Milner was born in
Yealmpton, near
Plymouth,
England into a military family. He gained a
King's Scholarship to
Eton College in 1947, and was awarded the
Tomline Prize (the highest prize in Mathematics at Eton) in 1952. Subsequently, he served in the
Royal Engineers, attaining the rank of Second Lieutenant. He then enrolled at
King's College, Cambridge, graduating in 1957. Milner first worked as a schoolteacher then as a
programmer at
Ferranti, before entering academia at
City University, London, then
Swansea University,
Stanford University, and from 1973 at the
University of Edinburgh, where he was a co-founder of the
Laboratory for Foundations of Computer Science (LFCS). He returned to
Cambridge as the head of the
Computer Laboratory in 1995 from which he eventually stepped down, although he was still at the laboratory. From 2009, Milner was a Scottish Informatics & Computer Science Alliance Advanced Research Fellow and held (part-time) the chair of computer science at the
University of Edinburgh. Milner died of a
heart attack on 20 March 2010 in Cambridge. His wife, Lucy, died shortly before he did. ==Contributions==