Notable staff •
Stephanie Amiel – diabetologist •
William Baly •
Gustav Victor Rudolf Born •
Thomas Peel Dunhill – thyroid surgeon and Physician to the Queen of the United Kingdom •
Edward Frankland – chemist •
Sir James Galloway – dermatologist •
Samuel Gee •
Ian Jacobs – gynaecological oncologist •
Peter Kopelman •
Irene Leigh – dermatologist •
Henry Letheby – chemist and public health officer •
William Odling – helped develop the periodic table •
Alexander George Ogston – biochemist • Dame
Lesley Rees – professor and dean of Bart's Medical College •
Joseph Rotblat – Nobel Prize winner •
Wendy Savage – gynaecologist •
Denise Sheer – geneticist •
R.A. Shooter – professor of bacteriology and dean of Bart's Medical College 1972–1981 •
Dorothy Stuart Russell – professor of morbid pathology •
John Robert Vane – Nobel Prize winner
Notable alumni •
George F. Abercrombie – British GP, cofounder of the
Royal College of General Practitioners •
John Abernethy – surgeon •
Robert D. Acland – surgeon, pioneer in plastic and reconstructive microsurgery •
Joseph Adams – surgeon and pathologist •
Christopher Addison, 1st Viscount Addison – politician •
George Augustus Auden – professor of public health •
John Badley – surgeon •
Edward Bancroft – physician and double agent in the American Revolution •
Gopal Baratham – author and neurosurgeon •
Gilbert Barling – former vice-chancellor of the University of Birmingham •
Thomas John Barnardo – philanthropist •
Frederick Batten – neurologist and paediatrician •
Hannah Billig – famous wartime doctor •
William Blizard – surgeon •
George Bodington – pulmonary specialist •
Henry Edmund Gaskin Boyle – anaesthetist •
Robert Bridges – poet and holder of the honour of poet laureate from 1913 •
Alfred James Broomhall – medical missionary •
George Busk – surgeon, zoologist and palaeontologist •
William Carr – former director of the Royal Australian Navy's Naval Medical Services •
Graham Chapman – comedian; member of the surreal comedy group
Monty Python •
Anjem Choudary – Islamist, founder of
al-Muhajiroun and
Islam4UK,solicitor, convicted of inviting support for a proscribed organisation, namely the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, under the Terrorism Act 2000 •
William Job Collins – surgeon and politician •
Brian Colvin – haematologist •
Albert Ruskin Cook – medical missionary •
John Desmond Cronin – politician and surgeon •
Tim Crow – psychiatrist •
Thomas Blizard Curling – surgeon •
John Langdon Down – first to describe
Down syndrome, a genetic disorder named after him •
Horace Evans, 1st Baron Evans – Welsh GP, personal physician to
King George VI •
Pamela Evans – GP and author •
John Fenning – British doctor and Olympic gold medallist •
John Freke – first ophthalmic surgeon •
Archibald Garrod – first physician to appreciate the importance of biochemistry in medicine •
Richard Gordon – screenwriter and novelist •
Martin Gore CBE – professor of medical oncology •
Major Greenwood – epidemiologist and statistician • Sir
Wilfred Grenfell – medical missionary •
Gordon Hamilton-Fairley – oncologist •
Anthony Hamilton-Smith, 3rd Baron Colwyn – politician •
William Harvey – described circulation •
Charles Hill, Baron Hill of Luton – politician and former chairman of the BBC •
James Hinton – surgeon and author •
Ebbe Hoff – founding director of the Virginia Division of Substance Abuse •
Eric John Holborow – physician and immunologist, known for his pioneering research on autoimmunity •
John Hughlings Jackson – neurologist •
John Hunt, Baron Hunt of Fawley – British GP, co-founder of the
Royal College of General Practitioners •
John Hunter – surgeon and anatomist; namesake of the Hunterian Society •
Jonathan Hutchinson – ophthalmologist •
Donald McIntosh Johnson – author and politician •
Parveen Kumar – co-author of world-renowned medical textbook ''Kumar and Clarke's'', former president of the
British Medical Association and the
Royal Society of Medicine, lectures occasionally at the Medical School •
William Lawrence – surgeon, a founder of British ophthalmology •
William Elford Leach – English zoologist and marine biologist •
John Leech – caricaturist •
Irene Leigh – dermatologist •
Suzy Lishman – former president of the
Royal College of Pathologists •
Siew C. Ng - Hong-Kong based clinician-scientist and Croucher Professor in Medical Sciences •
William John Little – surgeon, pioneer of orthopaedic surgery •
Martyn Lloyd-Jones – Evangelical Christian religious leader •
Morell Mackenzie – pioneer of laryngology •
Johann Malawana – leader of BMA Junior Doctors Committee, trade unionist •
William Marsden – surgeon, founder of The
Royal Free and
Marsden Hospitals •
Peter William Mathieson – president of the
University of Hong Kong •
John Preston Maxwell – medical missionary •
Robert Morrison – medical missionary •
Richard Owen – English biologist, comparative anatomist and palaeontologist •
Sir James Paget – surgeon and founder of scientific medical pathology •
James Parkinson – political activist and first to describe Parkinson's Disease •
Jonathan Pereira – pharmacologist •
Richard Pollok – gastroenterologist, medical researcher and academic •
Percivall Pott – English surgeon, founder of orthopaedy •
Sir Bentley Purchase – coroner, involved in
Operation Mincemeat •
Peter J. Ratcliffe – British Nobel laureate physician-scientist •
Reza Razavi – vice president (Research) at
King's College London and Director of the King’s Wellcome Trust EPSRC Centre For Medical Engineering •
W. H. R. Rivers – psychiatrist, psychiatric anthropologist •
Sir Ronald Ross – first British Nobel laureate, known for his work on the transmission of malaria •
Martine Rothblatt – entrepreneur, author, founder of
United Therapeutics and
Sirius Radio •
William Scovell Savory – surgeon •
Jay Sean – singer-songwriter •
Liz Shore – former deputy chief medical officer •
G. Spencer-Brown – mathematician •
Tareq Suheimat – Jordanian physician, military general and statesman •
Frederick Howard Taylor – medical missionary •
Herbert Hudson Taylor – medical missionary •
Hudson Taylor – medical missionary •
Roger Taylor – drummer of the band Queen •
Sir Frederick Treves, 1st Baronet – surgeon •
Daniel Hack Tuke – expert on mental illness •
William Turner – anatomist and former principal of the
University of Edinburgh •
John Waterlow – British physiologist •
Hugh Watkins – cardiologist •
William James Erasmus Wilson – surgeon •
Peter Wingfield – actor •
Robert Winston – gynaecologist and politician •
Arthur Wint – Olympic gold medallist •
Adeline Yen Mah – author and physician
Fictional alumni •
Harold Legg – doctor in the British soap opera
EastEnders from 1985 to 1997, making guest appearances in 2000 and 2004 •
Dr. Watson – Sherlock Holmes's companion and "biographer": not only did the two first meet in the pathology laboratories in 1881, but Watson studied and met his friend Stamford (who was Watson's "dresser" – the equivalent nowadays of the surgical houseman) at St. Bartholomew's Hospital in the mid/late 1870s. == See also ==