Sir Isambard Owen was a British physician and university academic.
Background
Owen was born in Chepstow in Monmouthshire, south Wales. At the time his father, William Owen, later chief engineer of the Great Western Railway, was building the South Wales Railway under Isambard Kingdom Brunel, from whom Isambard Owen received his unusual name.
Career
He was the first Vice-Chancellor of the University of Bristol and a deputy Chancellor of the University of Wales. He was educated at The King"s School, Gloucester, Rossall School and Downing College, Cambridge, where he read Natural Sciences. After graduating he studied medicine at Street George"s Hospital, then returned to Cambridge to take his final Bachelor of Medicine and to study for his Doctor of Medicine, which he received in 1882.
Owen was a major figure in the creation of the University of Wales in 1891–1892 and was its Deputy Chancellor from its creation in 1894 until 1910.
He received a knighthood from Edward VII in 1902. He was Principal of Armstrong College, Newcastle (then a college of Durham University) 1904-1909 and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Bristol 1909-1921.
Owen was executor of the will of Prince Louis Lucien Bonaparte (1813–1891) and may have acted as medical advisor to the Prince, who lived in London and was a philologist with an interest in the Celtic languages including Welsh.