Oxbridge full of same ‘elite’ names hundreds of years on

Being descended from Norman aristocracy may have its perks after all…

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According to research conducted by LSE, the same ‘elite’ surnames are still dominating Oxbridge just as they did during the Norman Conquest hundreds of years ago.

Surnames such as Darcy, Baskerville, Mandeville and Montgomery are still just as common within the elitist universities as they were nearly 1000 years ago.

Despite so called ‘social mobility’ exemplified by the introduction of publicly funded education and universal voting rights in England, the study shows that there have been very few changes at a deeper level.

“I say Reginald, there are a lot of oiks around these days.” “Far too many in my opinion, Montgomery.”

These common names also dominate medicine, law and politics.

If this isn’t enough, it turns out that ‘poor’ names such as Boorman and Defoe are still under-represented at Oxford and Cambridge.

Researchers Dr Neil Cummins and Professor Gregory Clark, believe that their findings show how wealth, education and occupational status are “highly heritable”.

It is actually believed that social status is actually more inheritable than height.

We all know which one we’d rather inherit.

Unfortunately the study is now being used to confirm what The Tab had shown was true: that 150 years of mass education have done very little to confront the issue of elitism at university, and perhaps in society as a whole.