This is a list of people from Exeter, a city in south-west England. People from Exeter are known as Exonians. This list is arranged chronologically by date of birth.

Thomas Bodley was born in Exeter in 1545
Born before 1701
- Baldwin of Exeter (died 1190), Archbishop of Canterbury
 - Joseph of Exeter (12th century), poet
 - Robert Stone (1516–1613), composer and member of the Chapel Royal
 - John Hooker (1525–1601), constitutionalist
 - William Peryam (1534 – after 1603), lawyer
 - Sir Thomas Bodley (1545–1613), diplomat and founder of the Bodleian Library
 - Nicholas Hilliard (c. 1547–1619), portraitist
 - John Rainolds (1549–1605), Puritan scholar
 - Richard Hooker (1554–1600), Anglican theologian
 - William Hakewill (1574–1655), legal antiquarian
 - George Hakewill (1578–1649), clergyman and author
 - Matthew Locke (c. 1621–1677), Baroque composer
 - Henrietta Anne Stuart (1644–1670), daughter of King Charles I
 - Peter King, 1st Baron King (1669–1734), Lord Chancellor
 - Thomas Yalden (1670–1736), poet
 - Simon Ockley (1678–1720), orientalist
 - Eustace Budgell (1686–1737), writer
 - Andrew Brice (1690–1773), printer and writer
 
Born 1701–1850
- Thomas Hudson (1701–1779), portrait painter
 - Francis Hayman (1708–1776), Rococo artist
 - John Rowe (1715–1787), merchant and owner of ship involved in Boston Tea Party
 - Thomas Mudge (horologist) (1715-1794), horologist who was responsible for the Lever escapement mechanism
 - Samuel Stennett (1727–1795), Baptist minister and hymnwriter
 - Richard Langdon (1729–1803), organist and composer
 - William Jackson (1730–1803), referred to as Jackson of Exeter, was an organist and composer
 - Robert Trewman (1738/39–1802), first proprietor of Trewman's Exeter Flying Post, published 1763–1917
 - Sir Francis Baring, 1st Baronet (1740–1810), banker
 - Richard Eastcott (baptised 1744–1828), Anglican clergyman and writer on music[1]
 - Robert Hawker (1753–1827), Anglican clergyman
 - David Collins (1756–1810), first governor of Van Diemens Land (Tasmania)
 - John Stockham (1765–1814), naval officer
 - Richard Parker (1767–1797), sailor and mutineer
 - John Blackall (1771–1860), physician
 - George Oliver (1781–1861), Catholic churchman and historian[2]
 - James Holman (1786–1857), noted blind traveller
 - Sir John Bowring (1792–1872), political economist and Governor of Hong Kong
 - Thomas Shapter (1809–1902), doctor and author of History of the Cholera in Exeter in 1832
 - Samuel Cousins (1801–1887), engraver
 - Mary Carpenter (1807–1877), educational and social reformer
 - William Benjamin Carpenter (1813–1885), physiologist and naturalist
 - John Carne Bidwill (1815–1853), botanist, first director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney
 - Lilly Martin Spencer (1822–1902), US painter
 - Lavington Glyde (1824-1890), South Australian politician and accountant
 - Henry Chadwick (1824–1908), journalist, "father of baseball"
 - Sabine Baring-Gould (1834–1924), writer, clergyman, antiquary and folklorist
 - Sir Harry James Veitch (1840–1924), horticulturist
 - William John Seward Webber (1842–1919), sculptor
 - William Kingdon Clifford (1845–1879), mathematician
 
Born 1851–1950
- Eva Luckes (1854–1919), matron of The London Hospital 1880–1919, pioneer of training for nurses
 - Theodore Bayley Hardy (1863–1918), Army chaplain and VC
 - Fred Karno (1866–1941), comedy pioneer and impresario
 - Irene Vanbrugh (1872–1949), actress
 - Herbert Augustine Carter (1874–1916), army officer and VC
 - William Temple (1881–1944), Archbishop of Canterbury
 - Ernest Kennaway (1881–1958), pathologist who suggested a link between smoking and lung cancer
 - Gordon Steele (1891–1981), recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - Primrose Pitman (1902–1998), artist
 - W. G. Hoskins (1908–1992), historian of the English landscape
 - Cliff Bastin (1912–1991), Arsenal and England footballer
 - John Manners (1914–2020), English cricketer and Royal Navy officer; oldest living first-class cricketer
 - Tommy Cooper (1921–1984), comedian born in Caerphilly but living in Exeter from the age of three
 - Denis Pereira Gray (born 1935), physician
 - Tony Burrows (born 1942), pop singer
 - Sarah Harrison (born 1946), novelist
 - Peter Rutley (born 1946), former professional footballer
 - Doug Finley (1946–2013), Canadian Senator and principal operational strategist of the Conservative Party of Canada
 
Born since 1950
- Clare Morrall (born 1952), novelist
 - John Scott (born 1954), England rugby union international
 - Beth Gibbons (born 1965), singer with Portishead
 - Ben Nealon (born 1966), actor
 - Toby Buckland (born 1969), gardener, TV presenter and author
 - Michael Caines (born 1969), chef and restaurateur
 - Jane Griffiths (born 1970), poet and literary historian
 - Chris Martin (born 1977), lead singer of Coldplay
 - Mathew Theedom (born 1977), cricketer
 - Dominic Wood (born 1978), TV presenter
 - Matthew Goode (born 1978), actor
 - David Lye (born 1979), cricketer
 - Scott C Shephard (born 1979), music executive
 - Jim Causley (born 1980), folk singer
 - Stuart Hooper (born 1981), rugby union player
 - Rebecca Worthley (born 1981), singer/songwriter
 - Trevor Anning (born 1982), cricketer
 - Bradley James (born 1983), actor
 - Kate Bushell (born 1983), victim of a high-profile child murder in the city in 1997, her murder remains unsolved as of 2022
 - Tim Shaw (born 1984), American football player for Tennessee Titans
 - Harry Treadaway (born 1984), actor
 - Ben Aldridge (born 1985), actor
 - Liam Tancock (born 1985), world champion swimmer
 - Aaron Jarvis (born 1986), Wales rugby union player
 - Liam Lewis (born 1986), cricketer
 - Kour Pour (born 1987), artist
 - James Yeoburn (born 1987), theatre producer and entrepreneur
 - Liam Sercombe (born 1990), professional footballer
 - Luke Newberry (born 1990), actor
 - Joe Launchbury (born 1991), England rugby union international
 - Harry Tincknell (born 1991), professional racing driver, 24 Hours of Le Mans LMP2-class winner
 - Tristan Evans (born 1994), drummer in The Vamps
 - Matt Grimes (born 1995), footballer for Swansea City A.F.C.
 - Xia Vigor (born 2009), actress for ABS CBN
 - Thomas Cameron (born 1999), classical singer, radio host
 
See also
References
- ↑ Baker, Anne Pimlott. "Eastcott, Richard". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/8412. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
 - ↑ Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.