In 1912, the
University of London took the initiative to assemble 53 representatives of universities in London to hold a Congress of Universities of the Empire. They decided they needed a "bureau of information". Its affairs would be handled by a committee representing universities at home and abroad. In 1913 the office opened as the Universities Bureau of the
British Empire. They incorporated under licence of the
Board of Trade in 1919 and received a grant of £5000 to operate an office premises, with the understanding that the universities of the Empire would fund its maintenance. In 1948 the name was changed to Association of Universities of the British Commonwealth, and in 1963 it changed to its current name.
Anastasios Christodoulou was the Secretary General of the Association of Commonwealth Universities from 1980 to 1996. In 1986, Queen
Elizabeth II became
patron of the Association of Commonwealth Universities. In 2019,
Meghan, Duchess of Sussex became patron of the Association of Commonwealth Universities, a role which she held until February 2021. King
Charles III was announced as the organisation's patron in May 2024. ==Membership==