Lucasian Professor of Mathematics


The Lucasian Chair of Mathematics is a mathematics professorship in the University of Cambridge, England; its holder is known as the Lucasian Professor. The post was founded in 1663 by Henry Lucas, who was Cambridge University's Member of Parliament in 1639-1640, and it was officially established by King Charles II on 18 January 1664. It has been called the most celebrated professorship in the world, and the most famous academic chair in the world due to the prestige of many of its holders and the groundbreaking work done by them. It was said by The Daily Telegraph to be one of the most prestigious academic posts in the world. Since its establishment, the professorship has been held by, among others, Isaac Newton, Charles Babbage, George Stokes, Joseph Larmor, Paul Dirac and Stephen Hawking.

History

, in his will, bequeathed his library of 4,000 volumes to the university and left instructions for the purchase of land whose yielding should provide £100 a year for the founding of a professorship.
It is the third oldest chair of mathematics in Great Britain, after the Gresham Professor of Geometry at Gresham College and the Savilian Professor of Geometry at the University of Oxford.
In the 1800s and following decades, the Lucasian professors "played important roles in making Britain the preeminent scientific state and in changing the university from a ‘gentleman’s club’ to a research institution."
Babbage applied for the vacancy in 1826, after Turton, but Airy was appointed. William Whewell remarked that he would be the best professor, but that the heads of the colleges would not see that. Nonetheless, Babbage was appointed when the chair became free again two years later.
The 19th and current Lucasian Professor is Michael Cates, starting from 1 July 2015.
Recently, the University of Cambridge requires holders of the chair to retire from the post at the age of 67, as was the case for Stephen Hawking.

List of Lucasian professors

#Year of appointmentPortraitNameSpecialityTenure
11663Isaac Barrow
Classics and mathematics6
21669Isaac Newton
Mathematics and physics33
31702William Whiston
Mathematics9
41711Nicholas Saunderson
Mathematics28
51739John Colson
Mathematics21
61760Edward Waring
Mathematics38
71798Isaac Milner
Mathematics and chemistry22
81820Robert Woodhouse
Mathematics2
91822Thomas Turton
Mathematics4
101826George Biddell Airy
Astronomy2
111828Charles Babbage
Mathematics and computing11
121839Joshua King
Mathematics10
131849George Gabriel Stokes
Physics and fluid mechanics54
141903Joseph Larmor
Physics29
151932Paul Dirac
Mathematical & theoretical physics37
161969James Lighthill
Fluid mechanics10
171979Stephen Hawking
Theoretical physics and cosmology30
182009Michael Green
String theory6
192015Michael Cates
Statistical mechanics of soft condensed mattercurrent

Cultural references

In the final episode of the science-fiction television series Star Trek: The Next Generation, one of the main characters, the android Data, holds the Lucasian Chair in the late 24th century, albeit in an alternate reality.