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The coat of arms of the University of Oxford. This is a list of professorships at the University of Oxford. During the early history of the university, the title of professor meant a doctor who taught. From the 16th century, it was used for those holding a professorship, also known as a chair.
The Dr Lee's Professorships are three named statutory professorships of the University of Oxford. They were created in 1919, and are named after Matthew Lee (1695–1755) who had endowed three readerships at Christ Church, Oxford , in the 19th century.
The Nuffield Professorship of Clinical Medicine is a chair at the University of Oxford. Created by the endowment of William Morris, 1st Viscount Nuffield , it was established in 1937. The chair is associated with a fellowship of Magdalen College, Oxford .
University of Oxford portal; Statutory Professors is the title the University of Oxford uses for its University Professorships. There are currently just over 200 of them. A number of them are permanently endowed, others are not. A titular professorship in the form of a Title of Distinction is not a statutory professorship
Statutory Professors of the University of Oxford (81 C, 78 P) Pages in category "Professorships at the University of Oxford" The following 84 pages are in this category, out of 84 total.
Sir Martin Jonathan Landray (born c. 1968) is a British physician, epidemiologist and data scientist who serves as a Professor of Medicine & Epidemiology at the University of Oxford. Landray designs, conducts and analyses large-scale randomised control trials ; including practice-changing international trials that have recruited over 100,000 ...
1936–52 (Professor, All Souls) India: First Indian to hold an Oxford professorship. [24] President 1962–67 [25] [26] Manmohan Singh: Nuffield: India Prime Minister 2004–2014 Indira Gandhi: Somerville: 1937–1941 India Prime Minister 1966–77 and 1980–84 [27] Norman Manley: Jesus: Jamaica: Chief Minister 1955–59, Premier 1959–62 ...
Trudie Lang is a Professor of Global Health Research at the University of Oxford. She specialises in clinical trials research capacity building in low-resource setting, and helped to organise the trial for the drug brincidofovir during the 2014 Ebola virus outbreak .