From 1858, the lecture was re-established as a one-off annual lecture, delivered by a person appointed by the Vice-Chancellor of the university. The names of the appointees and the titles of their lectures are given below.
1858-1899 • 1859
Richard Owen On the classifaction and geographical distribution of the Mammalia • 1860
John Phillips Life on the earth, its origin and succession • 1861
Robert Willis The social and architectural history of Trinity College • 1862
Edward Sabine The cosmical features of terrestrial magnetism • 1863
David Thomas Ansted The correlation of the natural history sciences • 1864
George Biddell Airy The late observations of total eclipses of the sun, and the inferences from them • 1865
John Tyndall On Radiation • 1866
William Thomson The dissipation of energy • 1867
John Ruskin The relation of national ethics to national art • 1868
Friedrich Max Müller On the stratification of language • 1869
William Huggins On the results of spectrum analysis of the heavenly bodies • 1870
William Allen Miller On some chemical processes of forming organic compounds, with illustrations from the coal tar colours • 1871
Joseph Norman Lockyer Recent solar discoveries • 1872
Edward Augustus Freeman The Unity of History • 1873
Peter Guthrie Tait Thermo-electricity • 1874
Samuel White Baker Slavery • 1875
Henry James Sumner Maine The effects of observation of India upon modern European thought • 1876
Samuel Birch The monumental history of ancient Egypt • 1877
Charles Wyville Thomson On some of the results of the expedition of H.M.S. Challenger • 1878
James Clerk Maxwell On the telephone • 1879
William Henry Dallinger 'The origin of life, illustrated by the life histories of the least and lowest organisms in nature' • 1880
George Murray Humphry 'Man, prehistoric, present, future' • 1881
William Muir The early Caliphate • 1882
Matthew Arnold Literature and Science • 1883
Thomas Henry Huxley '
The origin of the existing forms of animal life: construction or evolution? • 1884
Francis Galton The Measurement of Human Faculty • 1885
George John Romanes Mind and motion • 1886
John Lubbock, 1st Baron Avebury On the forms of seedlings and the causes to which they are due • 1887
John Robert Seeley Greater Britain in the Georgian and in the Victorian era • 1888
Frederick Augustus Abel Applications of science to the protection of human life • 1889
George Gabriel Stokes On some effects of the action of light on ponderable matter • 1890
Richard Claverhouse Jebb Erasmus • 1891
Alfred Comyn Lyall Natural religion in India • 1892
Thomas George Bonney ''The microscope's contributions to the earth's physical history'' • 1893
Michael Foster Weariness • 1894
John Willis Clark Libraries in the Medieval and Renaissance Periods • 1895
Mandell Creighton The Early Renaissance in England • 1896
J. J. Thomson Röntgen rays • 1897
Arthur William Rücker Recent researches on terrestrial magnetism • 1898
Henry Irving The theatre in its relation to the state • 1899
Marie Alfred Cornu La théorie des ondes lumineuses: son influence sur la physique moderne 1900-1949 • 1900
Frederic Harrison Byzantine history in the early middle age • 1901
Frederic William Maitland English Law and the Renaissance • 1902
Osborne Reynolds On an inversion of ideas as to the structure of the Universe • 1903
George Walter Prothero Napoleon III and the Second Empire • 1904
James Alfred Ewing The structure of metals • 1905
Francis Edward Younghusband Our true relationship with India • 1906
William Mitchell Ramsay The wars between Moslem and Christian for the possession of Asia Minor • 1907
Aston Webb The art of architecture, and the training required to practise it • 1908
Ernest Mason Satow An Austrian diplomatist in the fifties • 1909
Archibald Geikie Charles Darwin as Geologist • 1910
Charles Harding Firth The parallel between the English and American Civil Wars • 1911
Charles Algernon Parsons The Steam Turbine • 1912
George Gilbert Aimé Murray The chorus in Greek tragedy • 1913
George Nathaniel Curzon Modern Parliamentary Eloquence • 1914
Norman Moore ''St Bartholomew's Hospital in peace and war'' • 1915
Frederic George Kenyon Ideals and characteristics of English culture • 1916
George Forrest Browne The ancient cross-shafts of Bewcastle and Ruthwell • 1917
Richard Tetley Glazebrook Science and industry • 1918
Louis Alexander Mountbatten, 1st Marquess of Milford Haven The Royal Navy, 1815–1915 • 1919
Lord Moulton,
Science and War • 1920
James Scorgie Meston, 1st Baron Meston India at the crossways • 1921
William Napier Shaw The air and its ways • 1922
William Ralph Inge The Victorian Age • 1923
Hendrik Antoon Lorentz ''Clerk Maxwell's electromagnetic theory'' • 1924
Herbert Hensley Henson Byron • 1925
Hugh Walpole Some notes on the evolution of the English novel • 1926
Arthur Mayger Hind Claude Lorrain and modern art • 1927
Josiah Stamp On stimulus in the economic life • 1928
Michael Ernest Sadler Thomas Day: an English disciple of Rousseau • 1929
John Buchan The Causal and the Casual in History • 1930
James Hopwood Jeans The mysterious universe, resulting in the book
The Mysterious Universe • 1931
George Stuart Gordon Robert Bridges • 1932
Edgar Allison Peers St. John of the Cross • 1933
Charles Scott Sherrington Brain and its mechanism • 1934
Hugh Pattison Macmillan Two ways of thinking • 1935
Alfred Daniel Hall The pace of progress • 1936
Cedric Webster Hardwicke The drama to-morrow • 1937
Harold George Nicolson The Meaning Of Prestige • 1938
Patrick Playfair Laidlaw Virus diseases and viruses • 1939
Edward Mellanby Some social and economic implications of the recent advances in medical science • 1940
Augustus Moore Daniel Some approaches to judgment in painting • 1941
E. M. Forster Virginia Woolf • 1942
Archibald MacLeish American opinion of the war • 1943
Max Beerbohm ''Lytton Strachey's writings'' • 1944
Richard Winn Livingstone Plato and modern education • 1945
Norman Birkett National Parks and the countryside • 1946
Edward Victor Appleton Terrestrial magnetism and the ionosphere • 1947
Hubert Douglas Henderson The uses and abuses of economic planning • 1948
Walter Hamilton Moberly Universities and the state • 1949
Ernest William Barnes Religion and turmoil 1950-1999 • 1950
Edward Bridges Portrait of a Profession • 1951
Cecil Maurice Bowra Inspiration and poetry • 1952
Walter Russell Brain The Contribution of Medicine to our Idea of the Mind • 1953
Arthur Duncan Gardner The proper study of mankind • 1954
Charles Alfred Coulson Science and religion: a changing relationship • 1955
Lord David Cecil Walter Pater - the Scholar Artist • 1956
John Betjeman The English Town in the Last Hundred Years • 1957
Robert Wyndham Ketton-Cremer Matthew Prior • 1958
Charles Galton Darwin The problems of world population • 1959
C. P. Snow The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution • 1960
Edgar Wind Classicism • 1961
Lord Radcliffe Censors • 1962
Robert Hall Planning • 1963
Douglas William Logan The Years of Challenge • 1964
Kenneth Hurlstone Jackson The oldest Irish tradition - a window on the early Iron Age • 1965
Gavin de Beer Genetics and prehistory • 1966
Harold McCarter Taylor Why should we study the Anglo-Saxons? • 1967
Kenneth Wheare The university in the news • 1968
Patrick Arthur Devlin, Lord Devlin The House of Lords and the Naval Prize Bill 1911 • 1969
Patrick Maynard Stuart Blackett The gap widens • 1970
Kenneth Clark The artist grows old • 1971
Herbert Butterfield The discontinuities between the generations in History: their effect on the transmission of political experience • 1972 None • 1973
Kingsley Dunham Non-renewable resources - a dilemma • 1974
Walter Laing Macdonald Perry Higher education for adults: where more means better • 1975
Alfred Alistair Cooke The American in England: from Emerson to S. J. Perelman • 1976
Rupert Cross The golden thread of English Criminal Law: the burden of proof • 1977
Richard Southern The historical experience • 1978
Margaret Gowing Reflections on Atomic Energy History • 1979
The Duke of Edinburgh Philosophy, politics and administration • 1980
Shirley Williams Technology, employment, and change • 1981
Frederick Sydney Dainton British universities: purposes, problems, and pressures • 1982
Fred Hoyle Facts and Dogmas in Cosmology and Elsewhere • 1983
David Towry Piper The increase of learning and other great objects • 1984
Sir Clive Sinclair A time for change • 1985
Brian Urquhart The United Nations and international law • 1986
David Attenborough Islands • 1987
Sir John Thompson A reconsideration of the ideas underlying the international system • 1988
Roy Jenkins ''Lord Jenkins of Hillhead; 'An Oxford view of Cambridge' '' • 1989
Peter Alexander Ustinov Communication • 1990
The Princess Royal What is Punishment for and How Does it Relate to the Concept of Community? • 1991
Peter Swinnerton-Dyer Policy on Higher Education and Research • 1993
L. M. Singhvi A Tale of Three Cities • 1994
Geoffrey Howe Nationalism and the Nation State • 1996
Mary Robinson Civil Society: Renewal At Work • 1997
Leon Brittan Globalisation vs. Sovereignty? The European Response • 1998
Rosalyn Higgins International Law in a Changing Legal System 2000 onwards • 2009
Wen Jiabao See China in the Light of Her Development • 2010
Onora O'Neill The Two Cultures Fifty Years On • 2011
Harold Varmus The Purpose and Conduct of Science • 2012
Lord Turner of Ecchinswell The Purpose of the University: Knowledge and Human Wellbeing in the Modern Economy • 2015
Drew Gilpin Faust Two Wars and the Long Twentieth Century: the United States, 1861–65; Britain 1914–18 • 2017
Sue Desmond-Hellmann Facts or Fear? The Case for Facts • 2019
Jane Goodall Reasons for Hope • 2024
Mary Beard (classicist) The boy who breathed on the glass at the British Museum • 2026
Lorraine Daston Reason versus rationality: A history ==Notes==