List of people from York explained
This is a list of notable people with a Wikipedia page associated with York, a city in North Yorkshire, England.
Actors and performers
Arts
Confectioners
Musicians
Groups
Historians
Politicians and rulers
Religion
- Aaron of York (c. 1190 – c. 1253), financier and Chief Rabbi of England
- Alcuin (c. 735–804), Christian scholar.[11]
- John Ball (c. 1338–1381), Lollard priest and rebel.[12]
- Margaret Clitherow (died 1586), Catholic saint and martyr
- John Earle (c.1601–1665), bishop and writer on social customs.[13]
- Guy Fawkes (1570–1606), Roman Catholic revolutionary.[14]
- Josce of York (died 1190), Jewish martyr
- Francis Mason (1799–1874), American missionary.[15]
- Thomas Morton (1564–1659), bishop.[16]
- Matthew Poole (1624–1679), theologian.[17]
- Beilby Porteus (1731–1809), successively Bishop of Chester and of London.[18]
- Richard Sterne (c. 1596–1683), Archbishop of York (1664–83), revised the 1662 Book of Common Prayer.[19]
- William of York (1110–1154), archbishop, patron saint of York
Sciences and architecture
- Jocelyn Bell (born 1943), radio astronomer and discoverer of pulsars
- Moses B. Cotsworth (1859 - 1943] Egyptologist and 13-month calendar reformer, inventor of the International Fixed Calendar
- William Etty (c. 1675–1734), architect
- John Goodricke (1764–86), astronomer
- Joseph Hansom (1803–1882), architect and inventor.[20]
- Peter Harrison (1716–1775), architect
- George Hennet (1799–1857), railway contractor and entrepreneur
- Ivar the Boneless (794–872), Viking chieftain.[21]
- Christopher Hill (1912–2003), historian of 17th-century England and Master of Balliol College, Oxford
- John Middleton (1820–1885), architect
- William Parsons, 3rd Earl of Rosse (1800–1867), astronomer.[22]
- Martin Rees (born 1942), Lord Rees of Ludlow, current Astronomer Royal
- George Russell (1857–1951), horticulturalist who developed Russell hybrid lupins
- John Snow (1813–1858), physician
Sports
Football
and
Rugby
Cricket
Motor sport
Basketball
Writers
- Kate Atkinson (born 1951), novelist and playwright
- W. H. Auden (1907–1973), poet and essayist[24]
- Nathan Drake (1766–1836), essayist and physician.[25]
- Matt Haig (born 1975), novelist and journalist
- Justin Hill (born 1971), novelist
- Alison Hume (living), television writer
- Sheelagh Kelly (born 1948), novelist
- Andrew Martin (born 1962), novelist and journalist
- Fiona Mozley (born 1988), novelist
- Laurence Sterne (1713–1768), author of The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman.[26]
- J. E. Harold Terry (1885–1939), novelist, playwright and critic[27]
- Silvanus P. Thompson (1851–1916), author and electrical engineer
- Charles Whiting (1926–2007), novelist and military historian
Others
- Benedict of York (died 1189), money lender
- Jon Champion (born 1965), broadcaster
- William B. Franklin (1823–1903) a career US Army officer.[28]
- Captain Christopher Levett (1586–1630), explorer of New England, first settler of York (present-day Portland), Maine
- Elizabeth Montagu (1718–1800) social reformer and patron of the arts.[29]
- Guy Mowbray (born 1972), football commentator
- Tessa Rowntree (1909-1999), Quaker, aid worker in Czechoslovakia
- Laura Sayers (born 1978), radio producer and diarist
- Siward, Earl of Northumbria (died 1055), army commander.[30]
- James Hack Tuke (1819–1896), social campaigner.[31]
- Daniel Hack Tuke (1827–1895), social campaigner.[32]
- Henry Tuke (1755–1814), social campaigner.[33]
- Samuel Tuke (1784–1857), social campaigner.[34]
- William Tuke (1732–1822), social campaigner.[35]
See also
Notes and References
- Book: The Playgoer and Society Illustrated: Volumes 1–2 . 1909 . 218 . 5 July 2021.
- Etty, William . 9 . 863 - 864 . 1.
- Flaxman, John . 10 . Colvin . Sidney . Sidney Colvin . 489 - 491 . 1.
- Moore, Albert Joseph . 18 . 807 - 808 . 1.
- Barnby, Sir Joseph . 3 . 412 . 1.
- Herbert, Sir Thomas . 13 . 340 . 1.
- Thompson, William Hepworth . 26 . 871 . 1.
- Aislabie, John . 1 . 447 . 1.
- Hudson, George . 13 . 849 . 1.
- Severus, Lucius Septimius . 24 . Reid . James Smith . James Smith Reid . 724 - 726 . 1.
- Alcuin . 1 . Pfister . Christian . Christian Pfister . 529 - 530 . 1.
- Ball, John (priest) . 3 . 263 . 1.
- Earle, John . 8 . 796 . 1.
- Fawkes, Guy . 10 . Yorke . Philip Chesney . 217 - 218 . 1.
- Mason, Francis . 17 . 837 . 1.
- Morton, Thomas (bishop) . 18 . 882 . 1.
- Poole, Matthew . 22 . 72 . 1.
- Porteus, Beilby . 22 . 117 . 1.
- Sterne, Richard . 25 . 903 . 1.
- Hansom, Joseph Aloysius . 12 . 931 . 1.
- Ivarr, Beinlausi . 15 . 91 . 1.
- Rosse, William Parsons, 3rd Earl of . 23 . 745 . 1.
- Web site: Player profile: Tim Walton. CricketArchive . 1 December 2011.
- Web site: W. H. Auden . www.bl.uk . 20 November 2022.
- Drake, Nathan . 8 . 474 . 1.
- Sterne, Laurence . 25 . Minto . William . William Minto . Dobson . Henry Austin . Henry Austin Dobson . 901 - 903 . 1.
- Book: Parker . John . Who's Who in the Theatre, 4th edition . Small, Maynard and Company . Boston . 1922 . 789 . 12 October 2022.
- Franklin, William Buel . 11 . 33 . 1.
- Montagu, Elizabeth Robinson . 18 . 746 . 1.
- Siward . 25 . 164 . 1.
- Tuke . 27 . 365 . 1.
- Tuke . 27 . 365 . 1.
- Tuke . 27 . 365 . 1.
- Tuke . 27 . 365 . 1.
- Tuke . 27 . 365 . 1.