List of female fellows of the Royal Society

Fellowship of the Royal Society is open to scientists, engineers and technologists from the United Kingdom and Commonwealth of Nations, on the basis of having made "a substantial contribution to the improvement of natural knowledge, including mathematics, engineering science and medical science".[4] Election to the Fellowship is highly regarded and sought after, bringing prestige to both the individual academically and the institution the Fellow is associated with.[5] For scientists in the United Kingdom, the recognition is considered second only to being awarded the Nobel Prize.[6]

Female fellows of the Royal Society
Female fellows of the Royal Society elected from 2014 to 2018
Awarded forContributions to the improvement of natural knowledge”[1]
Sponsored byRoyal Society
Date1945 (1945)
LocationLondon
CountryUnited Kingdom
Total percentage of fellowsSince Kathleen Lonsdale and Marjory Stephenson in 1945, around 9% of fellows of the Royal Society are women[2][3]
Websiteroyalsociety.org/fellows

While there was no explicit prohibition of women as Fellow of the Royal Society in its original charters and statutes, election to the fellowships was for much of the Society's history de facto closed to women. As a result of the dissolution of nunneries in connection with the Dissolution of the Monasteries by Henry VIII, and female exclusion from schools and universities, the formal education of British girls and women was effectively non-existent throughout the 17th and 18th centuries. Women slowly gained admittance to learned societies in the UK starting in the 19th century, with the founding of the Zoological Society of London in 1829 and the Royal Entomological Society in 1833, both of which admitted women fellows from their inception.[7][8]

The first recorded question of women being admitted to the Royal Society occurred in 1900, when Marian Farquharson, the first female fellow of the Royal Microscopical Society, sent a letter to the Council of the Royal Society petitioning that "duly qualified women should have the advantage of full fellowship". In its reply, the Council stated that the question of women fellows "must depend on the interpretation to be placed upon the Royal Charters under which the Society has been governed for more than three hundred years".[7] When Hertha Ayrton was nominated for fellowship in 1902, her candidature was turned down on the basis that as a married woman she had no standing in law.[9] The Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act 1919 made it illegal for an incorporated society to refuse admission on the grounds of an individual's sex or marital status. While the Society acknowledged the provision of section 1 of the Act in 1925, in reply to a question originally put to them by the Women's Engineering Society three years prior, it was not until 1943 that another woman was nominated for fellowship. Kathleen Lonsdale and Marjory Stephenson were duly elected in 1945, after a postal vote amending the Society's statutes to explicitly allow women fellows.[7][8]

As of 2020, a total of 198 women have been elected fellows. Two women have been elected under the Society's former Statute 12 regulation and two Honorary Fellows for their service to the cause of science. Another four women, from the British Royal Family, have been either Royal Fellow or Patron of the Society. Thirty six more women have been elected as Foreign Members. Of the approximately 1,600 living fellows and foreign members in 2018, 8.5 per cent are women compared to 0.4% in 1945, according to a historical research project conducted by Aileen Fyfe and Camilla Mørk Røstvik.[3][10]

Fellows

List of female fellows
Year of electionImageFellowField(s)NotesRef.
1945 Kathleen LonsdaleCrystallographyAwarded the Davy Medal in 1957[11][12]
Marjory StephensonBiochemistry, microbiology[13][14]
1946Agnes ArberBotany[15][16]
1947 Mary CartwrightMathematicsAwarded the Sylvester Medal in 1964[17][18]
Dorothy HodgkinBiochemistryAwarded the Royal Medal in 1956, the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1964, and the Copley Medal in 1976; delivered the Tercentenary Lecture in 1960 and the Bakerian Lecture in 1972[19][20]
Muriel RobertsonProtozoology, bacteriology[21][22]
1948Sidnie MantonEntomologyHer sister Irene Manton was elected FRS in 1961.[23][24]
Dorothy NeedhamBiochemistry[25][26]
1952 Honor FellZoology[27][28]
Marthe VogtNeurologyAwarded the Royal Medal in 1981[29][30]
1954Rosalind Pitt-RiversBiochemistry[31][32]
1956Helen PorterPlant physiology[33][34]
1957Charlotte AuerbachZoology, geneticsAwarded the Darwin Medal in 1976[35][36]
1958Edith BülbringPharmacology[37][38]
1959Ann BishopProtozoology, parasitology[39][40]
Sylvia TaitEndocrinology[41][42]
1961 Irene MantonBotanySister of Sidnie Manton (elected FRS 1948)[43][44]
1963Sheina MarshallMarine biology[45][46]
1964Eleanor Margaret BurbidgeAstrophysics[47]
1965Dorothy HillGeology[48]
1966 Lillian Mary PickfordEndocrinology[49]
1967Emmeline Jean HansonBiophysics[50][51]
1969Winifred WatkinsBiochemistryAwarded the Royal Medal in 1988[52][53]
1971Florence Gwendolen ReesZoology, parasitology[54][55]
1972Mary ParkePhycology[56][57]
Ruth SangerHematology, serology[58][59]
1973Brigitte AskonasImmunology[60]
Mary LyonGeneticsAwarded the Royal Medal in 1984[61]
1975Anne McLarenDevelopmental biology, geneticsForeign Secretary and vice-president of the Royal Society 1991–96, and awarded the Royal Medal in 1990[62]
1976Patricia ClarkeBiochemistryDelivered the Leeuwenhoek Lecture in 1979[63]
Elsie WiddowsonNutrition[64][65]
1977 Helen MuirRheumatology[66]
1979 Brenda MilnerNeuropsychologyDelivered the Humphry Davy Lecture in 1989[67]
Winifred TutinBotany[68]

Janet VaughanPhysiology[69][70]
Janet WatsonGeology[71][72]
1982

Noreen MurrayMolecular geneticsVice-president of the Royal Society 2002–04, and awarded the Gabor Medal in 1989[73]
1985Naomi DattaGenetics[74]
Miriam RothschildEntomology, botany[75][76]
Anne WarnerDevelopmental biology[77]
1986Jean ThomasBiochemistryBiological Secretary and vice-president of the Royal Society 2008–present[78]
Elizabeth WarringtonNeuropsychology[79]
1987Olga KennardCrystallography[80]
1988Barbara PearseMolecular biology[81]
1989Anne TreismanPsychology[82]
1990Louise JohnsonBiochemistry, crystallography[83]
Carole JordanAstronomy[84]
1991Enid MacRobbieBiophysics[85]
1992 Elizabeth BlackburnMolecular biologyAwarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2009[86]
Suzanne CoryGeneticsAwarded the Royal Medal in 2002[87]
1993Patricia JacobsGenetics[88]
1994 Dusa McDuffMathematics[89]
1995Julia HigginsPolymer scienceForeign Secretary and vice-president of the Royal Society 2001–06, delivered the Blackett and Jagdish Chandra Bose Memorial Lecture in 2005 and the Humphry Davy and Claude Bernard Lecture in 2007[90]
Shirley TilghmanMolecular biology[91]
1996Jan AndersonBiology[92]
Dianne EdwardsPaleobotany[93]
Linda PartridgeGenetics, biogerontologyDelivered the Croonian Lecture in 2009[94]
1997

Philippa MarrackImmunologyAwarded the Wellcome Foundation Prize in 1990[95]
1998Jean BeggsGeneticsAwarded the Gabor Medal in 2003[96]
Cheryll TickleDevelopmental biology[97]
1999Frances AshcroftPhysiology[98]
Rosa BeddingtonDevelopmental biology[99][100]
Lorna CasseltonGeneticsForeign Secretary and vice-president of the Royal Society 2006–11, delivered the Rutherford Memorial Lecture in 2008 and the Blackett and Jagdish Chandra Bose Memorial Lecture in 2009[101]
Athene DonaldPhysicsDelivered the Bakerian Lecture in 2006[102]
Janet ThorntonBioinformatics[103]
2000 Janet RossantDevelopmental biology[104]
Patricia SimpsonDevelopmental biology[105]
2001Brigid HoganDevelopmental biology[106]
Frances KirwanMathematics[107]
Sheila SherlockMedicine[108][109]
2002Anne DellBiochemistry[110]
Judith HowardChemistry, crystallography[111]
Georgina MaceConservation biology, ecology[112]
Mary ReesMathematics[113]
2003 Jocelyn Bell BurnellAstrophysicsAwarded the Michael Faraday Prize in 2010[114]
Mariann BienzMolecular biology[115]
Kay DaviesGenetics[116]
Eleanor DodsonBiochemistry[117]
Ann DowlingMechanical engineering[118]
Bridget OgilvieParasitology[119]
Elizabeth RobertsonCell biology[120]
Karen VousdenMolecular biology[121]
Fiona WattMolecular biology[122]
2004 Caroline DeanBotany[123]
Lynn GladdenChemical engineeringAwarded the Bakerian Lecture for 2014[124]
Carol RobinsonChemistryAwarded the Rosalind Franklin Award in 2004, and the Davy Medal in 2010[125]
Nancy RothwellBiology[126]
2005Deborah CharlesworthEvolutionary biology[127]
Uta FrithDevelopmental psychology[128]
2006Valerie BeralEpidemiology[129]
Ruth Lynden-BellComputational chemistry[130]
Trudy MackayGenetics[131]
Helen SaibilMolecular biology[132]
2007Gillian BatesBiologyDelivered the GlaxoSmithKline Prize and Lecture in 1998[133]

Barbara Rosemary GrantEvolutionary biologyAwarded the Darwin Medal in 2002[134]

Ottoline LeyserBotanyAwarded the Rosalind Franklin Award in 2007[135]
Daniela RhodesMolecular biology[136]
Veronica van HeyningenGenetics[137]
2008 Anne O'GarraImmunology[138]
Ulrike TillmannMathematics[139]
2009Jennifer ClackPalaeontology, evolutionary biology[140]
Wendy HallComputer science[141]
Christine HoltDevelopmental neuroscience[142]
Angela McLeanMathematical biologyAwarded the Gabor Medal in 2011[143]
Karen SteelBiology[144]
2010Andrea BrandMolecular biologyAwarded the Rosalind Franklin Award in 2006[145]
Eleanor CampbellPhysical chemistry[146]
Nicola ClaytonComparative cognition[147]
Victoria KaspiAstrophysicsDelivered the UK-Canada Rutherford Lecture in 2010[148]
Elizabeth SimpsonBiology[149]
2011Doreen CantrellImmunology[150]
Clare GreyChemistryKavli Medal and Lecture in 2011[151]
Janet HemingwayTropical medicine[152]
Fiona PowrieGastroenterology[153]
Angela VincentBiology[154]
2012 Michele DoughertyAstrophysics[155]
Margaret RobinsonMolecular biology, cell biology[156]
2013Judith ArmitageBiochemistry[157]
Gillian GriffithsCell biology, immunology[158]

Joanna HaighAtmospheric physics[159]
Edith HeardEpigenetics[160]
Anne MillsHealth economics[161]
Maria Grazia SpillantiniNeurology[162]
Brigitta StockingerImmunology[163]
Sophie WilsonComputer architecture[164]

Julia YeomansPhysics[165]
2014 Dorothy BishopPsychology[166]
Sally DaviesMedicine[167]
Marian DawkinsZoology[168]
Amanda FisherBiology[169]
Jenny NelsonPhysics[170]
Karalyn PattersonNeuroscience[171]
Sheena RadfordBiophysics[172]
2015 Jane ClarkeBiophysics[173]
Anne CutlerPsycholinguistics[174]
Annette DolphinPharmacology[175]
Yvonne ElsworthHelioseismology[176]
Alison EtheridgeProbability[177]
Jane A. LangdalePlant development[178]
Julia SlingoMeteorology[179]
Natalie StrynadkaBiochemistry[180]
2016 Polina BayvelOptical communication[181]
Katharine CashmanVolcanology[182]
Sarah CleavelandEpidemiology[183]
Christl DonnellyEpidemiology[184]
Maria FitzgeraldNeuroscience[185]
Pratibha GaiMicroscopy[186]
Anne GloverBiology[187]
Sue IonNuclear power[188]
Eugenia KumachevaChemistry[189]
Corinne Le QuéréClimate change[190]
Eleanor MaguireNeuroscience[191]
Caroline SeriesMathematics[192]
Alison SmithPlant biochemistry[193]
2017 Wendy BickmoreGenome biology[194]
Anne Ferguson-SmithGenetics[195]
Gabriele C. HegerlClimate change[196]
Yvonne JonesMolecular biology[197]
Julia KingEngineering[198]
Anne NevilleEngineering[199]
Alison NobleBiomedical engineering[200]
Josephine PembertonEvolutionary biology[201]
Sarah (Sally) PriceChemistry[202]
Anne RidleyCell biology[203]
Nicola SpaldinMaterials science[204]
Jennifer ThomasPhysicist[205]
Susanne von CaemmererPlant physiology[206]
2018 Polly ArnoldChemistry[207]
Jillian BanfieldMicrobial ecology[208]
Margaret BrimbleChemistry[209]
Judy HirstMitochondrial biology[210]
Cathie MartinPlant biotechnology[211]
Tracy PalmerMicrobiology[212]
Lalita RamakrishnanMicrobiology[213]
Nancy ReidStatistics[214]
Sheila RowanPhysics[215]
Ingrid SchefferNeurology[216]
Michele SimmonsQuantum physics[217]
Angela StrankGeology[218]
2019Lucy CarpenterAtmospheric chemistry[219]
Sarah C. DarbyEpidemiology[220]
Véronique GouverneurChemistry[221]
Gagandeep KangMicrobiology[222]
Marta KwiatkowskaArtificial Intelligence[223]
Christine OrengoComputational biology[224]
Anne OsbournMicrobiology[225]
Barbara Sherwood LollarGeology[226]
Molly ShoichetBiomedical engineeringOntario's first chief scientist[227]
Liz SockettBacteriology[228]
2020Marian HolnessGeology[229]
Xin LuBiology, Cancer research[230]
Catherine PriceCognitive neuroscience[231]
Carol PrivesBiology, Cancer research[232]
Linda NazarChemistry[233]
Molly StevensBiomedical engineering[234]

Donna StricklandPhysicsNobel Prize winner[235]

Sarah TeichmannBioinformatics, Biophysics, Genomics, Immunology[236]
Jane VisvaderCell and Molecular Biology[237]
2021 Julie AhringerMolecular genetics[238]
Connie EavesMedical genetics[239]
Sadaf FarooqiMedicine, Genetics of obesity[240]
Ten FeiziMolecular biology[241]
Julie Forman-KayBiochemistry, Cell and molecular biology, Molecular medicine[242]
Jane FrancisPaleoclimatology[243]
Vernonica Franklin-TongCell biology (Plant)[244]
Usha GoswamiCognitive neuroscience[245]
Karen HeywoodOceanography[246]
Rebecca KilnerEvolutionary biology[247]
Fiona MarshallPharmacology[248]
Frances PlattBiochemistry, Pharmacology[249]
Marilyn RenfreeZoology[250]
Abigail SellenHCI[251]
Karen VogtmannMathematics[252]
Charlotte WilliamsChemistry[253]
2022 Eileen FurlongMolecular biology[254]
Jane HillstonComputer science[255]
Sandra KnappBotany[256]
Susan M. LeaStructural biology[257]
Irene Miguel-AliagaPhysiology[258]
Rachel O'ReillyChemistry[259]
Rosalind RickabyBiogeochemistry (Marine)[260]
Yvonne RogersCognitive science, HCI, IxD[261]
Kate StoreyDevelopmental biology[262]
Carola Garcia de VinuesaImmunology[263]
E. Sally WardImmunology[264]
Rachel WoodGeology, Paleobiology[265]
2023Judith AllenImmunology[266]
Sue BlackAnatomy, Forensic anthropology, Forensic science[267]
Cathie ClarkeAstrophysics[268]
Wendy FreedmanAstronomy[269]
Sarah GilbertVaccinology[270]
Louise HeathwaiteEnvironmental science[271]
Laura HeydermanPhysics, Materials science[272]
Loeske KruukEvolutionary biology[273]
Jane MemmottEcology, Entomology[274]
Valerie MizrahiMolecular biology[275]
Tebello NyokongChemistry[276]
Sarah O'ConnorMolecular biology[277]
Jane ParkerBotany[278]
Lori PassmoreStructural biology, CryoEM, RNA processing[279]
Hanadi SleimanChemistry[280]
Elizabeth ThompsonMathematical statistics, Population genetics[281]
Irene TraceyNeuroscience, Pain, Neuroimaging[282]

Foreign members

List of female Foreign Members
Year of electionImageMemberField(s)NotesRef.
1955 Lise MeitnerNuclear physics[283]
1969 Inge LehmannSeismology[284]
1989 Nicole Le DouarinDevelopmental biologyDelivered the Claude Bernard Lecture in 1987[285]
Barbara McClintockCytogeneticsAwarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1983[286]
1990 Christiane Nusslein-VolhardGenetics, embryologyAwarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1995[287]
1995 Gertrude ElionBiochemistry, pharmacologyAwarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1988[288]
Salome Gluecksohn-WaelschGenetics[289]
Rita Levi-MontalciniNeurologyAwarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1986[290]
2001Clara Franzini-ArmstrongDevelopmental biology[291]
2004 Jane LubchencoMarine biologyUnder Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere of the United States 2010–present[292]
2005 Catherine CesarskyAstronomy[293]
2008Barbara HohnMolecular biology[294]
Susan SolomonAtmospheric chemistry[295]
2010 Pascale CossartBacteriology[296]
2011 Joanne ChoryMolecular biology, Cell biology[297]
Carla ShatzNeuroscience[298]
2012Bonnie BasslerMolecular biology[299]
2013Margaret BuckinghamDevelopmental biology[300]
2014 Joan SteitzMolecular biology[301]
2015 Linda BuckOlfactory system[302]
Susan LindquistMolecular biology[303]
Gail MartinDevelopmental Biology[304]
2016 Jennifer Doudna Biochemistry[305]
Ellen WilliamsNanotechnology[306]
2017 Marcia McNuttGeophysics[307]
Susan R. WesslerPlant molecular biology[308]
2018 Carolyn R. BertozziSystems biology[309]
Fabiola GianottiParticle physics[310]
2019 Sandra DiazEcology[311]
Elaine FuchsCell biology[312]
Inez FungClimatology[313]
2020 Frances ArnoldBioengineering[314]
Else Marie FriisPalaeobiology[315]
Regine KahmannMicrobiology[316]
Margaret KivelsonGeophysics[317]
Ada YonathMicrobiology[318]
2021Anny CazenaveEarth sciences[319]
Elena ContiBiochemistry[320]
Julie Forman-KayBiochemistry[321]
V. Narry KimBiochemistry[322]
Claire VoisinMathematics[323]
2022 Titia de LangeBiochemistry[324]
Maria LeptinImmunology[325]
2023Eva-Mari AroBiology[326]
Odile EisensteinChemistry[327]
Shafi GoldwasserArtificial intelligence[328]
May-Britt MoserNeuroscience[329]
Karen UhlenbeckMathematics[330]

Honorary and Statute 12 fellows

Between 1903 and 1996, Statute 12 of the Society permitted the council to elect someone who would not otherwise qualify for election under the normal criteria for "conspicuous service to the cause of science, or are such that their election would be of signal benefit to the Society". Statute 12 Fellows were replaced by the introduction of Honorary Fellows in 1997.[331]

List of female honorary and Statute 12 fellows
Year of electionImageFellowField(s)NotesRef.
1983 Margaret ThatcherPoliticsPrime Minister of the United Kingdom (1979–1990)[332]
1988 Margaret GowingHistory of scienceDelivered the Wilkins Lecture in 1976[333]
2007 Onora O'NeillPhilosophy, politics[334]
2015 Lisa JardineHistory[335]
2023Kate Bingham[336]
Fiona Fox[337]

Royal fellows and patrons

Throughout its history, the Royal Society has elected a number of individuals to its Fellowship by virtue of their being a member of the nobility.[338] Such elections were restricted first in 1874 to princes and members of the Privy Council, and subsequently in 1903 to princes of the British Royal Family only.[331][339] This has since been relaxed to allow the election of any member of the British Royal Family.[340] Those elected by virtue of their royal blood or marriage are known as Royal Fellows.[341] From the beginning of the practice of British royal patronage in the 18th century,[342] the reigning monarch of Great Britain (and since 1801 that of the United Kingdom), starting with King George I,[343] has always served as patron of the Society.

List of female Royal Fellows and Patrons
Year of electionImageFellow / PatronNotesRef.
1838 Queen VictoriaNever elected as a Royal Fellow, instead served as Patron of the Society after her reign began as Queen of the United Kingdom and later Empress of India[344]
1947 Queen Elizabeth IIQueen of the United Kingdom and the other Commonwealth realms, and patron from 1952[345]
1956 Queen Elizabeth The Queen MotherQueen consort of King George VI[345]
1987 Princess AnnePrincess Royal[346]

See also

References

General
  • "About elections". The Royal Society. Retrieved 10 March 2023.
  • "Current Fellows". The Royal Society. Retrieved 10 March 2023.
  • "Search past Fellows". The Royal Society. Retrieved 10 March 2023.
Specific

External links