MarketSenior Wrangler
Company Profile

Senior Wrangler

The Senior Wrangler is the top mathematics undergraduate at the University of Cambridge in England, a position which has been described as "the greatest intellectual achievement attainable in Britain".

Others who finished in the top 12
Those who have achieved second place, known as Second Wranglers, include Alfred Marshall, James Clerk Maxwell, J. J. Thomson, Lord Kelvin, William Clifford, and William Whewell. Those who have finished between third and 12th include Archibald Hill, Karl Pearson and William Henry Bragg (third), George Green, G. H. Hardy, and Alfred North Whitehead (fourth), Adam Sedgwick (fifth), John Venn (sixth), Bertrand Russell, Nevil Maskelyne and Sir James Timmins Chance (seventh), Thomas Malthus (ninth), and John Maynard Keynes and William Henry Fox Talbot (12th). ==History==
History
Between 1748 and 1909 the university publicly announced the ranking, which was then reported in newspapers such as The Times. The examination was considered to be by far the most important in Britain and the Empire. The prestige of being a high Wrangler was great; the respect accorded to the Senior Wrangler was immense. Andrew Warwick, author of Masters of Theory, describes the term 'Senior Wrangler' as "synonymous with academic supremacy". Since 1910 successful students in the examinations have been told their rankings privately, and not all Senior Wranglers have become publicly known as such. In recent years, the custom of discretion regarding ranking has progressively vanished, and all Senior Wranglers since 2010 have announced their identity publicly. The youngest person to be Senior Wrangler is probably Arran Fernandez, who came top in 2013, aged 18 years and 0 months. The previous youngest was probably James Wilkinson in 1939, aged 19 years and nine months. The youngest up to 1909 were Alfred Flux in 1887, aged 20 years and two months and Peter Tait in 1852, aged 20 years and eight months. Two individuals have placed first without becoming known as Senior Wrangler. One was the student Philippa Fawcett in 1890. (She could not receive a degree from Cambridge due to being a woman, and so she could not be the senior wrangler. Cambridge did not offer degrees to women until 1948,) The other was the mathematics professor George Pólya. As he had contributed to reforming the Tripos with the aim that an excellent performance would be less dependent on solving hard problems and more so on showing a broad mathematical understanding and knowledge, G.H. Hardy asked Pólya to sit the examinations himself, unofficially, during his stay in England in 1924–5. Pólya did so, and to Hardy's surprise, received the highest mark, an achievement which, had he been a student, would have made him the Senior Wrangler. ==Derived uses of the term==
Derived uses of the term
Senior Wrangler's Walk is a path in Cambridge, the walk to and along which was considered to be sufficient constitutional exercise for a student aspiring to become the Senior Wrangler. The route was shorter than other walks, such as Wranglers' Walk and the Grantchester Grind, undertaken by undergraduates whose aspirations were lower. Senior Wrangler sauce is a Cambridge term for brandy butter, a type of hard sauce made from brandy, butter, and sugar, traditionally served in Britain with Christmas pudding and warm mince pies. Senior Wrangler is also the name of a solitaire card game, alternatively known as Mathematics and Double Calculation, played with two decks of cards and involving elementary modular arithmetic. == Literary references ==
Literary references
Fictional Senior Wranglers appearing in novels include Roger Hamley, a character in Elizabeth Gaskell's Wives and Daughters, and Tom Jericho, the cryptanalyst in Robert Harris's novel Enigma, who is described as having been Senior Wrangler in 1938. In Catherine Hall's The Proof of Love, Victor Turner is listed as having been Senior Wrangler in 1968. In George Bernard Shaw's play ''Mrs. Warren's Profession'', the title character's daughter Vivie is praised for "tieing with the third wrangler," and she comments that "the mathematical tripos" means "grind, grind, grind for six to eight hours a day at mathematics, and nothing but mathematics." In Ford Madox Ford's ''Parade's End'', the character Christopher Tietjens is described as having settled deliberately for only being Second Wrangler, to avoid the weight of expectation that the title would create. In his Discworld series of novels, Terry Pratchett has a character called the Senior Wrangler, a faculty member at the Unseen University, whose first name is Horace. The compiler of crosswords for The Leader in the 1930s used 'Senior Wrangler' as a pseudonym. == Coaches ==
Coaches
The two most successful 19th-century coaches of Senior Wranglers were William Hopkins and Edward Routh. Hopkins, the 'Senior Wrangler Maker', who himself was the 7th Wrangler, coached 17 Senior Wranglers. Routh, who had himself been the Senior Wrangler, coached 27. Another, described by his student (and Senior Wrangler) J.E. Littlewood as "the last of the great coaches", was another Senior Wrangler, Robert Alfred Herman. == Senior Wranglers and runners up, 1748–1909 ==
Senior Wranglers and runners up, 1748–1909
During 1748–1909 the top two colleges in terms of number of Senior Wranglers were Trinity and St John's with 56 and 54 respectively. Gonville and Caius was third with 13. , Senior Wrangler, 1763. , Senior Wrangler, 1806. , Senior Wrangler, 1813. , Senior Wrangler, 1823. , Senior Wrangler, 1841. , Senior Wrangler, 1842. , Senior Wrangler, 1843. , Senior Wrangler, 1848. , who at 20 years 8 months in 1852 was younger than all previous Senior Wranglers. , Senior Wrangler in 1854 and coach to many subsequent Senior Wranglers. , Senior Wrangler, 1865. , Senior Wrangler, 1863. , Senior Wrangler, 1877. The postcard portrait is a sign of the fame associated with the position of Senior Wrangler. , scored above the Senior Wrangler in 1890. , Senior Wrangler, 1895. , Senior Wrangler, 1904 , Senior Wrangler in the 1940s , Senior Wrangler, 1948 , Senior Wrangler, 1959 , Senior Wrangler, 1973 , Senior Wrangler, 1990 , Senior Wrangler, 1998 } || rowspan="2" | Gonville and Caius || || St John's == Senior Wranglers since 1910 ==
Senior Wranglers since 1910
Senior Wranglers since 1910 also include: • David Hobson (Christ's College) (1940s) • Peter Swinnerton-Dyer (Trinity College) (1940s) • Jack Leeming (St John's College) • Michael Hall (Trinity College) (1950s) Ruth Hendry Ruth Hendry is the first woman to have been the Senior Wrangler, which she was in 1992. Hendry was a second-generation student at Queens' College, Cambridge. Her father, Tom, was the son of a woman who "wasn't even sure where Cambridge was". Ruth's sisters followed her to Cambridge, Helen reading zoology at St John's and Kate graduating top of her year in geology, also at Queens'. (Kate is now chemical honorary professor at the University of Bristol and an oceanographer and marine biogeochemist in the Polar Oceans Team of the British Antarctic Survey.) Hendry became the first female Senior Wrangler in 1992. (In 1890 Philippa Fawcett had become the first woman to obtain the top score in the Cambridge Mathematical Tripos exam, but since she could not receive a degree from Cambridge due to being a woman, she could not be the Senior Wrangler. Cambridge did not offer degrees to women until 1948. == See also ==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com