This is a list of notable alumni and staff of Cardiff University and its predecessor institutions
Heads of state and government
- Lord Jenkins, former Chancellor of the Exchequer – Home Secretary, President of the European Commission and Chancellor of the University of Oxford (did not graduate)
 - Barham Salih – Former president of Iraq, former prime minister of the Iraqi Kurdistan Region and former deputy prime minister of the Iraqi federal government
 - Faisal Al-Fayez – Prime Minister of Jordan
 
Politics
- David Bahati – State Minister of Finance for Planning in the Cabinet of Uganda
 - Christine Chapman – MS for Cynon Valley
 - Jeffrey Cuthbert – Gwent Police and Crime Commissioner, MS for Caerphilly and Welsh Government Minister for Communities and Tackling Poverty
 - Hefin David – MS for Caerphilly
 - Wayne David – MP for Caerphilly and UK Shadow Minister for Europe, Shadow Minister for Defence Procurement and Shadow Minister for the Armed Forces
 - S. O. Davies – miner, trade union official and Labour Party MP[1]
 - Guto Harri – broadcaster, Communications Director for the Mayor of London
 - Elin Jones – MS for Ceredigion, Presiding Officer of the National Assembly for Wales and Welsh Government Minister for Rural Affairs
 - Fatou Sanyang Kinteh – Gambian Minister for Women's Affairs, Children and Social Welfare
 - Sir Emyr Jones Parry – British Permanent Representative to the United Nations[2]
 - Glenys Kinnock – MEP and UK Foreign Office Minister
 - Neil Kinnock – MP for Bedwellty and for Islwyn, Leader of the Labour Party, Leader of the Opposition
 - Mike Hedges – MS for Swansea East
 - Hilary Marquand – MP for Cardiff East and Minister for Health.
 - Robert Minhinnick – co-founder of Friends of the Earth (Cymru)[3]
 - Christopher Walter Monckton, 3rd Viscount Monckton of Brenchley – advisor to Margaret Thatcher
 - Craig Oliver – Conservative Party Director of Communications
 - Adam Price – MS and leader of Plaid Cymru
 - Bill Rammell – MP for Harlow
 - David Rees – MS for Aberavon and Deputy Presiding Officer of the Senedd Cymru.
 - Lord Richards – Chief of the Defence Staff
 - Michael Shrimpton – barrister, politician, and conspiracy theorist
 - John Smith – MP for the Vale of Glamorgan, member of the Defence Select Committee
 - Brian Wilson – MP for Cunninghame North and Minister of State
 - Mike Wood – MP for Dudley South
 
University administrators
- C. W. L. Bevan – Principal of the University College of South Wales and Monmounthshire 1966–1972; Principal of University College Cardiff 1972–1987
 - Leszek Borysiewicz – Vice Chancellor of the University of Cambridge
 - David Grant – Vice Chancellor of University of Wales Cardiff 2001–2005; Vice Chancellor of Cardiff University 2005–2012
 - Ernest Howard Griffiths – Principal of the University College of South Wales and Monmounthshire 1901–1918
 - John Viriamu Jones – Principal of the University College of South Wales and Monmounthshire 1883–1901
 - Frederick Rees – Principal of the University College of South Wales and Monmounthshire 1929–1949
 - Colin Riordan – Vice Chancellor of Cardiff University since 2012
 - Brian Smith – Principal of University of Wales College Cardiff 1988–1996; Vice Chancellor of University of Wales Cardiff 1996–2001
 - Anthony Steel – Principal of the University College of South Wales and Monmounthshire 1949–1966
 - Sir Aubrey Trotman-Dickenson – Principal of the University of Wales Institute of Science and Technology 1968–1988; Principal of University of Wales College Cardiff 1988–1993
 
Academics

Robert Huber, Nobel Laureate in Chemistry
- Abedelnasser Abulrob – medical researcher
 - Miguel Alcubierre – Mexican theoretical physicist
 - Rudolf K. Allemann – Swiss biochemist
 - Gabrielle Allen – computer scientist
 - Robin Attfield – philosopher
 - Martin J. Ball – Emeritus Professor of Linguistics at Bangor University, Cymru/Wales
 - Paul E. A. Barbier – Professor of French at the University of Leeds
 - Jason Barker – professor
 - Yehuda Bauer – Professor of Holocaust Studies at the Avraham Harman Institute of Contemporary Jewry at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
 - Archie Cochrane – pioneer of scientific method in medicine
 - Peter Coles – Professor of Astrophysics
 - David Crouch – historian
 - Alun Davies – bioscientist
 - Huw Dixon – economist
 - Stephen Dunnett – neuroscientist
 - Alice Laura Embleton – biologist, zoologist and suffragist.
 - Martin Evans – Nobel Prize for Medicine[4] 2007
 - Mahmoud Ezzamel – professorial fellow
 - Dimitra Fimi – writer
 - Brian J. Ford – Honorary fellow of Cardiff University (1986), honorary fellow of the Linnean Society, honorary fellow of the Royal Microscopical Society.
 - John S. Fossey – Professor of synthetic chemistry at the University of Birmingham
 - Burt Goldberg – university professor, microbiologist
 - Karen Holford – engineer
 - Robert Huber – Professor of Chemistry, Nobel Laureate in Chemistry 1988[5][6]
 - John Loughlin – Professor of Politics
 - Vaughan Lowe – Chichele Professor of Public International Law in the University of Oxford
 - Ursula Masson – women's history and feminism
 - Patrick Minford – Professor of Applied Economics
 - John Warwick Montgomery – American lawyer and theologian; Distinguished Research Professor of Philosophy and Christian Thought at Patrick Henry College[7]
 - Christopher Norris – literary critic
 - Keith Peters – Regius Professor of Physic in the University of Cambridge
 - Leighton Durham Reynolds – Emeritus Professor of Classical Languages and Literature, University of Oxford
 - Alice Roberts – clinical anatomist and osteoarchaeologist
 - Wendy Sadler – physicist and science communicator
 - H. W. Lloyd Tanner – Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy (1883–1909)
 - Pamela Taylor – Professor of Forensic Psychiatry since 2004
 - Meena Upadhyaya – medical geneticist
 - Keith Ward – philosopher, Gresham Professor of Divinity, Gresham College
 - Chandra Wickramasinghe – mathematician, astronomer and astrobiologist, Professor of Applied Mathematics
 - Rheinallt Nantlais Williams – professor of the philosophy of religion, principal of the United Theological College, Aberystwyth
 - Emma Yhnell – biomedical research scientist
 
Business
- Spencer Dale – Chief economist, Bank of England
 - Andrew Gould – chairman and former CEO, Schlumberger[8]
 - Martin Lewis – personal finance journalist, television presenter and website entrepreneur
 - Dame Mary Perkins – co-founder, Specsavers
 - Ceri Powell – senior Royal Dutch Shell executive
 - John Pettigrew (businessman) – CEO, National Grid plc
 - Lorenzo Simonelli – CEO, Baker Hughes Company
 - Terry Smith – British Fund Manager, Fundsmith
 
Religion
- Gregory Cameron – Bishop of St Asaph
 - Sheila Cameron – lawyer and ecclesiastical judge
 - Paul Colton – Bishop of Cork, Cloyne and Ross
 - Dominic Walker – Bishop of Monmouth
 
Sport
- Nathan Cleverly – professional boxer and former WBO light heavyweight world champion
 - Gareth Davies – former Wales and British and Irish Lions international rugby union player, and current chief executive of Cardiff Rugby Football Club
 - Gerald Davies – former Wales and British and Irish Lions international rugby union player
 - Mike Hall – former Wales and British and Irish Lions international rugby union player
 - Heather Knight – English cricketer
 - Steven Outerbridge – Bermudian cricketer
 - Jamie Roberts – Wales and British and Irish Lions international rugby union player
 - James Tomlinson – English cricketer
 - Bradley Wadlan – Welsh cricketer
 - Alex Gough – Squash player
 
Arts and journalism
Andrew Matthews-Owen (pianist and accompanist, professor at Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Drama, London)
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Huw Edwards, BAFTA award-winning journalist

Tim Hetherington, nominee of the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature in 2011
- Paul Atherton – television and film producer and director
 - Matt Barbet – journalist
 - Manish Bhasin – journalist and television presenter
 - Nick Broomfield – documentary filmmaker and receiver of the BAFTA Lifetime Achievement Award for Contribution to Documentary
 - Philip Cashian – composer
 - Suw Charman-Anderson – journalist and social software consultant.
 - Adrian Chiles – television presenter
 - Gillian Clarke – poet and receiver of the Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry
 - Huw Edwards – journalist
 - Ken Elias – artist/painter
 - Max Foster – CNN anchor, CNN Today[9]
 - M. A. Griffiths – poet
 - Julia Hartley-Brewer – journalist and television presenter
 - Jiang Heping – executive director of the CCTV Sports Programming Centre and Controller of CCTV-5
 - Tim Hetherington – photo-journalist and co-director of Academy Award-nominated Restrepo
 - Elis James – stand-up comedian and actor
 - Alun Hoddinott – composer
 - Sioned James – choral conductor
 - Karl Jenkins – composer
 - Alan Johnston – journalist
 - Riz Khan – journalist and television interviewer
 - Bernard Knight – crime writer
 - Simon Lane – co-founder and Creative director of The Yogscast Ltd
 - Gwilym Lee – actor.
 - Siân Lloyd – television presenter
 - Los Campesinos! – six piece indie pop band
 - Philip Madoc – actor
 - Paul Moorcraft – writer
 - Sharon Morgan – actress
 - Joanna Natasegara – documentary producer, Academy Award winner for Netflix documentary The White Helmets
 - Siân Phillips – actress
 - Susanna Reid – television presenter
 - James Righton – musician
 - Leo Rowlands – Welsh musical composer, Catholic priest
 - Arlene Sierra – composer
 - Mari Strachan – novelist and librarian
 - Richard Tait – former BBC governor and BBC trustee
 - Craig Thomas – author
 - Alex Thomson – journalist & television presenter
 - Vedhicka – Indian actress
 - Grace Williams – composer
 - Ron Smerczak – actor[10]
 
References
- ↑ "DAVIES, STEPHEN OWEN (1886?-1972), miners' leader and Labour politician". Dictionary of Welsh Biography. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
 - ↑ "Former Permanent Representatives". United Kingdom Mission to the United Nations. Archived from the original on 7 August 2011. Retrieved 4 March 2011.
 - ↑ "Robert Minhinnick". British Council. Archived from the original on 3 January 2011. Retrieved 4 March 2011.
 - ↑ "The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2007". Nobelprize.org. Retrieved 9 March 2011.
 - ↑ "Nobel laureate joins University". Cardiff University. Retrieved 4 July 2008.
 - ↑ "The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1988". The Nobel Foundation. Retrieved 4 July 2008.
 - ↑ "JWM's WEB SITE". Retrieved 10 September 2012.
 - ↑ "Schlumberger CEO to retire, remains as chairman". Forbes. Retrieved 1 August 2011.
 - ↑ "CNN International – Anchors & Reporters – Max Foster". CNN International. Retrieved 4 March 2011.
 - ↑ "Ron Smerczak at TVSA". TVSA. Retrieved 3 December 2014.
 
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