former British Permanent Representative to the UN
- Charles Powell (born 1941), diplomat, businessman, and foreign policy adviser to Margaret Thatcher
- Jonathan Powell (born 1956), diplomat and former Downing Street Chief of Staff under Tony Blair
Religion
- Gavin Ashenden (born 1954), former Anglican priest and continuing Anglican bishop
- Richard Boys (1785 - 1867), Anglican clergyman, chaplain on St. Helena, and author
- William Broughton (1788 - 1853), Anglican Bishop of Australia
- David Edwards (1929 - 2018), former Dean of Norwich, Speaker's Chaplain, Sub-Dean at Westminster Abbey, Dean of Southwark, and author
- Reginald Glennie, first-class cricketer and clergyman
- Michael Mayne (1929 - 2006), former Dean of Westminster
- Howard Mowll (1890 - 1958), former Anglican Archbishop of Sydney
Sport
- Ronald Binny (1910 - 1979), first-class cricketer and British Indian Army officer
- Harry Gardner (1890 - 1939), first-class cricketer and British Army officer
- Reginald Glennie (1864 - 1953), first-class cricketer and clergyman
- David Gower (born 1957), cricket commentator, former cricketer and captain of the England cricket team
- Bob Haines (1906 - 1965), cricketer
- Frances Houghton (born 1980), Olympic rower and World Champion
- Millie Knight (born 1999), Paralympic skier
- Cecil Paris (1911–1998), first-class cricketer; chairman of the Test and County Cricket Board (1968–1969) and president of the Marylebone Cricket Club (1975)
- Tom Ransley (born 1985), former Olympic rower and World Champion
- Ollie Robinson (born 1993), England cricketer[4]
- Fred Scarlett (born 1975), Olympic rower
Other
Notes and References
- Davis . John A . Thomas Stapleton . BMJ . 1 March 2008 . 336 . 7642 . 513 . 10.1136/bmj.39491.712014.BE . 2258391 .
- http://venn.csi.cam.ac.uk/cgi-bin/search.pl?sur=wyse&suro=c&fir=william&firo=c&cit=&cito=c&c=all&tex=&sye=&eye=&col=all&maxcount=50 Venn Cambridge University database
- Web site: www.kings-school.co.uk . 2007-06-26 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070928083133/http://www.kings-school.co.uk/document_1.aspx?doc=1:29160&id=1:31713&id=1:31638 . 2007-09-28 . dead .
- Web site: Ollie Robinson. ESPNcricinfo. 2021. 10 June 2021.
- Web site: Honours system under scrutiny after sex abuser kept title for years . The Observer . 30 March 2019. Jamie Doward . 1 April 2019.