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The Donegall Lecturership at Trinity College Dublin, is one of two endowed mathematics positions at
Trinity College Dublin , name_Latin = Collegium Sanctae et Individuae Trinitatis Reginae Elizabethae juxta Dublin , motto = ''Perpetuis futuris temporibus duraturam'' (Latin) , motto_lang = la , motto_English = It will last i ...
(TCD), the other being the Erasmus Smith's Chair of Mathematics. The Donegall (sometimes spelt Donegal) Lectureship was endowed in 1668 by The 3rd Earl of Donegall.The Dublin University Calendar 1877
/ref> In 1675, after the restoration, it was combined with the previous public Professor in Mathematics position that had been created in 1652 by the Commonwealth parliament. For much of its history, the Donegall Lectureship was awarded to a
mathematician A mathematician is someone who uses an extensive knowledge of mathematics in their work, typically to solve mathematical problems. Mathematicians are concerned with numbers, data, quantity, structure, space, models, and change. History On ...
as an additional honour which came with a supplementary income. Since 1967, the lectureship has been awarded to a leading international scientist who visits the Department of Pure and Applied Mathematics and gives talks, including a public lecture called the Donegall Lecture.


List of Donegall Lecturers

* 1675–1685: Miles Symner (1610?–1686) * 1685–1692: St. George Ashe (1657–1718) * 1692–1694: Charles Willoughby (1630?–1694) * 1694–1696: Edward Smyth (1665–1720) * 1696–1723: Claudius Gilbert (1670–1743) * 1723–1730: Richard Helsham (1682–1738) * 1730–1731: Charles Stuart (circa 1698–1746) * 1731–1734: Lambert Hughes (1698–1771) * 1734–1735:
Robert Shawe Robert Shawe (circa 1699 to 1752) was an Irish academic who spent his final years as a clergyman. He was Donegall Lecturer of maths at Trinity College Dublin (TCD) from 1734 to 1735. Life and career Shawe was born in near Athenry, in county Ga ...
(1699?–1752) * 1735–1738: Caleb Cartwright (1696?–1763) * 1738–1747: John Pellisier (1703–1781) * 1747–1750: John Whittingham (1712–1778) * 1750–1759: William Clement (1707–1782)William Clements (1733–1763)
/ref> * 1759–1760:
Theaker Wilder Theaker Wilder (1717–1778) was an Anglo-Irish academic with expertise in mathematics and Greek. He was the first Regius Professor of Greek,, Regius Professor of Greek Senior Register and Senior Fellow at Trinity College Dublin. He is rememb ...
(1717–1777) * 1760–1762: John Stokes (1720?–1781) * 1762–1764: Richard Murray (1725?–1799) * 1764–1769:
Henry Joseph Dabzac Henry Joseph Dabzac (1737–12 May 1790) was an Irish academic.
(1737–1790) * 1769–1770:
Henry Ussher Henry Ussher (1550 – 2 April 1613) was an Irish Protestant churchman, a founder of Trinity College, Dublin, and Church of Ireland Archbishop of Armagh. Life The second of five sons of Thomas Ussher by Margaret (d. January 1597), daughter of ...
(1741–1790) * 1770–1782: Gerald Fitzgerald (1739?–1819) * 1782–1786: Matthew Young (1750–1800) * 1786–1790: Digby Marsh (1750?–1791) * 1790–1795: Thomas Elrington (1760–1835) * 1795–1800:
Whitley Stokes Whitley Stokes, CSI, CIE, FBA (28 February 1830 – 13 April 1909) was an Irish lawyer and Celtic scholar. Background He was a son of William Stokes (1804–1878), and a grandson of Whitley Stokes the physician and anti-Malthusian (1763� ...
(1763–1845) * 1800–1807: Robert Phipps (1765?–1844) * 1807–1820:
James Wilson James Wilson may refer to: Politicians and government officials Canada *James Wilson (Upper Canada politician) (1770–1847), English-born farmer and political figure in Upper Canada * James Crocket Wilson (1841–1899), Canadian MP from Quebe ...
(1774?–1829) * 1820–1827: Richard MacDonnell (1787–1867) * 1827–1832: Henry Harte (1790–1848) * 1832–1847: Thomas Luby (1800–1870) * 1847–1858: Andrew Hart (1811–1890) * 1858–1867:
George Salmon George Salmon FBA FRS FRSE (25 September 1819 – 22 January 1904) was a distinguished and influential Irish mathematician and Anglican theologian. After working in algebraic geometry for two decades, Salmon devoted the last forty years of his ...
(1819–1904) * 1867–1876: William Roberts (1817–1883) * 1876–1884: Benjamin Williamson (1828–1916) * 1884–1904: Arthur Panton (1843–1906) * 1904–1907: Robert Russell (1858?–1938) * 1917–1923: Reginald Rogers (1874–1923) * 1923–1926: Charles Rowe (1893–1943) * 1926–1944: TS (Stan) Broderick (1893–1962) * 1967–1968:
Paul Halmos Paul Richard Halmos ( hu, Halmos Pál; March 3, 1916 – October 2, 2006) was a Hungarian-born American mathematician and statistician who made fundamental advances in the areas of mathematical logic, probability theory, statistics, operator ...
(1916–2006) ''Spinsters, sequences and the Schroeder-Berstein theorem'' * 1969–1970: James Hamilton (1918–2000) ''Discrete symmetry properties and elementary particles'' * 1970–1971:
Friedrich Hirzebruch Friedrich Ernst Peter Hirzebruch ForMemRS (17 October 1927 – 27 May 2012) was a German mathematician, working in the fields of topology, complex manifolds and algebraic geometry, and a leading figure in his generation. He has been described as ...
(1927–2012) ''Some relations between topology and number theory'' * 1971–1972:
Ailsa Land Ailsa Horton Land (; 14 June 1927 – 16 May 2021) was a Professor of Operational Research in the Department of Management at the London School of Economics and was the first woman professor of Operational Research in Britain. She is most we ...
(1927–2021) ''Mathematical programming'' * 1972–1973:
Dennis Sciama Dennis William Siahou Sciama, (; 18 November 1926 – 18/19 December 1999) was a British physicist who, through his own work and that of his students, played a major role in developing British physics after the Second World War. He was the PhD ...
(1926–1999) ''Black holes and the future of astronomy'' * 1976–1977:
Christopher Zeeman Sir Erik Christopher Zeeman FRS (4 February 1925 – 13 February 2016), was a British mathematician, known for his work in geometric topology and singularity theory. Overview Zeeman's main contributions to mathematics were in topology, parti ...
(1925–2016) ''Introduction to catastrophe theory'' * 1978–1979:
Dennis Lindley Dennis Victor Lindley (25 July 1923 – 14 December 2013) was an English statistician, decision theorist and leading advocate of Bayesian statistics. Biography Lindley grew up in the south-west London suburb of Surbiton. He was an only child an ...
(1923–2013) ''Decision making, probability and the law'' * 1979–1980:
Heini Halberstam Heini Halberstam (11 September 1926 oreen Halberstam, wife/ref> – 25 January 2014) was a Czech-born British mathematician, working in the field of analytic number theory. He is remembered in part for the Elliott–Halberstam conjecture from 19 ...
(1926–2014) ''The formation of mathematical concepts: the vibrating string controversy'' * 1982–1983: Lior Tzafriri (1936–2008) ''New results and problems in the geometry of normed spaces'' * 1983–1984:
Marc Yor Marc Yor (24 July 1949 – 9 January 2014) was a French mathematician well known for his work on stochastic processes, especially properties of semimartingales, Brownian motion and other Lévy processes, the Bessel processes, and their applicati ...
(1949–2014) ''Brownian Motion'' * 1985–1986:
Roy Kerr Roy Patrick Kerr (; born 16 May 1934) is a New Zealand mathematician who discovered the Kerr geometry, an exact solution to the Einstein field equation of general relativity. His solution models the gravitational field outside an uncharged ...
(born 1934) ''Black holes'' * 1986–1987: Wilhelm Kaup ''Jordan algebras and analysis'' * 1988–1989: T. J. Willmore ''Variational problems for surfaces'' * 1989–1990: Jacob Schwartz (1930–2009) ''Mathematical problems in neuroscience and neural nets'' * 1991–1992:
Donald Knuth Donald Ervin Knuth ( ; born January 10, 1938) is an American computer scientist, mathematician, and professor emeritus at Stanford University. He is the 1974 recipient of the ACM Turing Award, informally considered the Nobel Prize of computer sc ...
(born 1938) ''Stable husbands'' * 1994–1995:
Freeman Dyson Freeman John Dyson (15 December 1923 – 28 February 2020) was an English-American theoretical physicist and mathematician known for his works in quantum field theory, astrophysics, random matrices, mathematical formulation of quantum m ...
(born 1923) ''The evolution of science'' * 1996–1997:
Christopher Isham Christopher Isham (; born 28 April 1944), usually cited as Chris J. Isham, is a theoretical physicist at Imperial College London. Research Isham's main research interests are quantum gravity and foundational studies in quantum theory. He w ...
(born 1944) ''The challenge of quantum gravity'' * 1997–1998: James Lighthill (1924–1998) ''A century of shock waves'' * 1998–1999: Michael Berry (born 1941) ''Seven wonders of physics'' * 1999–2000: Chen Nigh Yang (born 1922) * 2000–2001:
Robbert Dijkgraaf Robertus Henricus "Robbert" Dijkgraaf FRSE (Dutch: born 24 January 1960) is a Dutch theoretical physicist, mathematician and string theorist, and the current Minister of Education, Culture and Science in the Netherlands. From July 2012 unti ...
(born 1960) ''The unreasonable effectiveness of physics in modern mathematics'' * 2002–2003:
David Gross David Jonathan Gross (; born February 19, 1941) is an American theoretical physicist and string theorist. Along with Frank Wilczek and David Politzer, he was awarded the 2004 Nobel Prize in Physics for their discovery of asymptotic freedom. ...
(born 1941) ''The coming revolutions in physics'' * 2003–2004:
Ludwig Faddeev Ludvig Dmitrievich Faddeev (also ''Ludwig Dmitriyevich''; russian: Лю́двиг Дми́триевич Фадде́ев; 23 March 1934 – 26 February 2017) was a Soviet and Russian mathematical physicist. He is known for the discovery of the ...
(1934–2017) ''Development of physics from a mathematical point of view'' * 2005–2010:
Tony Bell Tony Bell (born 20 June 1958) is a freelance writer and journalist, known for his ''What's he on'' column in Cycling Weekly, where he was a columnist between 1994 and 2006. His popularity gained as a CW columnist led to engagements as an after-d ...
''A view of theoretical neuroscience and machine learning'' * 2010:
Ludvig Faddeev Ludvig Dmitrievich Faddeev (also ''Ludwig Dmitriyevich''; russian: Лю́двиг Дми́триевич Фадде́ев; 23 March 1934 – 26 February 2017) was a Soviet and Russian mathematical physicist. He is known for the discovery of the ...
(1934–2017)


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Donegall Lecturership at Trinity College Dublin Professorships at Trinity College Dublin Professorships in mathematics