WYLLMOT, ---; b.; adm.; QS in 1570 (Chapter Muniments).
WYLKYNSONE, THOMAS; b.; adm.; QS 10 Aug 1553 (Chapter Muniments).
WYLD, JAMES, brother of Thomas Wyld (qv); bapt. St. Andrew, Holborn 23 Feb 1765 (IGI); adm. 16 Jun 1775; KS (aged 14) 1779; Capt. of the School 1783; elected head to Trinity Coll. Cambridge 1784, adm. pens. 9 Jun 1784, scholar 8 Apr 1785; BA 1788; adm. Lincoln’s Inn 13 Mar 1784; ordained; Rector of Blunsdon St. Andrew, Wilts., from 1814; m. Elizabeth Ann, dau. of John Haverfield, Kew, Surrey; d. 2 Jan 1834.
WYE, ROGER; b.; adm.; KS 1667; elected to Trinity Coll. Cambridge 1669, adm. pens. 28 Jun 1669, scholar 1670, matr. 1669; BA 1672/3; MA 1676; Fellow, Trinity Coll. 1674 – c. 1683; ordained deacon 24 Dec 1676, priest 22 Dec 1678 (both London); Vicar of Ware, Herts., 1682-99; Vicar of Wotton, Surrey, from 28 Mar 1699; d. 16 Feb 1700/1.
WYCKES, JOHN; b.; adm.; QS 1 Jun 1554 (Chapter Muniments).
WYCHE, JOHN, eldest son of Sir Peter Wyche, Kt, Westminster, British Envoy to Russia, and Isabella, dau. of Sir Robert Bolles, Bart.; nephew of Sir Cyril Wyche (qv); b. 2 Jan 1667/8; adm.; KS 1681; elected to Trinity Coll. Cambridge 1684, adm. pens. 19 Jun 1684, scholar 1 May 1685; British Resident, The Hanse Towns 1702-9, Envoy Extraordinary there from 1709; m. Bethesda, dau. of John Savage; d. 15 Oct 1713.
WYCHE, SIR CYRIL, second son of Right Hon. Sir Peter Wyche, PC, Kt, English Ambassador at Constantinople, and Jane, dau. of Sir William Meredith, Kt, Wrexham, Denbighshire; b.; a godson of Cyril Loukaris, Orthodox Patriarch of Constantinople, after whom he was named; adm.; KS in 1649; contributed a copy of verses to Lacrimae Musarum, 1649; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 27 Nov 1650; BA 17 Feb 1652/3; MA 1655; DCL 1665; LLD Dublin 1692; adm. Gray’s Inn 1 May 1657, called to bar 15 Jun 1670; knighted at The Hague May 1660; one of the Six Clerks in Chancery 28 Jan 1662-75; MP Callington May 1661 – Jan 1678/9, East Grinstead Feb – Mar 1680/1, Saltash 1685-7, Preston 1702-5; Chief Secretary to Duke of Ormonde, Lord Lieut. Ireland 1677-82, and to Henry Sidney, Lord Lieut. Ireland, Sep 1692 – Jul 1693; MP (I) Dublin University 17 Sep 1692 – 26 Jun 1693; Privy Councillor (I) 1692; one of the Lord Justices of Ireland 1693-5; a Commissioner for Irish Forfeitures 1700; FRS 20 May 1663, President 30 Nov 1683 – 30 Nov 1684; lic. to m. 1st, 2 Aug 1663 Elizabeth, dau. of Sir Thomas Jermyn, Rushbrooke, Suffolk; lic. to m. 2nd, 29 Jul 1684 Susanna, dau. of Sir Herbert Perrott, Kt, MP, Haroldstone, Pembs., and dau. of Sir Francis Norreys, Kt, Weston on the Green, Oxfordshire; m. 3rd, 15 May 1692 Mary, eldest dau. of George Evelyn, Wotton, Surrey; d. 29 Dec 1707. DNB.
WYBARNE (or WIBORNE), JOSEPH, third son of Rev. Percival Wybarne (or Wiborne), Prebendary of Westminster; b.; adm.; QS; elected to Trinity Coll. Cambridge 1598, adm. pens. 1598, scholar 1599, matr. 1598; BA 1602/3; MA 1606; ordained deacon (Lincoln) 31 May 1607; author, The New Age of Old Names, 1609, and Machiavellus Comedia.
Wyatt, Frederick Evan, son of Harry Frederick James Wyatt, R.N.; b. Sept. 23, 1877; adm. as Q.S. Sept. 25, 1890; left July 1894; a Quartermaster in the P. and O. Steamship Co's service; d. 1967.
WYAT, SIR DUDLEY, son of John Wyat (or Wyott) (IGI); bapt. St. Margaret, Westminster 1 Nov 1608 (IGI); adm.; KS in 1625; elected to Trinity Coll. Cambridge 1627, adm. pens. 1627, scholar 25 Apr 1628, matr. 1627; BA 1631/2; MA 1635; Minor Fellow, Trinity Coll. 4 Oct 1633, Major Fellow 10 Oct 1634-44; given leave of absence from his college to travel in Ireland for seven years 1641, but deprived of Fellowship 1644; joined Queen Henrietta Maria in France and developed into a busy spy and intriguer; Commissary-General in Royalist Army; knighted 4 Jun 1645; appears subsequently to have gone over to Parliament, for in a letter dated 23 Dec 1647 Oliver Cromwell requested the Master of Trinity to readmit Wyat (Alum. Westmon., 100), although there is no record of his readmission; emigrated to Virginia1650, where he d. before 25 Jul 1651 (will dated 29 Mar 1650, proved Jamestown, Virginia 25 Jul 1651).