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University of St Andrews



 
 
The University of St Andrews is the oldest
List of oldest universities in continuous operation

This is a list of the oldest extant universities in the world. To be listed on this page, an educational institution must satisfy the definition of a university at the time of founding; it must have been founded before 1500 or be the oldest university in a region; and it must have been operational without a significant interruption ever sin...
 university
University

A university is an institution of higher education and research, which grants academic degrees in a variety of subjects. A university provides both undergraduate education and postgraduate education....
 in Scotland
Scotland

conventional_long_name = ScotlandAlba|common_name= Scotland|image_flag = Flag of Scotland.svg|flag_width = 130px...
 and third oldest in the English-speaking world
English-speaking world

The English-speaking world consists of those countries or regions that use the English language to one degree or another....
, having been founded between 1410 and 1413. The University is situated in the town of St Andrews
St Andrews

St Andrews is a town and former royal burgh on the east coast of Fife, Scotland. According to the recent population estimate , the town has a population of 16,596, making this the fifth largest settlement in Fife....
, in Fife
Fife

Fife is a council area of Scotland, situated between the Firth of Tay and the Firth of Forth, with inland boundaries to Perth and Kinross and Clackmannanshire....
, on the east coast of Scotland. It is a member of the 1994 Group
1994 Group

The 1994 Group is a coalition of "smaller research-intensive university" in the United Kingdom founded in 1994 to defend their interests following the creation of the Russell Group by larger research-intensive universities earlier that year....
, a network of smaller research-intensive British
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 universities. Intake is highly selective and Independent school
Independent school (UK)

An independent school in the United Kingdom is a school financed by private sources, predominantly in the form of school fees and charitable endowments; and so not subject to the conditions of "maintained status" imposed by accepting state financing....
 intake is high. The university has a widening participation policy; however, the university has one of the smallest percentages of students from lower income backgrounds, out of all higher education institutions in the UK.






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The University of St Andrews is the oldest
List of oldest universities in continuous operation

This is a list of the oldest extant universities in the world. To be listed on this page, an educational institution must satisfy the definition of a university at the time of founding; it must have been founded before 1500 or be the oldest university in a region; and it must have been operational without a significant interruption ever sin...
 university
University

A university is an institution of higher education and research, which grants academic degrees in a variety of subjects. A university provides both undergraduate education and postgraduate education....
 in Scotland
Scotland

conventional_long_name = ScotlandAlba|common_name= Scotland|image_flag = Flag of Scotland.svg|flag_width = 130px...
 and third oldest in the English-speaking world
English-speaking world

The English-speaking world consists of those countries or regions that use the English language to one degree or another....
, having been founded between 1410 and 1413. The University is situated in the town of St Andrews
St Andrews

St Andrews is a town and former royal burgh on the east coast of Fife, Scotland. According to the recent population estimate , the town has a population of 16,596, making this the fifth largest settlement in Fife....
, in Fife
Fife

Fife is a council area of Scotland, situated between the Firth of Tay and the Firth of Forth, with inland boundaries to Perth and Kinross and Clackmannanshire....
, on the east coast of Scotland. It is a member of the 1994 Group
1994 Group

The 1994 Group is a coalition of "smaller research-intensive university" in the United Kingdom founded in 1994 to defend their interests following the creation of the Russell Group by larger research-intensive universities earlier that year....
, a network of smaller research-intensive British
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
 universities. Intake is highly selective and Independent school
Independent school (UK)

An independent school in the United Kingdom is a school financed by private sources, predominantly in the form of school fees and charitable endowments; and so not subject to the conditions of "maintained status" imposed by accepting state financing....
 intake is high. The university has a widening participation policy; however, the university has one of the smallest percentages of students from lower income backgrounds, out of all higher education institutions in the UK. At the same time, the average price for accommodation for students at St Andrews is more than that for students at any other university in Scotland. The library and many university departments are spread around the town centre. The town's population of 18,000 is boosted considerably by the University's 6,000 students. St Andrews is listed among the top five universities in the United Kingdom
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
, and has been described by the Sunday Times as "the main rival in the UK to Oxford and Cambridge
University of Cambridge

The University of Cambridge , located in Cambridge, England, is the List of oldest universities in continuous operation university in the Anglosphere....
".

History


The University was founded in 1410 when a charter
Charter

A charter is the grant of authority or rights, stating that the granter formally recognizes the prerogative of the recipient to exercise the rights specified....
 of incorporation was bestowed upon the Augustinian priory
Priory

A priory is a house of men or women under religious vows headed by a prior or prioress.Priories may be houses of mendicant friars or religious sisters , or monastery of monks or nuns ....
 of St Andrews Cathedral. A Papal Bull
Papal bull

A Papal bull is a particular type of letters patent or charter issued by a pope. It is named after the bulla that was appended to the end to authenticate it....
 was issued in 1413 by the Avignon Pope Benedict XIII. A royal charter was granted in 1532. The University grew in size quite rapidly; A pedagogy
Pedagogy

Pedagogy , or paedagogy is the art or science of being a teacher. The term generally refers to strategies of instruction, or a style of instruction....
, St John's College
St John's College, St Andrews

St John's College of the University of St Andrews as a constituent college founded between 1418 and 1430 and was the precursor to present-day St Mary's College, St Andrews....
 was founded 1418-1430 by Robert of Montrose and Lawrence of Lindores, St Salvator's College was established in 1450, St Leonard's College in 1511, and St Mary's College
St Mary's College, St Andrews

St Mary's College of the University of St Andrews, in Fife, Scotland - in full, the New College of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary - was founded in 1538 by Archbishop James Beaton, uncle of cardinal David Beaton on the site of the pedagogy or St Johns College ....
 in 1537. St Mary's College was a re-foundation of St Johns College and earlier pedagogy. Some of the early college buildings that are in use today date from this period such as St Salvator's Chapel
St Salvator's Chapel

St Salvator's Chapel is one of two chapels belonging to the University of St Andrews, the other being St Leonard's Chapel. It was founded in 1450, built in the Late Gothic architectural style, and refurbished in the 1680s, 1860s and throughout the 20th century....
 and St Leonards College chapel and St Mary's College quadrangle. At this time, much of the teaching was of a religious
Religion

A religion is an organized approach to human spirituality which usually encompasses a set of myth, symbols, beliefs and practices, often with a supernatural or transcendence quality, that give meaning to the practitioner's experiences of life through reference to a higher power or truth....
 nature and was conducted by cleric
Cleric

A cleric , clergyman , or churchman is a member of the clergy of a religion, especially one who is a priest, preacher, or other religious professional....
s associated with the cathedral
Cathedral

A cathedral is a Christian church that contains the seat of a bishop. It is a Religion building for worship, specifically of a denomination with an episcopal hierarchy, such as the Roman Catholic Church, Anglicanism, Orthodox Christian and some Lutheranism churches, which serves as a bishop's seat, and thus as the central church of a dioc...
.

From the 17th to 19th centuries, the university underwent many changes. The distinctive red gowns, which are still in use today, were adopted in 1672. Toward the end of the seventeenth century, the university considered and eventually rejected a move to Perth
Perth, Scotland

Perth is a town and former royal burgh in central Scotland. Sitting on the banks of the River Tay, it is the administrative headquarters of Perth and Kinross council area....
. In 1747, St Salvator's and St Leonard's merged to form the United College of St Salvator and St Leonard
United College, St Andrews

The United College is one of the two statutory colleges of the University of St Andrews in St Andrews, Scotland. It was founded in 1747 by the merger of St Salvator's College, and St Leonard's College, when the University was in decline....
.

During the 19th century, student numbers were very low, in the 1870s, the student population was fewer than 150, and perhaps partly in response to this, the university founded University College in Dundee in 1897, which became a centre of medical, scientific and legal excellence. This affiliation ended in 1967 when the college, renamed Queen's College, became a separate and independent institution as the University of Dundee
University of Dundee

The University of Dundee is a university in the city and Royal burgh of Dundee, Scotland.Founded in 1881 and existing for most of its early existence as a Collegiate university of the University of St Andrews, the University of Dundee became an independent institution in 1967 whilst retaining much of its ancient universities of Scotland he...
. The loss of teaching facilities for clinical medicine caused the university's Bute Medical School
Bute Medical School

The Bute Medical School is the Medical school at the University of St Andrews in St Andrews, Fife, Scotland....
 to form a new attachment with the University of Manchester
University of Manchester

The University of Manchester is a "red brick university" civic university located in Manchester, England. It is a member of the Russell Group of large research-intensive universities and the N8 Group for research collaboration....
, which was then expanding its clinical medicine intake.

A new School of Medicine at the University of St Andrews will be named in honour of B.C. Sekhar, after the sizeable sum of £8.25m towards building costs was donated by his son, Malaysia
Malaysia

Malaysia is a federation that consists of States of Malaysia in Southeast Asia with a total landmass of . The capital city is Kuala Lumpur, while Putrajaya is the seat of the federal government....
n entrepreneur Vinod Sekhar.

Reputation


St Andrews is frequently listed among the top five universities in the United Kingdom
United Kingdom

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, commonly known as the United Kingdom , the UK or Britain,is a sovereign state located off the northwestern coast of continental Europe....
, as well as being listed as first in Scotland
Scotland

conventional_long_name = ScotlandAlba|common_name= Scotland|image_flag = Flag of Scotland.svg|flag_width = 130px...
 for the last three years.

UK University Rankings
League tables of British universities

League tables of British universities which rank the performances of universities in the United Kingdom on a number of criteria, have been published every year by The Times newspaper and several other newspapers since October 1992....
2009 2008 2007 2006 2005
Times Good University Guide 5th 5th 20th 7th 9th
Guardian University Guide5th4th 42nd 43rd 11th
Sunday Times University Guide  5th 6th 14th 14th
The Independent 7th 5th   
Daily Telegraph   5th  


The independent IpsosMORI National Student Survey
National student survey

The National Student Survey is a survey, launched in 2005, of all final year degree students at institutions in England, Wales and Northern Ireland....
 2006 commissioned by HEFCE placed it third among the UK universities. It has achieved the most consistently high ratings in research assessment exercises with no subjects receiving a rating lower than 4 on a grading scale 1-5*, where 5* denotes outstanding international research. The departments of English and Psychology have received a 5* in the latest exercise, and 72% of staff across the university received a 5 or 5* rating. The Philosophical Gourmet report ranks St Andrews' graduate philosophy programme as third in the UK, and the joint programme with Stirling University is ranked second in the UK and joint 13th in the world.

Nearly eight in ten graduates obtain a First Class or an Upper Second Class Honours degree. A similar proportion enter further employment requiring a respected degree or obtaining placements for further postgraduate research. The ancient Scottish universities award Master of Arts degrees (except for science students who are awarded a Bachelor of Science degree) which are classified upon graduation, in contrast to Oxbridge
Oxbridge

Oxbridge was originally a fictional composite of the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge in England, and the term is now used to refer to them collectively, often with implications of superior intellectual or social status, emphasising the apparent "difficulty" of gaining admission....
 where one becomes a Master of Arts after a certain number of years, and the rest of the UK, where graduates are awarded BAs.

Entry to the University is highly competitive; the latest UCAS figures show that there are generally 12 applications per place available, and the University has not entered Clearing since 2003. The standard offer of a place tends to require at a minimum AAABB at Scottish Highers for Scottish applicants, AAB at GCE A Levels for English, Welsh and Northern Irish candidates, or a score of at least 36 points on the International Baccalaureate, with International Relations commanding AAA at GCE A Level due to the high level of able applicants. They have a noted preference for candidates who already have these qualifications, something that implicitly gives preference to Scottish applicants as they will have normally completed the Scottish Highers at the time of application, whereas other applicants, such as those studying in England, are still in the process of attaining their final secondary qualifications.

Traditions


Gowns

One of the most conspicuous traditions at St Andrews is the wearing of academic dress, particularly the distinctive red undergraduate gown of the United College. Undergraduates in Arts and Science subjects can be seen wearing these garments at the installation of a Rector or Chancellor, at chapel services, on 'Pier Walks', at formal hall dinners, at meetings of the Union Debating Society
University of St Andrews Union Debating Society

The University of St Andrews Union Debating Society is a student debating society at the University of St Andrews in Scotland and the oldest in the United Kingdom....
, or giving tours to prospective students and visitors. Divinity students wear a black undergraduate gown. (See Academic dress of the University of St Andrews
Academic dress of the University of St Andrews

Academic dress at the University of St Andrews is an important part of university life. The University of St Andrews was founded between 1410 and 1413, being the oldest of the ancient universities of Scotland and the third oldest university in the English-speaking world....
.)

Raisin Weekend

Raisin Weekend is the highlight of the social calendar at the University. Held annually over the last weekend of November, first years are entertained by their academic parents, normally consisting of a tea party thrown by the mothers and then a tour of pubs conducted by the fathers. This culminates in a foam fight on the Monday morning in quad of St Salvator's College.

Cobblestones

Situated around the town of St Andrews
St Andrews

St Andrews is a town and former royal burgh on the east coast of Fife, Scotland. According to the recent population estimate , the town has a population of 16,596, making this the fifth largest settlement in Fife....
 are cobblestone markings denoting where Protestant martyrs were burnt at the stake. To students, the most notable of these is the cobblestone initials "PH" located outside the main gate of St Salvators College. These cobblestones denote where Patrick Hamilton
Patrick Hamilton (martyr)

Patrick Hamilton was a Scotland churchman and an early Protestant Protestant Reformation in Scotland. He travelled to Europe, where he met several of the leading reforming thinkers, before returning to Scotland to preach....
 was martyred in 1528. According to student tradition, stepping on the "PH" will cause a student to become cursed, with the effect that the offender will fail his or her degree and so students are known to jump over the cobblestones when passing.

May Dip

The May Dip is a student tradition held annually at dawn on May Day. Students stay awake until dawn, at which time they collectively run into the North Sea. The May Dip is also traditionally the only way of removing the curse inflicted by stepping on the PH cobbles. If a student is to step on the stones he/she can be forgiven if on the dawn of the first of May, they run into the North Sea.

Governance and administration


As with the other Ancient universities
Ancient university

Ancient university is a term used to describe the medieval universities and renaissance university of England, Scotland and Ireland that have continued to exist....
 of Scotland, governance is determined by the Universities (Scotland) Act 1858. This Act created three bodies: the General Council
General Council (Scottish university)

The General Council of an Ancient universities of Scotland in Scotland is the corporate body of all Alumnus and senior academics of each university....
, University Court
University Court

A University Court is an administrative body of a university in the United Kingdom. In England's Oxbridge such a Court carries out limited judicial functions; whereas in Scotland it is a University's supreme governing body, analogous to a Board of Directors or a Board of Trustees....
 and Academic Senate
Academic Senate

An Academic Senate is a governing body in some universities and colleges in the English-speaking world and typically the supreme academic authority for the institution....
 (Senatus Academicus).

General Council


The General Council is a standing advisory body of all the graduates
Alumnus

An alumnus according to the American Heritage Dictionary is "a male graduate or former student of a school, college, or university." In addition, an alumna is "a female graduate or former student of a school, college, or university." If a group includes more than one gender, even if there is only one male, the plural form alumni i...
, academics and former academics of the University. It meets twice a year and appoints a Business Committee to transact business between these meetings. Its most important functions are to appoint two Assessor
Assessor

An assessor may be:* Assessor , the assistant to a judge or magistrate* Assessor , a senior officer of the University of Oxford* Assessor , an expert who calculates the value of property...
s to the University Court
University Court

A University Court is an administrative body of a university in the United Kingdom. In England's Oxbridge such a Court carries out limited judicial functions; whereas in Scotland it is a University's supreme governing body, analogous to a Board of Directors or a Board of Trustees....
 and elect the University Chancellor
Chancellor of the University of St Andrews

The Chancellor is the titular head of the University of St Andrews. His duties include conferring academic degree, promoting the University?s image throughout the world, and furthering its interests, both within Scotland and beyond....
.

University Court


The University Court
University Court

A University Court is an administrative body of a university in the United Kingdom. In England's Oxbridge such a Court carries out limited judicial functions; whereas in Scotland it is a University's supreme governing body, analogous to a Board of Directors or a Board of Trustees....
 is the body responsible for administrative and financial matters, and is in effect the governing body of the University. It is chaired by the Rector
Rector

The word rector has a number of different meanings, but all of them indicate an academic, religious or political administrator.The word "rector" also appears in many modern languages, such as Albanian, Dutch language, Spanish language, Catalan language and Romanian language....
, who is elected by all the matriculated
Matriculation

Matriculation, in the broadest sense, means to be registered or added to a list, from the Latin matricula - little list. In Scottish heraldry, for instance, a matriculation is a registration of armorial bearings....
 students of the University. Members are appointed by the General Council, Academic Senate
Academic Senate

An Academic Senate is a governing body in some universities and colleges in the English-speaking world and typically the supreme academic authority for the institution....
 and Fife Council
Fife

Fife is a council area of Scotland, situated between the Firth of Tay and the Firth of Forth, with inland boundaries to Perth and Kinross and Clackmannanshire....
. The President of the Students' Representative Council and Director of Representation are ex officio members of the Court. Several lay
Lay

Lay may refer to:*Laity, any person who is not a member of the clergy.*a Lyric poetry**Germanic L?c***any poem of the Poetic Edda**Lai, a 13th- or 14th-century northern European song....
 members are also co-opted and must include a fixed number of alumni of the University.

Senatus Academicus


The Academic Senate
Academic Senate

An Academic Senate is a governing body in some universities and colleges in the English-speaking world and typically the supreme academic authority for the institution....
 (Latin Senatus Academicus) is the supreme academic body for the University. Its members include all of the Professor
Professor

The meaning of the word professor varies. In some English-speaking countries, it refers to a senior academic who holds a departmental chair, especially as head of the Academic department, or a personal chair awarded specifically to that individual....
s of the University, certain senior Reader
Reader (academic rank)

In the academic rank in the United Kingdom and some universities in Australia and New Zealand, reader is the rank between senior lecturer and professor....
s, a number of Senior Lecturers and Lecturer
Lecturer

Lecturer is a term of academic rank. In the United Kingdom lecturer is the name given to university teachers in their first permanent university position....
s and three elected student Senate Representatives - one from the Arts / Divinity faculty, one from the Science / Medicine faculty and one postgraduate student. It is responsible for authorising degree programmes and issuing all degrees to graduates. Another function of the Senate is to discipline students. The President
President

President is a title held by many leaders of organizations, company, trade unions, university, and country. Etymology, a "president" is one who Wiktionary:Preside, who sits in leadership ....
 of the Senate is the University Principal.

Faculties

St Andrews University Classics Building
The University is divided into four academic Faculties
Faculty (university)

A faculty is a division within a university comprising one subject area, or a number of related subject areas . The concept of a university with different faculties for different subjects dates back to Al-Azhar University, which had individual faculties for a Madrasah and theological seminary, Sharia and Fiqh, Arabic grammar, Islamic astronom...
:
  • Arts
    Humanities

    The humanities are academic disciplines which study the human condition, using methods that are primarily analytic, critical, or speculative, as distinguished from the mainly empirical approaches of the natural science and social sciences....
  • Divinity
    Divinity (academic discipline)

    Divinity is the study of Christianity and other theology and religious ministry at a school, divinity school, university, or seminary. The term is sometimes a synonym for theology as an academic, speculative pursuit, and sometimes is used for the study of applied theology and ministry to make a distinction between that and academic theology....
  • Medicine
    Medicine

    Medicine is the art and science of healing. It encompasses a range of health care practices evolved to maintain and restore health by the prevention and treatment of illness....
  • Science
    Science

    In its broadest sense, science refers to any systematic knowledge or practice. In its more usual restricted sense, science refers to a system of acquiring knowledge based on scientific method, as well as to the organized body of knowledge gained through such research....
Each is governed by a Faculty Council and administered by a Dean
Dean (education)

In academic administration, a dean is a person with significant authority over a specific Academia unit, or over a specific area of concern, or both....
. Students apply to become members of a particular faculty, as opposed to any particular school or department.

Number of students by faculty


Academic Year 2005/2006 [1]:

Faculty Undergraduate Postgraduate
Arts 3,582 604
Divinity 48 50
Medicine 419 7
Science 1,731 367
Total 5,780 1,028


Office of the Principal


The Principal is the chief executive of the University and is assisted in that role by several key officers.

The current composition of the Office of the Principal is:
  • Principal and Vice-Chancellor: Dr Louise Richardson
    Louise Richardson

    Louise Richardson is a political science, and Vice Chancellor of the University of St Andrews. She was formerly employed at Harvard University where she served as executive dean of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study....
  • Master of the United College
    Master of the United College

    The Master of the United College is a senior academic at the University of St Andrews in St Andrews, Scotland who is charged with carrying out duties as required by the Academic Senate of that University....
     and Deputy Principal: Professor Keith Brown
  • Vice-Principal (Governance and Planning): Professor Ronald Piper
  • Vice-Principal (Research): Professor Neville Richardson
  • Vice-Principal (Learning and Teaching): Professor Philip Winn
  • Vice-Principal (External Relations): Stephen Magee
  • Proctor: Professor Christopher Smith
  • Quaestor and Factor
    Factor (Scotland)

    In Scotland a Factor is a person or firm charged with superintending or managing properties and estates -- sometimes where the owner or landlord is unable to or uninterested in attending to such details personally, or in tenements in which several owners of individual flats contribute to the factoring of communal areas....
    : Derek Watson


Deans of the Faculties


The Deans are academics appointed by the Master of the United College to oversee the day to day runnings of each faculty. They were once elected by their constituents but this was changed to appointment in 2005

The current Deans are:
  • Dean of the Faculty of Arts: Professor Lorna Milne
  • Dean of the Faculty of Divinity: Professor James Davila
  • Dean of the Faculty of Medicine: Professor R. Hugh MacDougall
  • Dean of the Faculty of Science: Professor Alyson Tobin


Student Residence Halls


St Andrews is characterised amongst Scottish Universities as having a significant number of students in University operated accommodation. Approximately half of the overall student population live 'in Hall'. All are now co-educational and non-smoking. Residences include:

  • Albany Park
    Albany Park, St Andrews

    Albany Park is a small residential area owned by the University of St Andrews completed in 1973. It is situated on the East Sands Beach on the road out of town to the East Neuk of Fife, Scotland....
  • Andrew Melville Hall
    Andrew Melville Hall

    Andrew Melville Hall is a student hall of residence of the University of St Andrews, Scotland.It is named after Andrew Melville, a 16th-century Scottish scholar, Theology and religious reformer who was a graduate of the University, and who later became its rector and dean of theology....
  • Carruthers House
  • David Russell Apartments
    David Russell Apartments

    David Russell Apartments is a large residential complex owned by the University of St Andrews, its first phase being opened in September 2003....
     (built on the site of the now-demolished original David Russell Hall)
  • Deans Court
    Deans Court

    Deans Court is a student hall of residence at the University of St Andrews, and arguably the oldest dwelling house in the city of St Andrews. It is devoted exclusively to postgraduates, and comprises a main building and four annexes, two on North Street, two on South Street, including the 'roundal' building....
     (Postgraduate only)
  • Fife Park
  • Gannochy House (part of St Salvator's Hall - Postgraduate only)
  • John Burnet Hall (formerly known as Athol Hotel, and was male only)
  • McIntosh Hall (formerly known as Chattan Hotel, and was female only)
  • New Hall
    New Hall (St Andrews)

    New Hall is the largest single-building Hall of Residence owned by the University of St Andrews. It was opened in 1993 and is located in the town of St Andrews, Fife, Scotland....
  • St Regulus Hall (originally male only)
  • St Salvator's Hall (originally male only)
  • Stanley Smith House & Angus House (Postgraduate only)
  • University Hall (originally female only)


Fife Park, and affordability
The university decided in 2004 to significantly increase the cost of rent, claiming accommodation services was running at a loss. When the proposal to increase rent was accepted, the university promised to maintain a certain amount of affordable
Affordable housing

Affordable housing is a term used to describe dwelling units whose total house costs are deemed "wikt:affordable" to a group of people within a specified income range....
 accommodation, namely whichever is higher out of 500 beds, or 1/6 of the total number of beds.

Fife Park is one of only two affordable halls available for undergraduates. Currently (in 2008), Fife Park consists of 252 beds; to undergradutes, it is rented out at £55.56 per week for 36 weeks. In June 2008, the university applied for planning permission to demolish Fife Park.

The university intends to replace the existing residence with 777 bed spaces, 567 of which will be en-suite ("Type 5"). The rent is expected to be in the range £97–130 per week for the replacement, self-catered, accommodation. The design of the proposed accommodation is modelled upon that of the university's existing 3-star en-suite residence, the David Russell Apartments
David Russell Apartments

David Russell Apartments is a large residential complex owned by the University of St Andrews, its first phase being opened in September 2003....
, which as of 2008 costs over £122 per week (£4,405 over 36 weeks), so it is likely the proposed en-suite accommodation will cost at least that amount.

Even without the demolition of Fife Park, there is a shortage of affordable accommodation in St Andrews. Because of reasons like this, the already-high cost of accommodation in St Andrews, and because St Andrews has only a small number of students from lower income backgrounds, students such as members of the Lower Rents Now coalition
Lower Rents Now Coalition

The Lower Rents Now coalition is a student group at the University of St Andrews. The group would like to see an increase in the amount of affordable accommodation at St Andrews....
 have campaigned against the universities plans.

One ground of objection to the university's plans is that it is council policy that 30% of houses built in or around St Andrews must be affordable, but the proposed Fife Park replacement will have no affordable beds. The University of St Andrews is aware of this council policy, and asked the Scottish Government to redefine the word 'affordable' in the context of planning guidelines to include all accommodation built for students, so that none of the replacement beds would need to be affordable.

Former residences


In addition to the residences listed above, the University formerly also had the following residences:

  • Hamilton Hall
    Hamilton Hall

    Hamilton Hall was a hall of residence for the University of St Andrews, Scotland, between the years of 1949 and 2006....
  • Hepburn Hall
  • Southgait Hall
  • Kinnessburn Hall
  • David Russell Hall
  • Bishops Hall (now part of St Leonards School)
and West Park, which was pulled down to make way for the the Students' Union building, built in the 1970s.

The University guarantees every student a place of accomodation. For this reason, when 400 extra students joined for the 2008/09 academic year, the university had to rent out flats in the previously sold Hepburn Hall to accommodate the rise in student numbers.

Notable alumni

See also :Category:Alumni of the University of St Andrews

Arts and media

  • Robert Ayton
    Robert Ayton

    Sir Robert Ayton was a Scotland poet.Ayton was the son of Ayton of Kincaldie in Fife. After graduating from St. Andrews, he studied law at Paris, became ambassador to the Emperor, and held other court offices....
    , poet
  • Crispin Bonham-Carter
    Crispin Bonham-Carter

    Crispin Bonham-Carter is an England actor.Bonham-Carter is a distant cousin of Helena Bonham Carter. He is the son of Peter Bonham-Carter and Clodagh Greenwood....
    , actor
  • Bruce Marshall
    Bruce Marshall

    BiographyClaude Cunningham Bruce Marshall, known as Bruce Marshall was a prolific Scotland writer who wrote fiction and non-fiction books on a wide range of topics and genres....
    , novelist
  • Andrew Crumey
    Andrew Crumey

    Andrew Crumey is a novelist and former literary editor of the Scotland on Sunday newspaper. He was born in Kirkintilloch, north of Glasgow, Scotland....
    , novelist
  • Gavin Douglas
    Gavin Douglas

    Gavin Douglas was a Scotland bishop, makar and translator.Douglas was a prolific writer in Middle Scots. His principal work is the Eneados, a complete translation of the Aeneid of Virgil, which was completed in 1513....
    , poet and bishop
  • William Dunbar
    William Dunbar

    William Dunbar , Scotland poet, was probably a native of East Lothian. This is assumed from a satirical reference in the Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedie , where, too, it is hinted that he was a member of the noble house of Dunbar....
    , poet
  • Robert Fergusson
    Robert Fergusson

    Robert Fergusson , Scotland poet, son of William Fergusson, a clerk in the British Linen Bank, was born in Edinburgh....
    , poet, one of Edinburgh's most gifted but least recognised poets
  • Sarah Hall (writer)
    Sarah Hall (writer)

    Sarah Hall is a young British novelist and poet. Her critically-acclaimed second novel, The Electric Michelangelo, was nominated for the Booker Prize and achieved considerable international commercial success....
    , novelist
  • Hazel Irvine
    Hazel Irvine

    Hazel Irvine , is a television presenter from the United Kingdom. Educated at Hermitage Academy in Helensburgh, she achieved an M.A. in History of Art at the University of St....
    , television presenter
  • Sir David Lindsay, poet and diplomat
  • Ian McDiarmid
    Ian McDiarmid

    Ian McDiarmid is a Scotland Tony Award-winning theatre actor and theatre director, who has also made sporadic appearances on film and television....
    , actor
  • Louise Minchin
    Louise Minchin

    Louise M M Minchin is a United Kingdom journalist and presenter. She is currently a regular presenter on the BBC News , as well as being the main relief presenter for the BBC News at One and BBC Breakfast....
    , newsreader
  • Siobhan Redmond
    Siobhan Redmond

    Siobhan Redmond is a Scotland actress.Originally from Tollcross, Glasgow, Glasgow, Redmond's first television appearances were in the early 1980s....
    , actor
  • Alastair Reynolds
    Alastair Reynolds

    Alastair Preston Reynolds is a Wales science fiction author. He specialises in dark hard science fiction and space opera. He spent his early years in Cornwall, moved back to Wales before going to Newcastle University, where he read Physics and Astronomy....
    , science fiction author
  • Brian Taylor
    Brian Taylor (journalist)

    Brian Taylor is the political editor for BBC Scotland. Taylor – who joined the BBC in 1985 – originally co-presented Left, Right and Centre and was political correspondent prior to his current role....
    , journalist
  • Fay Weldon
    Fay Weldon

    Fay Weldon Order of the British Empire is an England author, essayist and playwright, whose work has been associated with feminism. In her fiction, Weldon typically portrays contemporary women who find themselves trapped in oppressive situations caused by the patriarchy structure of Western, in particular British, society....
    , feminist and writer
  • Timothy Williams
    Timothy Williams

    Timothy Williams is a British author who has written five novels featuring Commissario Piero Trotti, a character critics have referred to as a personification of modern Italy....
    , novelist


Philosopher and academia


  • Robert Balfour
    Robert Balfour

    Robert Balfour was a Scotland philosopher.He was educated at the University of St Andrews and the University of Paris. He was for many years principal of the College of Guienne at Bordeaux....
    , philosopher
  • Andrew Bell (educationalist)
    Andrew Bell (educationalist)

    Andrew Bell, was a Scotland Anglican Communion priest and educationalist who pioneered the Monitorial system in schools and is the founder of Madras College, a secondary school in St Andrews...
    , Scottish Anglican priest and educationalist, founder of Madras College
    Madras College

    Madras College is a secondary school located in St. Andrews, Scotland. It was built in 1832, on an idea by Andrew Bell, and is named after the area in India where Bell served as a Minister and a Teacher....
  • Sir Eric Anderson
    William Eric Kinloch Anderson

    Sir William "Eric" Kinloch Anderson, Order of the Thistle, Royal Society of Edinburgh , was Provost of Eton of Eton College from September 2000 - 30th January, 2009....
    , academic, Provost of Eton College
  • Kieron O'Hara
    Kieron O'Hara

    Dr Kieron O'Hara is a philosopher, computer scientist and political writer. He is currently a senior research fellow within the department of Electronics and Computer Science at the University of Southampton where he specialises in the politics, philosophy and epistemology of technology....
    , philosopher and political writer
  • Walter Perry
    Walter Perry

    Walter Laing MacDonald Perry, Baron Perry of Walton Fellow of the Royal Society was a distinguished academic. He was the first Vice Chancellor of the Open University....
    , Lord Perry of Walton, first Vice-Chancellor of the Open University
    Open University

    The Open University is the UK's Distance education government-supported university notable for having an open entry policy, i.e. students' previous academic achievements are not taken into account for entry to most undergraduate courses....
  • Dominic Sandbrook
    Dominic Sandbrook

    Dominic Sandbrook is a UK historian and writer. Born in Bridgnorth, Shropshire, he was educated at Malvern College and studied at Balliol College, Oxford, the University of St Andrews and Jesus College, Cambridge....
    , historian and author
  • Lawrence Stenhouse
    Lawrence Stenhouse

    Lawrence Stenhouse was a British educational thinker who sought to promote an active role for teachers in educational research and curriculum development....
    , educational researcher


Law


  • Lord Colonsay, former Lord Advocate
    Lord Advocate

    Her Majesty's Advocate , known as the Lord Advocate , is the chief legal officer of the Scottish Government and the Crown in Scotland for both civil and criminal matters that fall within the devolution powers of the Scottish Parliament....
     and Lord Justice General
  • Lord Cullen, former Lord President
    Lord President

    The title Lord President may refer to one of several offices:*The Lord President of the Council is the presiding officer of the Privy Council of the United Kingdom...
     of the Court of Session
    Court of Session

    The Court of Session is the Supreme courts of Scotland civil court of Scotland. It is both a court of first instance and a court of appeal and sits exclusively in Parliament House, Edinburgh in Edinburgh....
     and Lord Justice General
  • Lord Eassie
    Ronald Mackay, Lord Eassie

    Ronald David Mackay is a Scottish lawyer. He was appointed a Senator of the College of Justice, sitting in Scotland's highest courts, in 1997; he took the judicial title of Lord Eassie....
    , Judge of the Inner House
    Inner House

    The Inner House is the senior part of the Court of Session, the supreme court Civil law Courts of Scotland in Scotland; the Outer House forms the junior part of the Court of Session....
     of the Court of Session


Politics and public affairs

  • Archibald Campbell, 1st Marquess of Argyll
    Archibald Campbell, 1st Marquess of Argyll

    Archibald Campbell, 1st Marquess of Argyll, 8th Earl of Argyll, chief of Clan Campbell, was the de facto head of government in Scotland during most of the conflict known as the Wars of the Three Kingdoms....
    , 8th Earl of Argyll, chief of Clan Campbell
  • Angie Bray
    Angie Bray

    Angie Bray is a Conservative Party politician and was member of the London Assembly for West Central from 2000 to 2008. She is a former journalist and was head of broadcasting at Conservative Central Office in both the 1992 and 2005 General Elections....
    , Conservative and Unionist politician
  • Henry Balnaves
    Henry Balnaves

    Henry Balnaves was a Scotland politician and religious reformer.Born in Kirkcaldy, Fife, around 1512, he was educated at the University of St Andrews and on the continent, where he adopted Protestant views....
    , Scottish politician and religious reformer
  • Malcolm Bruce
    Malcolm Bruce

    Malcolm Bruce, British House of Commons is a Scottish Liberal Democrat politician. He is the Scottish MPs for Gordon ....
    , Liberal Democrat
    Liberal Democrats

    The Liberal Democrats, often shortened to Lib Dems or just Lib Dem, are a Liberalism political party in the United Kingdom, formed in 1988 by merging the Liberal Party and the Social Democratic Party ; the two parties had been SDP-Liberal Alliance for seven years, from shortly after the formation of the SDP....
     MP
  • Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of Elgin
    Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of Elgin

    Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of Elgin and 11th Earl of Kincardine was a British nobleman and diplomat, known for the removal of marble sculptures from the Parthenon in Athens, for which some have termed him a vandal....
    , diplomat
  • Christopher Chope
    Christopher Chope

    Christopher Robert Chope Order of the British Empire is a United Kingdom barrister and Conservative Party politician. He is the Member of Parliament for Christchurch ....
    , Conservative and Unionist politician
  • Barry Gardiner
    Barry Gardiner

    Barry Strachan Gardiner is a United Kingdom politician. He is the Labour Party Member of Parliament for Brent North ....
    , Labour Party
    Labour Party (UK)

    The Labour Party is a political party in the United Kingdom. Founded at the start of the 20th century, it has been since the 1920s the principal party of the Left-wing politics in England, Scotland and Wales, but not Northern Ireland, where it has only recently organised again....
     politician, MP
  • Marlyn Glen
    Marlyn Glen

    Marlyn Glen is a Scotland Scottish Labour Party politician, and Member of the Scottish Parliament for North East Scotland region since 2003.She was educated at Baldragon Academy in Dundee, and attended the University of St Andrews and the University of Dundee....
    , Scottish Labour politician, and Member of the Scottish Parliament
    Member of the Scottish Parliament

    Member of the Scottish Parliament is the title given to any one of the 129 individuals elected to serve in the Scottish Parliament....
     for North East Scotland region since 2003.
  • James Graham, 1st Marquess of Montrose
    James Graham, 1st Marquess of Montrose

    James Graham, 1st Marquess of Montrose , was a Scottish people nobleman and soldier, who initially joined the Covenanters in the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, but subsequently supported King Charles I of England as the English Civil War developed....
    , royalist military commander
  • John Graham, 1st Viscount of Dundee
    John Graham, 1st Viscount of Dundee

    John Graham of Claverhouse, 1st Viscount Dundee was a Scotland soldier and nobleman, a Tory and an Scottish Episcopal Church. Claverhouse is remembered by history in two distinct characters....
    , Jacobite
    Jacobitism

    Jacobitism was the political movement dedicated to the restoration of the House of Stuart kings to the thrones of Kingdom of England, Kingdom of Scotland, and Kingdom of Ireland....
     military commander, "Bonnie Dundee"
  • John Campbell, 9th Duke of Argyll
    John Campbell, 9th Duke of Argyll

    John George Edward Henry Douglas Sutherland Campbell, 9th and 2nd Duke of Argyll, Order of the Garter, Order of the Thistle, Order of St Michael and St George, Royal Victorian Order, Privy Council of the United Kingdom , usually better known by the courtesy title Marquess of Lorne, by which he was known before 1900, was a United Kingdo...
    , British nobleman and was Governor General of Canada
    Governor General of Canada

    The Governor General of Canada is the viceroy representative in Canada of the Monarchy of Canada, who is the head of state. Canada is one of sixteen Commonwealth realms, all of which share the same person as their respective sovereign....
     from 1878 to 1883
  • Michael Fallon
    Michael Fallon

    Michael Cathal Fallon is a United Kingdom Conservative Party politician. He is the Member of Parliament for Sevenoaks .Michael Fallon is the son of an Ireland surgery....
    , Conservative and Unionist politician, MP
  • Michael Forsyth, Baron Forsyth of Drumlean
    Michael Forsyth, Baron Forsyth of Drumlean

    Michael Bruce Forsyth, Baron Forsyth of Drumlean Privy Council of the United Kingdom, is a United Kingdom Conservative Party politician. His highest office was as Secretary of State for Scotland from 1995 to 1997....
    , Conservative and Unionist politician
  • Arthur Hobhouse
    Arthur Hobhouse

    Sir Arthur Lawrence Hobhouse was a long-serving England local government Liberal Party politician, who is best remembered as the architect of the system of National parks of England and Wales....
    , architect of the system of National parks of England and Wales
    National parks of England and Wales

    The national parks of England and Wales are areas of relatively undeveloped and scenic landscape that are designated under the National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949....
    , MP
  • Mark Lazarowicz
    Mark Lazarowicz

    Mark Lazarowicz, is a Scotland politician, and Labour Party and Co-operative Party member of Parliament for Edinburgh North and Leith ....
    , Labour Party
    Labour Party (UK)

    The Labour Party is a political party in the United Kingdom. Founded at the start of the 20th century, it has been since the 1920s the principal party of the Left-wing politics in England, Scotland and Wales, but not Northern Ireland, where it has only recently organised again....
     politician
  • John MacGregor, Baron MacGregor of Pulham Market, Conservative and Unionist politician
  • Lewis Moonie, Baron Moonie, Labour Party
    Labour Party (UK)

    The Labour Party is a political party in the United Kingdom. Founded at the start of the 20th century, it has been since the 1920s the principal party of the Left-wing politics in England, Scotland and Wales, but not Northern Ireland, where it has only recently organised again....
     politician, MP
  • Madsen Pirie
    Madsen Pirie

    Dr Madsen Pirie is president of the Adam Smith Institute and formerly Distinguished Visiting Professor of Logic and Philosophy at Hillsdale College, Michigan, USA....
    , founder, Adam Smith Institute
    Adam Smith Institute

    The Adam Smith Institute is a think tank based in the United Kingdom, named after the father of modern economics, Adam Smith. Although non-partisan, it espouses free market and classical liberal views, in particular by creating radical policy options in the light of public choice theory, which politicians can then develop....
  • Lyon Playfair, 1st Baron Playfair
    Lyon Playfair, 1st Baron Playfair

    Lyon Playfair, 1st Baron Playfair, Order of the Bath, Privy Council of the United Kingdom, Fellow of the Royal Society was a Scottish scientist and Parliament of Great Britainarian....
    , scientist and Liberal
    Liberal Party (UK)

    The Liberal Party was one of the two major British political parties from the early 19th century until the rise of the Labour Party in the 1920s, and a third party of varying strength and importance up to 1988, when it merged with the Social Democratic Party to form a new party which would become known as the Liberal Democrats....
     politician
  • George Reid
    George Reid (Scottish politician)

    George Newlands Reid was the second Presiding Officer of the Scottish Parliament of the Scottish Parliament, and was the Lord High Commissioner to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland in May 2008....
    , Scottish National Party
    Scottish National Party

    The Scottish National Party is a centre-left List of Scottish political parties which campaigns for Scottish independence. In the last few decades, the SNP has normally polled the second highest number of votes for a Scottish political parties in Scotland....
     politician and second Presiding Officer of the Scottish Parliament
    Scottish Parliament

    The Scottish Parliament is the Devolution national, Unicameralism legislature of Scotland, located in the Holyrood, Edinburgh area of the capital Edinburgh....
  • Alex Salmond
    Alex Salmond

    Alexander Elliot Anderson "Alex" Salmond, is the First Minister of Scotland of Scotland, heading a minority government Scottish Government.He is leader of the Scottish National Party , Scottish MPs for the List of UK Parliamentary constituencies in Scotland of Banff and Buchan , and the Member of the Scottish Parliament for Gordon ....
    , First Minister
    First Minister

    The term First Minister refers to the leader of a Cabinet ....
     of Scotland and leader of the Scottish National Party
    Scottish National Party

    The Scottish National Party is a centre-left List of Scottish political parties which campaigns for Scottish independence. In the last few decades, the SNP has normally polled the second highest number of votes for a Scottish political parties in Scotland....
  • Alex Singleton
    Alex Singleton

    Alex Singleton is a Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph leader writer. His work has previously appeared The Guardian and The Daily Express. He blogs for Telegraph.co.uk and is a regular commentator on television and radio programmes such as Newsnight, the Today programme, The Moral Maze, Channel 4 News, CNBC Europe, and Sky N...
    , Political Commentator and Former President of the Globalisation Institute
  • Catherine Stihler
    Catherine Stihler

    Catherine Stihler is a United Kingdom Labour Party politician. She has been a member of the European Parliament for Scotland since 1999. She was the unsuccessful Labour Party candidate in the Dunfermline and West Fife by-election, 2006 held on February 9 2006, in what had been regarded as a safe Labour seat....
    , Labour Party
    Labour Party (UK)

    The Labour Party is a political party in the United Kingdom. Founded at the start of the 20th century, it has been since the 1920s the principal party of the Left-wing politics in England, Scotland and Wales, but not Northern Ireland, where it has only recently organised again....
     politician
  • Jamie Stone
    Jamie Stone

    Jamie Stone of the Scottish Liberal Democrats is a member of the Scottish Parliament for the constituency of Caithness, Sutherland, and Easter Ross, which is the northern-most mainland Scotland constituency and one of the largest constituencies in Britain....
    , Liberal Democrat
    Liberal Democrats

    The Liberal Democrats, often shortened to Lib Dems or just Lib Dem, are a Liberalism political party in the United Kingdom, formed in 1988 by merging the Liberal Party and the Social Democratic Party ; the two parties had been SDP-Liberal Alliance for seven years, from shortly after the formation of the SDP....
     Member of the Scottish Parliament
  • Desmond Swayne
    Desmond Swayne

    Desmond Angus Swayne Territorial Decoration is a politician in the United Kingdom. He is Conservative Party Member of Parliament for the constituency of New Forest West in Hampshire, and was first elected in May 1997 and is currently the Parliamentary Private Secretary to David Cameron....
    , Conservative and Unionist politician
  • Hugo Swire
    Hugo Swire

    Hugo George William Swire is a politician in the United Kingdom. He is Conservative Party member of Parliament for East Devon , and was first elected in 2001....
    , Conservative and Unionist politician
  • James Wilson
    James Wilson

    James Wilson , was a Scotland lawyer, most notable as a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence. He was twice elected to the Continental Congress, a major force in the drafting of the United States Constitution, a leading legal theoretician and one of the six original justices appointed by George Washington to the Supreme Cour...
    , signatory of the United States Declaration of Independence
    United States Declaration of Independence

    The United States Declaration of Independence is a statement adopted by the Second Continental Congress on July 4, 1776, which announced that the Thirteen Colonies then at war with Kingdom of Great Britain were now independent states, and thus no longer a part of the British Empire....


Religion, church, and theology

  • David Beaton
    David Beaton

    David Beaton was Archbishop of St Andrews and the last Scotland Cardinal prior to the Scottish Reformation.He was a younger son of John Beaton of Balfour in the county of Fife, and is said to have been born in 1494....
    , Cardinal Archbishop of St Andrews
  • James Beaton
    James Beaton

    James Beaton, or Bethune , was a Scotland church leader, the uncle of Cardinal David Beaton.He was the sixth and youngest son of John Beaton of Balfour, in Fife....
    , Scottish church leader, the uncle of Cardinal David Beaton
    David Beaton

    David Beaton was Archbishop of St Andrews and the last Scotland Cardinal prior to the Scottish Reformation.He was a younger son of John Beaton of Balfour in the county of Fife, and is said to have been born in 1494....
  • George Buchanan
    George Buchanan (humanist)

    George Buchanan , was a Scotland historian and Renaissance humanism scholar. He was part of the Monarchomach movement....
    , scholar, theologian, and playwright
  • Reverend Alexander Duff, DD, LLD
    Alexander Duff

    Alexander Duff, D.D. LLD. , was a Christian Protestant Presbyterian missionary of Scottish heritage who worked in India. He was the first overseas missionary of the Church of Scotland to India....
    , missionary and founder of Scottish Church College, Calcutta
    Scottish Church College, Calcutta

    The Scottish Church College, which is located at 1 & 3 Urquhart Square, Calcutta 700006 is the oldest continuing Missionary administered Liberal arts college in India....
  • Thomas Chalmers
    Thomas Chalmers

    Thomas Chalmers , Scotland mathematician and a leader of the Free Church of Scotland , was born at Anstruther in Fife....
    , theologian and leader of the Free Church of Scotland
    Free Church of Scotland (1843-1900)

    The Free Church of Scotland is a Scotland denomination which was formed in 1843 by a large withdrawal from the established Church of Scotland in a schism known as the Disruption of 1843....
  • Colin Falconer
    Colin Falconer

    Colin Falconer is the author of sixteen novels, including 'Harem', 'When We Were Gods', and 'Anastasia'.He moved to Australia in his twenties and worked variously as a taxi driver, semi-professional soccer player and played guitar in rough pubs before joining an advertising agency....
    , 17th century Scottish minster and bishop
    Bishop

    A bishop is an ordination or consecration member of the Clergy#Christian clergy who is generally entrusted with a position of authority and oversight....
  • George Gillespie
    George Gillespie

    George Gillespie was a Scotland theology....
    , Scottish theologian
  • Patrick Hamilton
    Patrick Hamilton (martyr)

    Patrick Hamilton was a Scotland churchman and an early Protestant Protestant Reformation in Scotland. He travelled to Europe, where he met several of the leading reforming thinkers, before returning to Scotland to preach....
    , Protestant Reformer, early martyr of the Scottish Reformation+
  • Alexander Henderson
    Alexander Henderson (theologian)

    Alexander Henderson was a Scotland theologian, and an important ecclesiastical statesman of his period. He is considered the second founder of the Reformed Church in Scotland, and its Presbyterian churches are largely indebted to him for the forms of their dogmas and organization....
    , theologian
  • John Knox
    John Knox

    John Knox was a Scotland clergyman and leader of the Protestant Reformation who is considered the founder of the Presbyterianism denomination....
    , theologian, leader of the Protestant Reformation who is considered the founder of the Presbyterian Church of Scotland
  • Andrew Melville
    Andrew Melville

    Andrew Melville was a Scotland scholar, theology and religious reformer....
    , scholar and theologian and religious reformer
  • Rev John Munro of Tain
    Rev John Munro of Tain

    The Reverend John Munro was a Presbyterian minister of Tain, in the Scottish Highlands. As a Presbyterian, he resisted the efforts of King James VI of Scotland to unite the Presbyterian Church of Scotland with the Anglicanism Church of England....
    , dissenter opposing reforms of James VI.
  • Victor Premasagar
    Victor Premasagar

    Victor Premasagar was an acknowledged authority on Old Testament. He taught that subject in his early years at the Andhra Christian Theological College in Gandhinagar, Hyderabad, India, Andhra Pradesh, India....
    , Old Testament
    Old Testament

    In Western Christianity, the Old Testament refers to the books that form the first of the two-part Christianity Bible Biblical canon. These works correspond to the Hebrew Bible , with some variations and additions....
     Scholar and Moderator of Church of South India
    Church of South India

    The Church of South India is a union of many Protestant denominations spread throughout South India. It is the largest Protestant Church in India and second largest Christian church after the Catholic Church in India ....
  • Klyne Snodgrass
    Klyne Snodgrass

    Klyne Ryland Snodgrass is an American scholar.Born Dec 28, 1944 in Kingsport, Tennessee. Received DPhil 1973 University of St Andrews, Scotland....
    , American scholar and theologian
  • Sheila Watson
    Sheila Watson (cleric)

    The Venerable Sheila Watson is a cleric in the Church of England.She grew up in a seaside town, graduated in classics at the University of St Andrews, took a preparatory year of theology at Oxford, and then returned to St Andrew's for a research degree....
    , archdeacon
  • John Witherspoon
    John Witherspoon

    John Witherspoon was a signatory of the United States Declaration of Independence as a representative of New Jersey. He was both the only active clergyman and college president to sign the Declaration....
    , theologian, President of Princeton University
    Princeton University

    Princeton University is a private university university located in Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. The school is one of the eight universities of the Ivy League and has the largest per-student Financial endowment in the world....
    , and signatory of the U.S. Declaration of Independence
    Declaration of independence

    This article is about declarations of independence in general. Specific declarations of independence are listed below in alphabetical order. For the painting of this name, see Trumbull's Declaration of Independence....
    .


Royalty


  • King James II of Scotland
  • Prince William of Wales
    Prince William of Wales

    Prince William of Wales is the elder son of Charles, Prince of Wales and the late Diana, Princess of Wales, and grandson of Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh....
     (known at university as William Wales
    Prince William of Wales

    Prince William of Wales is the elder son of Charles, Prince of Wales and the late Diana, Princess of Wales, and grandson of Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh....
    )


Sciences

  • Joseph Bancroft
    Joseph Bancroft

    Joseph Bancroft, was a surgeon and parasitology born in England, who emigrated to Australia....
    , surgeon
    Surgeon

    In medicine, a surgeon is a person who performs surgery. Surgery is a broad category of invasive medical treatment that involves the cutting of a body, whether human or animal, for a specific reason such to remove a diseased organ or to repair a tear or breakage....
     and parasitologist born in England, who emigrated to Australia
  • Sir Douglas Black
    Douglas Black

    Sir Douglas Black was a physician in the United Kingdom, famous as the author of the Black Report.He was born in Shetland in 1913, and studied medicine at the Bute Medical School, University of St Andrews, graduating with Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery in 1933....
    , physician
    Physician

    A physician, medical practitioner, doctor of medicine, or medical doctor practices medicine, and is concerned with maintaining or restoring human health through the study, diagnosis, and treatment of disease and injury....
     and the author of Black Report
    Black Report

    The Black report was a 1980 document published by the Department of Health and Social Security in the United Kingdom, which was the report of the expert committee into health inequality chaired by Douglas Black....
  • James Black
    James W. Black

    Sir James Whyte Black, Order of Merit, Royal Society, Royal Society of Edinburgh, Royal College of Physicians is a Scotland Physician and Pharmacology who invented Propranolol, synthesized Cimetidine and was awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1988 for these discoveries....
    , Nobel prize winner in Medicine
  • Professor John Garrow
    John Garrow

    Professor John Garrow, Doctor of Medicine, PhD , Royal College of Physicians, Royal College of Physicians was editor of European Journal of Clinical Nutrition 1988-1999....
    , Honorary consultant physician, chairman of HealthWatch
    HealthWatch

    HealthWatch is a long-established UK charity which promotes evidence-based medicine. Its formal aims are:# The assessment and testing of treatments, whether ?orthodox? or ?alternative?;...
    , Joint Advisory Committee on Nutrition Education and Association for the Study of Obesity
  • Walter Haworth
    Walter Haworth

    Sir Walter Norman Haworth was a United Kingdom chemist who is best known for his groundbreaking work on ascorbic acid whilst working at Birmingham University....
    , Nobel
    Nobel Prize in Chemistry

    The Nobel Prize in Chemistry is awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences to scientists in the various fields of chemistry. It is one of the five Nobel Prizes established by the will of Alfred Nobel in 1895, awarded for outstanding contributions in chemistry, Nobel Prize in Physics, Nobel Prize in Literature, Nobel Peace Pri...
     prize winner in Chemistry
  • Alan MacDiarmid
    Alan MacDiarmid

    Alan Graham MacDiarmid Order of New Zealand was a chemist, and one of three recipients of the Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 2000....
    , Nobel
    Nobel Prize in Chemistry

    The Nobel Prize in Chemistry is awarded annually by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences to scientists in the various fields of chemistry. It is one of the five Nobel Prizes established by the will of Alfred Nobel in 1895, awarded for outstanding contributions in chemistry, Nobel Prize in Physics, Nobel Prize in Literature, Nobel Peace Pri...
     prize winner in Chemistry
  • James Gregory
    James Gregory (astronomer and mathematician)

    James Gregory , was a Scotland mathematician and astronomer. It has been said that "Of the British mathematicians of the seventeenth century, Gregory was only excelled by Isaac Newton."...
    , astronomer and mathematician, has been said that "Of the British mathematicians of the seventeenth century, Gregory was only excelled by Newton
    Newton

    The newton is the International System of Units SI derived unit of force, named after Isaac Newton in recognition of his work on classical mechanics....
    ."
  • John Napier
    John Napier

    John Napier of Merchistoun - also signed as Neper, Nepair - named Marvellous Merchiston, was a Scotland mathematics, physicist, astronomer/astrologer and 8th Laird of Merchistoun, son of Sir Archibald Napier of Merchiston....
    , mathematician, inventor of logarithms
  • Edward Jenner
    Edward Jenner

    Edward Jenner, Fellow of the Royal Society, was an English scientist who studied his natural surroundings in Berkeley, Gloucestershire, Gloucestershire, England....
    , Doctor of Medicine, first doctor to introduce & study the Smallpox vaccine


Miscellaneous


  • Sir Eric Anderson, Provost
    Provost

    Provost may refer to:* Provost , an officer of local government, including the equivalent of a mayor in Scotland* Provost , a senior academic administrator...
     of Eton College
    Eton College

    Eton College, also known as Eton, is a world-famous British independent school for boys, founded in 1440 by Henry VI of England. It was founded as the King's College of Our Lady of Eton beside Windsor....
  • Sir John Rose (Rolls-Royce), CEO of Rolls-Royce plc
    Rolls-Royce plc

    Rolls-Royce Public limited company is a United Kingdom aircraft engine maker, and the second-largest in the world, behind GE Aviation. The company has related businesses in the defence aerospace, marine and energy markets....
  • G. W. S. Barrow
    G. W. S. Barrow

    Geoffrey Wallis Steuart Barrow DLitt Fellow of the British Academy Royal Society of Edinburgh is a British historian and academic. He is Professor Emeritus at the University of Edinburgh, and arguably the most prominent Scottish medievalist of the last century....
    , arguably the most prominent Scottish medievalist of the last century
  • Alexander Berry
    Alexander Berry

    Alexander Berry was a Scotland born surgery, merchant and List of explorers who in 1822 was given a land grant of 10,000 acres and 100 convicts to establish the first European settlement on the south coast of New South Wales, Australia....
    , explorer, Australian pioneer/settler Coolangatta
  • James Crichton
    James Crichton

    James Crichton, known as the Admirable Crichton , was a Scotland polymath noted for his extraordinary accomplishments in languages, the arts, and sciences....
    , polymath, the original "Admirable Crichton"
  • Saba Douglas-Hamilton
    Saba Douglas-Hamilton

    Saba Douglas-Hamilton is a British wildlife conservationist and television presenter.She was born in Kenya in 1970, the daughter of Zoology, Iain Douglas-Hamilton, and Oria Douglas-Hamilton n?e Rocco....
    , British wildlife conservationist and television presenter
  • John Honey
    John Honey

    John Honey became famous as a nineteen-year-old student of the University of St Andrews. On January 3, 1800, he was attending a service at St Salvator's Chapel when the congregation received news that a small ship, the Janet of Macduff, had run aground east of the town harbour....
    , student who rescued five men from a ship
  • Chris Hoy
    Chris Hoy

    Sir Christopher Andrew "Chris" Hoy Member of the Order of the British Empire is a track cycling representing Great Britain at the Olympics and Scotland at the Commonwealth Games....
    , World, Olympic and Commonwealth Cycling Champion
  • Russell Kirk
    Russell Kirk

    Russell Kirk was an American political theorist, historian, social critic, literary critic, and fiction author known for his influence on 20th century American conservatism....
    , American political theorist, historian, and fiction author
  • Olivier Sarkozy
    Olivier Sarkozy

    Olivier Sarkozy is a France-United States businessman and the half-brother of French President Nicolas Sarkozy....
    , senior investment banker and half brother of French President, Nicolas Sarkozy
    Nicolas Sarkozy

    Nicolas Sarkozy is the 23rd President of the French Republic and ex officio List of Co-Princes of Andorra. He assumed the office on 16 May 2007 after defeating Socialist Party candidate S?gol?ne Royal ten days earlier....


Famous Rectors


In Scotland, the position of Rector exists in the four ancient universities (St Andrews, Glasgow, Aberdeen and Edinburgh) - as well as in the University of Dundee. The post (officially Lord Rector, but by normal use Rector alone) was made an integral part of these universities by the Universities (Scotland) Act 1889. The Rector of the University of St Andrews
Rector of the University of St Andrews

The Lord Rector of the University of St Andrews is chosen every three years by the students of the University of St Andrews. Seldom referred to as Lord Rector, he is more commonly known simply as the Rector, the office having been created by the Parliament of the United Kingdom when it passed the Universities Act 1858, which provided for th...
 chairs meetings of the University Court, the governing body of the university, and is elected at regular intervals by the matriculated student body

  • Charles Neaves
    Charles Neaves

    Charles Neaves , also known as Lord Neaves, was a Scottish people theologian, judge and writer. He served as Rector of the University of St Andrews and as a judge of the Scottish Court of Session, the supreme court of Scotland....
    , Lord Neaves 1872–1874, Scottish theologian, jurist
    Jurist

    A jurist or jurisconsult is a professional who studies, develops, applies, or otherwise deals with the law. The term is widely used in American English, but in the United Kingdom and many Commonwealth of Nations countries it has only historical and specialist usage....
     and evolution
    Evolution

    In biology, evolution is change in the heritability trait of a population of organisms from one generation to the next. These changes are caused by a combination of three main processes: variation, reproduction, and selection....
     analyst
  • John Cleese
    John Cleese

    'John Marwood Cleese' is an Academy Award-nominated English actor, comedian, writer, film producer and singer, who is known as being a member of Monty Python, a group of comedians responsible for the sketch show Monty Python's Flying Circus and for all of the four Monty Python films: And Now for Something Completely Different, Monty...
     1970-1973, English actor and comedian
  • Rudyard Kipling
    Rudyard Kipling

    Joseph Rudyard Kipling was an English author and poet. Born in Mumbai, British India , he is best known for his works of fiction The Jungle Book , Kim , many short stories, including The Man Who Would Be King ; and his poems, including Mandalay , Gunga Din , and If? ....
     1922-1925, Nobel Prize
    Nobel Prize

    The Nobel Prize , established in the 1895 will of Swedish chemist Alfred Nobel; it was first awarded in Nobel Prize in Physics, Nobel Prize in Chemistry, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, Nobel Prize in Literature, and Nobel Peace Prize in 1901....
     winner, British author and poet
  • Andrew Carnegie
    Andrew Carnegie

    Andrew Carnegie was a Scotland-born United States industrialist, List of business people, and a major philanthropist. He was an immigrant as a child with his parents....
     1901-1907, Scottish-born American businessman, philanthropist
  • John Stuart Mill
    John Stuart Mill

    John Stuart Mill , United Kingdom philosopher, political economy, civil servant and Parliament of the United Kingdom, was an influential liberalism thinker of the 19th century....
     1865-1868, English philosopher and political economist
  • Douglas Haig
    Douglas Haig, 1st Earl Haig

    Field Marshal Douglas Haig, 1st Earl Haig, Order of the Thistle, Order of the Bath, Order of Merit, Royal Victorian Order, Order of the Indian Empire, Aide de Camp was a United Kingdom soldier and senior commander during World War I....
    , 1916-1919, Senior British Commander of World War I
  • J. M. Barrie
    J. M. Barrie

    Sir James Matthew Barrie, 1st Baronet Order of Merit , more commonly known as J. M. Barrie, was a Scotland author and dramatist. He is best remembered for creating Peter Pan, the boy who refused to grow up, whom he based on his friends, the Llewelyn Davies boys....
    , 1919-1922, Scottish author of Peter Pan
    Peter Pan

    Peter Pan is a character created by Scotland novelist and playwright J. M. Barrie . A mischievous boy who can fly and magically refuses to aging, Peter Pan spends his never-ending childhood adventuring on the small island of Neverland as the leader of his gang the Lost Boys , interacting with Mermaid, Native_Americans_in_the_United_States, f...
  • Fridtjof Nansen
    Fridtjof Nansen

    Fridtjof Wedel-Jarlsberg Nansen was a Norway explorer, scientist and diplomat. Nansen was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1922 for his work as a League of Nations High Commissioner....
    , 1925-1928, Norwegian explorer, scientist, diplomat and Nobel Peace Prize
    Nobel Peace Prize

    The Nobel Peace Prize is one of five Nobel Prizes bequeathed by the Swedish industrialist and inventor Alfred Nobel. According to Nobel's will , the Peace Prize should be awarded "to the person who shall have done the most or the best work for :wikt:fraternity between nations, for the abolition or reduction of standing armies and for the h...
     winner


Links with the United States

The University has a strong link with the United States
United States

The United States of America is a Federal government constitutional republic comprising U.S. state and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its Contiguous United States and Washington, D.C., the Capital districts and territories, lie between the Pacific Ocean and Atlantic Oceans, Borders of the U...
. Significant numbers of students matriculate from the United States. Many important American figures (and emigrants to the United States) from Scotland have been associated with the university:

  • Andrew Carnegie
    Andrew Carnegie

    Andrew Carnegie was a Scotland-born United States industrialist, List of business people, and a major philanthropist. He was an immigrant as a child with his parents....
    , Lord Rector of the University. See the following link to the NY Times article which documents his controversial Inaugural Address: .
  • Bill Bryson
    Bill Bryson

    William McGuire "Bill" Bryson, Order of the British Empire, is a best-selling United States author of humorous books on travel, as well as books on the English language and on science subjects....
    , author.
  • Bobby Jones
    Bobby Jones (golfer)

    Robert Tyre "Bobby" Jones Jr. was one of the greatest golfers to compete on a national and international level. He participated only as an amateur, primarily on a part-time basis, and chose to retire from competition at age 28....
    , golfer.
  • Guy Sands-Pingot
    Guy Sands-Pingot

    Guy Ludvic Sands-Pingot is an United States brigadier general in the United States Army. He serves as commander of the 353rd Civil Affairs Command located at Fort Wadsworth, New York....
    , Brigadier General, USAR.
  • Bob Dylan, awarded honorary degree.
  • Michael Douglas
    Michael Douglas

    Michael Kirk Douglas is an United States actor and film producer, primarily in movies and television. Douglas's first television exposure was that of Karl Malden's young college-educated partner, Insp....
    , awarded honorary degree.
  • Jonathan Taylor Thomas
    Jonathan Taylor Thomas

    Jonathan Taylor Thomas is an American actor, former child actor, and teen idol. He is well known for his role of middle child Randy Taylor on the sitcom Home Improvement and as the voice of the young Simba in Walt Disney Pictures's The Lion King....
    , actor, exchange student.


Signatories of the Declaration of Independence

Also, three of the signatories of the 1776 American Declaration of Independence attended or received degrees from St Andrews, including:

  • James Wilson
    James Wilson

    James Wilson , was a Scotland lawyer, most notable as a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence. He was twice elected to the Continental Congress, a major force in the drafting of the United States Constitution, a leading legal theoretician and one of the six original justices appointed by George Washington to the Supreme Cour...
    , born at Carskerdo, near Cupar
    Cupar

    Cupar is a town and former royal burgh in Fife, Scotland. The town is approximately equidistant between the larger settlements of Dundee and Glenrothes....
     (signer from the state of Pennsylvania)
Wilson attended three Scottish Universities including St Andrews, but did not earn a degree from any of them. Carrying important letters of introduction, Wilson arrived in America in 1765. He became a Latin tutor at Philadelphia College (now the University of Pennsylvania
University of Pennsylvania

The University of Pennsylvania is a private research university located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. Penn is America's first university and is the fourth-oldest institution of higher education in the United States....
), and successfully petitioned that institution to grant him an honorary Master of Arts.

  • John Witherspoon
    John Witherspoon

    John Witherspoon was a signatory of the United States Declaration of Independence as a representative of New Jersey. He was both the only active clergyman and college president to sign the Declaration....
    , born at Gifford, East Lothian
    Gifford, East Lothian

    Gifford is a village in the parish of Yester in East Lothian, Scotland. It lies approximately 4 miles south of Haddington and 25 miles east of Edinburgh....
     (signer from the state of New Jersey)
Witherspoon had an impressive list of credentials and was a significant public figure. He was president of the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University
Princeton University

Princeton University is a private university university located in Princeton, New Jersey, New Jersey, United States. The school is one of the eight universities of the Ivy League and has the largest per-student Financial endowment in the world....
). Witherspoon was largely responsible for converting the institution into a success by employing Scottish educational standards. He received his Master of Arts
Master of Arts (Scotland)

A Master of Arts in Scotland is an academic degree in humanities and social sciences awarded by the ancient universities of Scotland ? St Andrews University, the University of Glasgow, the University of Aberdeen and Edinburgh University....
, Bachelor of Divinity
Bachelor of Divinity

In Western culture universities, a Bachelor of Divinity is usually an undergraduate academic degree awarded for a course taken in the study of divinity or related disciplines, such as theology or, rarely, religious studies....
, and was made a Doctor of Divinity
Doctor of Divinity

Doctor of Divinity is an advanced academic degree in Divinity . Historically, it identified one who had been licensed by a university to teach Christianity theology or related religion subjects....
 at the University of St Andrews.

  • Benjamin Franklin
    Benjamin Franklin

    Benjamin Franklin was one of the Founding Fathers of the United States of the United States. A noted polymath, Franklin was a leading author and Printer , Satire, list of political philosophers, politician, scientist, inventor, activism, statesman, and diplomacy....
    , born Boston, Massachusetts (signer from the state of Pennsylvania)
In 1759 Franklin received an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws from the University of St Andrews.

Exchange Programs

Emory University
Emory University

Emory University is a private university located in the metropolitan area of the city of Atlanta, Georgia in western unincorporated area DeKalb County, Georgia, Georgia , United States....
 in Atlanta runs an exchange programme with St Andrews called the Bobby Jones Scholars
Bobby Jones (golfer)

Robert Tyre "Bobby" Jones Jr. was one of the greatest golfers to compete on a national and international level. He participated only as an amateur, primarily on a part-time basis, and chose to retire from competition at age 28....
 programme, which allows for recent graduates of both universities to study at the other university. In addition, the School of Physics and Astronomy maintains a postgraduate exchange with The Georgia Institute of Technology
Georgia Institute of Technology

The Georgia Institute of Technology, commonly known as Georgia Tech or simply Tech, is a public university, coeducational research university in Atlanta, Georgia in the United States....
. Both of these exchanges are funded by the Robert T. Jones Memorial Trust. The Robert Lincoln McNeil Scholarship is run in conjunction with the University of Pennsylvania
University of Pennsylvania

The University of Pennsylvania is a private research university located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. Penn is America's first university and is the fourth-oldest institution of higher education in the United States....


University of St Andrews

Any alumnus, student or staff member can wear a scarf of dark blue, sky blue and white:

















                 
University of St Andrews





















                    
St Mary's College
St Mary's College, St Andrews

St Mary's College of the University of St Andrews, in Fife, Scotland - in full, the New College of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary - was founded in 1538 by Archbishop James Beaton, uncle of cardinal David Beaton on the site of the pedagogy or St Johns College ....



















                 
Bute Medical School
Bute Medical School

The Bute Medical School is the Medical school at the University of St Andrews in St Andrews, Fife, Scotland....



















                 
St Leonard's College (Postgraduate)
United College, St Andrews

The United College is one of the two statutory colleges of the University of St Andrews in St Andrews, Scotland. It was founded in 1747 by the merger of St Salvator's College, and St Leonard's College, when the University was in decline....


Student organisations


Students' Association


The University of St Andrews Students' Association is the organisation which represents the student body of the University of St Andrews
University of St Andrews

The University of St Andrews is the List of oldest universities in continuous operation university in Scotland and third oldest in the English-speaking world, having been founded between 1410 and 1413....
. The Association was instituted in 1983 under the Constitution and Laws of the University of St Andrews Students’ Association. It comprises the Students' Representative Council
Students' Representative Council

A Students' Representative Council represents student interests in the government of a university, school or other educational institution. Generally the SRC forms part of a broader Students' Association which may include other functions such as societies, entertainments and sports ...
 (SRC), established in 1885 and legally defined under the Universities (Scotland) Act 1889, and the Students' Union (which was itself a merger of the Students' Union and the Women's Union). The Students' Association is registered with the Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator
Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator

The Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator is a non-ministerial department of the Scottish Government, with responsibility for the regulation of Charitable organisation in Scotland....
 as charity SCO19883

The Students' Association Building (colloquially known as the Union) is located on St Mary's Place, St Andrews
St Andrews

St Andrews is a town and former royal burgh on the east coast of Fife, Scotland. According to the recent population estimate , the town has a population of 16,596, making this the fifth largest settlement in Fife....
. External bodies operating in the building include a Blackwells
Blackwells

Blackwells may refer to:*Blackwell's, a chain of bookshops, online retail, mail order and library services in the United Kingdom*Blackwell Publishing...
 bookshop and the University's Student Support Services. The Students' Association is affiliated to, and indeed a founding member of, the Coalition of Higher Education Students in Scotland
Coalition of Higher Education Students in Scotland

The Coalition of Higher Education Students in Scotland is a body representative of students in Scotland founded in 2001 by the Students' Associations of University of Aberdeen, University of Dundee, University of Edinburgh and University of St Andrews Universities, and University of Glasgow's Students' Representative Council#Scotland....
 (CHESS) and is not a member of the National Union of Students
National Union of Students of the United Kingdom

The National Union of Students is the main confederation of students' unions that exist inside the United Kingdom. Although the NUS is the central organisation for all affiliated unions in the UK, there are also the devolved national sub-bodies NUS Scotland in Scotland, NUS Wales in Wales and NUS-USI in Northern Ireland ....
.

The Students' Association receives a maintenance grant from the University, which stood at £159,000 GBP for the academic year 2004-2005.

The Students' Association is headed up by four sabbatical officers. Currently they are Andrew Keenan (Association President), James Shield (Director of Representation), Stacy Lee (Director of Events and Services) and Philippa Dunn (Director of Student Development and Activities).

Societies


Students at the university form various voluntary societies for academic, social, political, religious and other reasons. Many of these are affiliated with the Students' Association. Other groups are not affiliated to the University or the Students Association, and therefore not a part of the University structure. Notable independent student groups
Independent Student Groups in St Andrews

There are a number of unaffiliated groups run by students in St Andrews...
 include the Global Investment Group, The International Politics Association, Kate Kennedy Club
Kate Kennedy Club

The Kate Kennedy Club is a historical Club from the University of St Andrews. In its present form it was founded in 1926 but it has origins in the early fifteenth century....
, and Lower Rents Now.

University of St Andrews Athletic Union


  • University of St Andrews Rugby Football Club
    University of St Andrews Rugby Football Club

    The University of St Andrews Rugby Football Club is an affiliated member of the University of St Andrews Athletic Union in Fife, Scotland. It was founded in 1858, making it one of the oldest football clubs in the world....
     (Founded 1858)


Media


  • Newspapers:
    • The Saint
      The Saint (UK newspaper)

      The Saint is a newspaper written by students at the University of St Andrews in Scotland. It is one of only three such newspapers in the United Kingdom to enjoy complete financial and editorial independence, as it is not affiliated with the University or Students' Association in any way....
       is the longest-lived student newspaper, published fortnightly since 1997 and tracing its roots several decades further. It is fully independent of both the Student's Union and the University, which has led to some controversy about certain articles in the past. This independence is only matched by three other student newspapers in Britain - Cherwell
      Cherwell (newspaper)

      Cherwell newspaper is a student newspaper published by and for students of Oxford University. First published in 1920, it has had an online edition since 1996....
       in Oxford
      Oxford

      Oxford is a City status in the United Kingdom, and the county town of Oxfordshire, in South East England. It has a population of 151,000. The rivers River Cherwell and River Thames run through Oxford and meet south of the city centre....
      , Varsity
      Varsity (Cambridge)

      Varsity is the older of University of Cambridge's main student newspapers ....
       in Cambridge
      Cambridge

      The city status in the United Kingdom of Cambridge is a College town and the administrative centre of the county of Cambridgeshire, England. It lies about 50 miles north of London....
       and The Inquirer at City University
      City University

      City University, or University City may refer to:*City University, London*City University of Hong Kong*City University of New York*City University of Seattle...
       in London
      London

      London is the capital of both England and the United Kingdom, and the most populous municipality in the European Union. An important settlement for two millennia, History of London goes back to its founding by the Roman Empire....
    • On 17 April 2006, the Vine magazine (supported by the Students' Association) was re-launched. The magazine claimed to generate discussion and thought throughout the student population of the town, and was printed at irregular intervals. Sales were poor, and the publication eventually closed down in 2007.


  • Academic Journals:
    • St. Andrews Psychology Review (S.P.R.) founded in 2008 in association with St. Andrews Psychology Department and the The St. Andrews Psychology Society (independently funded and not affiliated with The St. Andrews Student Union.) While it is the first Independent Academic Journal at The University St. Andrews it has a number of individuals who aren’t university staff or students as writers and staff.
    • Aporia (The Philosophy Society Journal) A biannual journal founded in 2007. The articles featured are predominantly be papers written on philosophical topics by St. Andrews' students.


  • Radio:
    • On 28 February 2005, a number of St Andrews students launched the University's first FM
      Frequency modulation

      In telecommunications, frequency modulation conveys information over a carrier wave by varying its frequency . In analog signal applications, the instantaneous frequency of the carrier is directly proportional to the instantaneous value of the input signal....
       station broadcasting over 5 km on the 87.7 MHz
      Hertz

      The hertz is a measure of frequency per unit of time, or the number of list of cycles per second. It is the SI base unit of frequency in the International System of Units , and is used worldwide in both general-purpose and scientific contexts....
       frequency. The station was granted a Restricted Service Licence
      Restricted Service Licence

      A United Kingdom Restricted Service Licence , is typically granted to radio stations and television stations broadcasting within the UK to serve a local community or a special event....
       by Ofcom
      Ofcom

      The Office of Communications or, as it is more often known, Ofcom, is the independent regulator and competition authority for the communication industries in the United Kingdom....
      , which allowed for six hours of broadcast a day. Subsequent periods of broadcast followed until the end of 2007, when it was decided to re-brand Star FM as STAR
      Star

      A star is a massive, luminous ball of Plasma that is held together by its own gravity. The nearest star to Earth is the Sun, which is the source of most of the energy on Earth....
       or St Andrews Radio and broadcast solely as an Internet station online for twenty-four hours a day. The radio station is now a sub-committee of the Students' Association under the name of the Broadcasting Committee. It broadcasts 24/7 during University term time. The station can be found at www.standrewsradio.com.


See also


  • Chancellor of the University of St Andrews
    Chancellor of the University of St Andrews

    The Chancellor is the titular head of the University of St Andrews. His duties include conferring academic degree, promoting the University?s image throughout the world, and furthering its interests, both within Scotland and beyond....
  • Rector of the University of St Andrews
    Rector of the University of St Andrews

    The Lord Rector of the University of St Andrews is chosen every three years by the students of the University of St Andrews. Seldom referred to as Lord Rector, he is more commonly known simply as the Rector, the office having been created by the Parliament of the United Kingdom when it passed the Universities Act 1858, which provided for th...
  • Ancient universities of Scotland
    Ancient universities of Scotland

    The ancient universities of Scotland are medieval universities and renaissance university which continue to exist until the present day. The majority of the ancient universities of the British Isles are located within Scotland, and have a number of distinctive features in common, being governed by a series of measures laid down in the Univers...
  • Academic dress of the University of St Andrews
    Academic dress of the University of St Andrews

    Academic dress at the University of St Andrews is an important part of university life. The University of St Andrews was founded between 1410 and 1413, being the oldest of the ancient universities of Scotland and the third oldest university in the English-speaking world....
Academics of the University of St Andrews
  • Lower Rents Now


External links