Michael Faraday delivering a Christmas Lecture in 1856

The Royal Institution Christmas Lectures are a series of lectures on a single topic each, which have been held at the Royal Institution in London each year since 1825. The lectures present scientific subjects to a general audience, including young people, in an informative and entertaining manner. The Managers of the Royal Institution conceived and initiated the Christmas Lecture series in 1825, at a time when organised education for young people was scarce. Many of the Christmas Lectures were published.

History

A close-up image of a candle showing the wick and the various parts of the flame. Michael Faraday lectured on "The Chemical History of a Candle".

The Royal Institution's Christmas Lectures were first held in 1825, and have continued on an annual basis since then except for four years during the Second World War. They have been hosted each year at the Royal Institution itself, except in 1929 and between 2005 and 2006, each time due to refurbishment of the building. Michael Faraday was the most famous lecturer, hosting the series on nineteen occasions. Recent series have toured Japan, Korea and Singapore among other countries.

The Nobel laureate Sir William Bragg gave the Christmas lectures on four occasions, and his co-laureate son Sir Lawrence Bragg gave them twice. Other notable lecturers have included Desmond Morris (1964), Eric Laithwaite (1966 & 1974), Sir George Porter (1969 & 1976), Sir David Attenborough (1973), Heinz Wolff (1975), Carl Sagan (1977), Richard Dawkins (1991), Susan Greenfield (1994), Dame Nancy Rothwell (1998), Monica Grady (2003), Sue Hartley (2009), Alison Woollard (2013), Danielle George (2014), and Saiful Islam (2016).

In 1994, Professor Susan Greenfield became the first female scientist to present the Christmas Lectures. The first non-white science lecturer was Kevin Fong in 2015, and in August 2020 it was announced that Professor Christopher Jackson would jointly present the 2020 lecture series, thus becoming the first black scientist to do so.

The props for the lectures are designed and created by the Royal Institution's science demonstration technician, a post which Faraday previously held. A popular technician, with the advent of television, serving from 1948 to 1986, was Bill Coates. The technician is informed of the general subject of the lectures during spring, but the specifics are not settled until September, with the recordings made in mid-December. By 2009, the lectures had expanded to a series of five sessions each year. However, in 2010 the Royal Institution cut back on costs, as it had become over £2 million in debt, and this resulted in a reduction from five lectures to three.

Television

A 15-minute preview of a Christmas Lecture by G. I. Taylor was the first to be televised, in December 1936, on the BBC's fledgling Television Service. This was the first scientific experiment shown on television. Occasional lectures were broadcast in the subsequent decades, and each series was broadcast in its entirety on BBC Two from 1966 to 1999 and Channel 4 from 2000 to 2004. In 2000, one of the lectures was broadcast live for the first time.

Following the end of Channel 4's contract to broadcast the lectures, there were concerns that they might simply be dropped from scheduling as the channel was negotiating with the Royal Institution over potential changes to the format, while the BBC announced that "The BBC will not show the lectures again, because it feels the broadcasting environment has moved on in the last four years." Channel Five subsequently agreed to show the lectures from 2005 to 2008, an announcement which was met with derision from academics. The lectures were broadcast on More4 in 2009. In 2010, the lectures returned to the BBC after a ten-year absence from the broadcaster, and have been shown on BBC Four each year since then.

The Lecture Theatre today

In January 2022, the RI launched an appeal to trace copies of those televised lectures which are missing from the BBC's archives, these being the complete series of five lectures each from 1966, 1967, 1969, 1970 and 1971, plus one episode of David Attenborough's 1973 lectures, "The language of animals".

List of Christmas lectures

1825 to 1965

The following is a complete list of the Christmas Lectures from 1825 to 1965:

YearLecturer(s)Title of series
1825John MillingtonExperimental Philosophy, including Dynamics, Mechanics, Pneumatics, Hydrostatics, Optics, Magnetism, Electricity, and Astronomy.
1826John WallisAstronomy
1827Michael FaradayChemistry
1828George John WoodThe History, Architecture, Rites, Ceremonies, Manners, Customs &c. of the Ancient World
1829Michael FaradayElectricity
1830Thomas WebsterGeology
1831James RennieZoology
1832Michael FaradayChemistry
1833John LindleyBotany
1834William Thomas BrandeChemistry
1835Michael FaradayElectricity
1836William Thomas BrandeChemistry of the Gases
1837Michael FaradayChemistry
1838John WallisAstronomy
1839William Thomas BrandeThe Chemistry of the Atmosphere and the Ocean
1840John Frederic DaniellThe First Principles of Franklinic Electricity
1841Michael FaradayThe Rudiments of Chemistry
1842William Thomas BrandeThe Chemistry of the Non-Metallic Elements
1843Michael FaradayFirst Principles of Electricity
1844William Thomas BrandeThe Chemistry of the Gases
1845Michael FaradayThe Rudiments of Chemistry
1846John WallisThe Rudiments of Astronomy
1847William Thomas BrandeThe Elements of Organic Chemistry
1848Michael FaradayThe Chemical History of a Candle
1849Robert WalkerThe Properties of Matter and the Laws of Motion
1850William Thomas BrandeThe Chemistry of Coal
1851Michael FaradayAttractive Forces
1852Chemistry
1853Voltaic Electricity
1854The Chemistry of Combustion
1855The Distinctive Properties of the Common Metals
1856Attractive Forces
1857Static Electricity
1858The Metallic Properties
1859The Various Forces of Matter and their Relations to Each Other
1860The Chemical History of a Candle
1861John TyndallLight
1862Edward FranklandAir and Water
1863John TyndallElectricity at Rest and Electricity in Motion
1864Edward FranklandThe Chemistry of a Coal
1865John TyndallSound
1866Edward FranklandThe Chemistry of Gases
1867John TyndallHeat and Cold
1868William OdlingThe Chemical Changes of Carbon
1869John TyndallLight
1870William OdlingBurning and Unburning
1871John TyndallIce, Water, Vapour and Air
1872William OdlingAir and Gas
1873John TyndallThe Motion and Sensation of Sound
1874John Hall GladstoneThe Voltaic Battery
1875John TyndallExperimental Electricity
1876John Hall GladstoneThe Chemistry of Fire
1877John TyndallHeat, Visible and Invisible
1878James DewarA Soap Bubble
1879John TyndallWater and Air
1880James DewarAtoms
1881Robert Stawell BallThe Sun, the Moon and the Planets
1882John TyndallLight and the Eye
1883James DewarAlchemy in Relation to Modern Science
1884John TyndallThe Sources of Electricity
1885James DewarThe Story of a Meteorite
1886The Chemistry of Light and Photography
1887Robert Stawell BallAstronomy
1888James DewarClouds and Cloudland
1889Arthur RückerElectricity
1890James DewarFrost and Fire
1891John Gray McKendrickLife in Motion; or the Animal Machine
1892Robert Stawell BallAstronomy
1893James DewarAir: Gaseous and Liquid
1894John Ambrose FlemingThe Work of an Electric Current
1895John Gray McKendrickSound, Hearing and Speech
1896Sylvanus Phillips ThompsonLight, Visible and Invisible
1897Oliver LodgeThe Principles of the Electric Telegraph
1898Robert Stawell BallAstronomy
1899Charles Vernon BoysFluids in Motion and at Rest
1900Robert Stawell BallGreat Chapters from the Book of Nature
1901John Ambrose FlemingWaves and Ripples in Water, Air and Aether
1902Henry Selby Hele-ShawLocomotion: On the Earth, Through the Water, in the Air
1903Edwin Ray LankesterExtinct Animals
1904Henry CunynghameAncient and Modern Methods of Measuring Time
1905Herbert Hall TurnerAstronomy
1906William DuddellSignalling to a Distance
1907David GillAstronomy, Old and New
1908William StirlingThe Wheel of Life
1909William DuddellModern Electricity
1910Silvanus Phillips ThompsonSound: Musical and Non-Musical
1911Peter Chalmers MitchellThe Childhood of Animals
1912James DewarChristmas Lecture Epilogues
1913Herbert Hall TurnerA Voyage in Space
1914Charles Vernon BoysScience in the Home
1915Herbert Hall TurnerWireless Messages from the Stars
1916Arthur KeithThe Human Machine Which All Must Work
1917John Ambrose FlemingOur Useful Servants: Magnetism and Electricity
1918D'Arcy Wentworth ThompsonThe Fish of the Sea
1919William Henry BraggThe World of Sound
1920John Arthur ThomsonThe Haunts of Life
1921John Ambrose FlemingElectric Waves and Wireless Telephony
1922Herbert Hall TurnerSix Steps Up the Ladder to the Stars
1923William Henry BraggConcerning the Nature of Things
1924Francis Balfour-BrowneConcerning the Habits of Insects
1925William Henry BraggOld Trades and New Knowledge
1926Archibald Vivian HillNerves and Muscles: How We Feel and Move
1927Edward AndradeEngines
1928Alexander WoodSound Waves and their Uses
1929Stephen GlanvilleHow Things Were Done in Ancient Egypt
1930Arthur Mannering TyndallThe Electric Spark
1931William Henry BraggThe Universe of Light
1932Alexander Oliver RankineThe Round of the Waters
1933James Hopwood JeansThrough Space and Time
1934William Lawrence BraggElectricity
1935Charles Edward Kenneth MeesPhotography
1936Geoffrey Ingram TaylorShips
1937Julian HuxleyRare Animals and the Disappearance of Wild Life
1938James KendallYoung Chemists and Great Discoveries
1939–1942No lectures due to the Second World War
1943Edward AndradeVibrations and Waves
1944Harold Spencer JonesAstronomy in our Daily Life
1945Robert Watson-WattWireless
1946Hamilton HartridgeColours and How We See Them
1947Eric Keightley RidealChemical Reactions: How They Work
1948Frederic BartlettThe Mind at Work and Play
1949Percy DunsheathThe Electric Current
1950Edward AndradeWaves and Vibrations
1951James GrayHow Animals Move
1952Frank Sherwood TaylorHow Science Has Grown
1953John Ashworth RatcliffeThe Uses of Radio Waves
1954Frank WhittleThe Story of Petroleum
1955Harry W. MelvilleBig Molecules
1956Harry BainesPhotography
1957Julian Huxley and James FisherBirds
1958John Ashworth Ratcliffe, James M. Stagg, Robert L. F. Boyd, Graham Sutton, George E. R. Deacon, Gordon de Quetteville RobinInternational Geophysical Year
1959Thomas AlliboneThe Release and Use of Atomic Energy
1960Vernon Ellis CosslettSeeing the Very Small
1961William Lawrence BraggElectricity
1962R. E. D. (Richard Evelyn Donohue) BishopVibration
1963Ronald KingEnergy
1964Desmond MorrisAnimal Behaviour
1965Bernard Lovell, Francis Graham-Smith, Martin Ryle, Antony HewishExploration of the Universe

Since 1966

The following is a list of televised Christmas Lectures from 1966 onward as of December2025[update]:

YearLecturer(s)Title of seriesLecture titlesNetwork
1966Eric LaithwaiteThe Engineer in Wonderland1. The White Rabbit 2. Only the Grin was Left 3. The Caucus Race 4. Curiouser and Curiouser 5. If only I were the right size to do it 6. It's the Oldest Rule in the BookBBC Two
1967Richard L. GregoryThe Intelligent Eye1. Ancient Eyes and Simple Brains 2. Learning to See Things 3. Playing with Illusions 4. How Illusions Play Games with Us 5. Human Eyes in Space 6. The Future-Machines that See?
1968Philip MorrisonGulliver's Laws: The Physics of Large and Small1. The World of Captain Gulliver 2. Meat and Drink Sufficient... 3. A Prodigious Leap? 4. Lilliput and Brobdingnag since the Industrial Revolution 5. Dwarf and Giant Numbers 6. Beyond the Map
1969George PorterTime Machines1. In the Beginning... 2. Clockwork Harmony 3. The Tick of the Atom 4. Big Time, Little Time 5. Faster, Faster 6. To the Ends of Time
1970John NapierMonkeys Without Tails: A Giraffe's Eye-view of Man1. Man has a very short neck and no tail 2. Man comes in several different sizes and shapes 3. Fancy having to climb trees in order to eat 4. Man chooses a sensible place to live at last 5. Why choose to walk on two legs when it is much safer on four? 6. What's the idea of shooting at us?
1971Charles TaylorSounds of Music: The Science of Tones and Tune1. Making and Measuring the Waves 2. From Small Beginnings 3. Growing and Changing 4. Craftsmanship and Technology 5. On the Way to the Ear 6. The End of the Journey
1972Geoffrey G. GourietRipples in the Ether: The Science of Radio Communication1. How It All Began 2. Getting Rid of the Wires 3. The Sound of Broadcasting 4. Pictures With and Without Wires 5. But Electrons aren't Coloured! 6. Vision of the Future
1973David AttenboroughThe Language of Animals1. Beware! 2. Be Mine 3. Parents and Children 4. Simple Signs and Complicated Communications (lost from archives ) 5. Foreign Languages 6. Animal Language, Human Language
1974Eric LaithwaiteThe Engineer Through the Looking Glass1. Looking Glass House 2. Tweedledum and Tweedledee 3. Jam Yesterday, Jam Tomorrow 4. The Jabberwock 5. The Time has come the Walrus said 6. It's my own Invention
1975Heinz WolffSignals from the Interior1. You as an engine 2. Pumps pipes and flows 3. Spikes and waves 4. Probes, sondes and sounds 5. Looking through your skin 6. Signals from the mind
1976George PorterThe Natural History of a Sunbeam1. First Light 2. Light and Life 3. A Leaf from Nature 4. Candles from the Sun 5. Making Light Work 6. Survival Under the Sun
1977Carl SaganThe Planets1. The Earth as a Planet 2. The Outer Solar System and Life 3. The History of Mars 4. Mars before Viking 5. Mars after Viking 6. Planetary Systems Beyond Our Sun
1978Erik Christopher ZeemanMathematics into Pictures1. Linking and Knotting 2. Numbers and Geometry 3. Infinity and Perspective 4. Games and Evolution 5. Waves and Music 6. Catastrophe and Psychology
1979Eric M. RogersAtoms for Engineering Minds: A Circus of Experiments1. Getting to Know Atoms 2. Molecules in Motion 3. Electrified Atoms 4. Atoms that Explode 5. Atoms and Energy 6. Seeing Atoms at Last
1980David Chilton Phillips with Max Perutz in Lecture 5The Chicken, the Egg and the Molecules1. What are chickens made of? 2. Machine tools of life 3. Muscle power 4. Eggs, genes and proteins 5. Haemoglobin: the breathing molecule 6. Molecules at work
1981Reginald Victor JonesFrom Magna Carta to Microchip1. Principles, Standards and Methods 2. The Measurement of Time 3. More and More About Less and Less 4. Onwards to the Stars 5. Measurement and Navigation in War 6. Some Impacts of Measurement on Life: And Can We Take it too Far?
1982Colin BlakemoreCommon Sense1. Making Sense 2. The Sound of Silence 3. The Sixth Sense–and the Rest 4. Show Me the Way to Go Home 5. Vive la différence 6. Enchanted Loom
1983Leonard MaunderMachines in Motion1. Driving Forces 2. Gathering Momentum 3. Vibration 4. Under Control 5. Fluids and Flight 6. Living Machines
1984Walter BodmerThe Message of the Genes1. We're All Different 2. The Spice of Life 3. Genetic Engineering 4. Bodies and Antibodies 5. Normal Cells and Cancer Cells 6. When Will Pigs Have Wings?
1985John David PyeCommunicating1. No Man is an Island 2. Animal Talk 3. The Bionic Bat 4. The Pace of Technology 5. The Integrated Body 6. Computers
1986Lewis WolpertFrankenstein's Quest: Development of Life1. First Take an Egg... 2. The Medium and the Message 3. The Right Stuff 4. Genes and Flies 5. Chain of Command 6. Growing Up and Growing Old
1987John Meurig Thomas and David PhillipsCrystals and Lasers1. The Micro-world 2. The architecture of crystals 3. Crystal Miracles 4. Constructing a LASER 5. The Light Fantastic 6. Crystals, lasers and the human body
1988Gareth RobertsThe Home of the Future1. Appliance Science 2. Home, Safe Home 3. Electronics for Pleasure 4. Home, Smart Home 5. Mixers, Meters and Molecules
1989Charles TaylorExploring Music1. What Is Music? 2. The Essence of an Instrument 3. Science, Strings and Symphonies 4. Technology, Trumpets and Tunes 5. Scales, Synthesisers and Samplers
1990Malcolm LongairOrigins1. The Grand Design 2. The Birth of the Stars 3. The Origin of Quasars 4. The Origin of the Galaxies 5. The Origin of the Universe
1991Richard DawkinsGrowing Up in the Universe1. Waking Up in the Universe 2. Designed and Designoid Objects 3. Climbing Mount Improbable 4. The Ultraviolet Garden 5. The Genesis of Purpose
1992Charles J. M. StirlingOur World Through the Looking Glass1. Man in the Mirror 2. Narwhals, Palindromes and Chesterfield Station 3. The Handed Molecule 4. Symmetry, Sensation and Sex 5. In the Hands of Giants
1993Frank CloseThe Cosmic Onion1. A is for Atoms 2. To the Centre of the Sun 3. Invaders from Outer Space 4. Anti-Matter Matters 5. An Hour to Make the Universe
1994Susan GreenfieldJourney to the Centre of the Brain1. The Electric Ape 2. Through a Glass Darkly 3. Bubble Bubble Toil and Trouble 4. The Seven Ages of the Brain 5. The Mind's I
1995James JacksonPlanet Earth, An Explorer's Guide1. On the Edge of the World 2. Secrets of the Deep 3. Volcanoes: Melting the Earth 4. The Puzzle of the Continents 5. Waterworld
1996Simon Conway MorrisThe History in our Bones1. Staring into the Abyss 2. The Fossils Come Alive 3. The Great Dyings: Life after Death 4. Innovations And Novelty 5. Feet on the Ground, Head in the Stars: The History of Man
1997Ian StewartThe Magical Maze1. Sunflowers and Snowflakes 2. The Pattern of Tiny Feet 3. Outrageous Fortune 4. Chaos and Cauliflowers 5. Fearful Symmetry
1998Nancy RothwellStaying Alive1. Sense and Sensitivity 2. Fats and figures 3. Chilling out 4. Times of our lives 5. Pushing the limits
1999Neil F. JohnsonArrows of Time1. Back to the Future 2. Catching the Waves 3. The Quantum Leap 4. Edge of Chaos 5. Shaping the Future
2000Kevin WarwickRise of the Robots1. Anatomy of an Android 2. Things That Think 3. Remote Robots 4. Bionic Bodies 5. I, RobotChannel 4
2001John SulstonThe Secrets of Life1. What is life? 2. How do I grow? 3. What am I? 4. Can we fix it? 5. Future of life?
2002Tony RyanSmart Stuff1. The Spider that Spun a Suspension Bridge 2. The Trainer That Ran Over The World 3. The Phone that Shrank the Planet 4. The Plaster that Stretches Life 5. The Ice Cream that Will Freeze Granny
2003Monica GradyVoyage in Space and Time1. Blast Off 2. Mission to Mars 3. Planet Patrol 4. Collision Course 5. Anybody Out There?
2004Lloyd PeckAntarctica1. Ice People 2. Ice Life 3. Ice World
2005John KrebsThe Truth About Food1. The ape that cooks 2. Yuck or yummy? 3. You are what you eat 4. When food goes wrong 5. Food for the futureChannel Five
2006Marcus du SautoyThe Num8er My5teries1. The curious incident of the never-ending numbers 2. The quest to predict the future 3. The story of the elusive shapes 4. The case of the uncrackable code 5. The secret of the winning streak
2007Hugh MontgomeryBack from the Brink: The Science of Survival1. Peak Performance 2. Completely Stuffed 3. Grilled and Chilled 4. Fight, Flight and Fright 5. Luck, Genes and Stupidity
2008Christopher BishopHi-tech Trek1. Breaking the Speed Limit 2. Chips with Everything 3. The Ghost in the Machine 4. Untangling the Web 5. Digital Intelligence
2009Sue HartleyThe 300-Million-Year War1. Plant Wars 2. The Animals Strike Back 3. Talking Trees 4. Dangerous to Delicious 5. Weapons of the FutureMore4
2010Mark MiodownikSize Matters1. Why Elephants Can't Dance but Hamsters Can Skydive 2. Why Chocolate Melts and Jet Planes Don't 3. Why Mountains Are So SmallBBC Four
2011Bruce HoodMeet Your Brain1. What's in your head? 2. Who's in charge here anyway? 3. Are you thinking what I'm thinking?
2012Peter WothersThe Modern Alchemist1. Air: the elixir of life 2. Water: the fountain of youth 3. Earth: the philosopher's stone
2013Alison WoollardLife Fantastic1. Where do I come from? 2. Am I a Mutant? 3. Could I live forever?
2014Danielle GeorgeSparks will fly: How to Hack your Home1. The light bulb moment 2. Making contact 3. A new revolution
2015Kevin FongHow to survive in space1. Lift off! 2. Life in Orbit 3. The next frontier
2016Saiful IslamSupercharged: Fuelling the future1. Let there be light! 2. People Power 3. Fully charged
2017Sophie ScottThe Language of Life1. Say it with Sound 2. Silent Messages 3. The Word
2018Alice Roberts Aoife McLysaghtWho am I?1. Where Do I Come From? 2. What Makes Me Human? 3. What Makes Me, Me?
2019Hannah FrySecrets and Lies: The Hidden Power of Maths1. How to Get Lucky 2. How to Bend the Rules 3. How Can We All Win?
2020Christopher Jackson Helen Czerski Tara ShinePlanet Earth: A user's guide1. Earth Engine 2. Water World 3. Up in the Air
2021Jonathan Van-TamGoing viral: How Covid changed science forever1. The Invisible Enemy 2. The Perfect Storm 3. Fighting Back
2022Sue BlackSecrets of Forensic Science1. Dead Body 2. Missing Body 3. Living Body
2023Michael WooldridgeThe Truth about AI1. How to Build an Intelligent Machine 2. My AI Life 3. The Future of AI: Dream or Nightmare?
2024Chris van TullekenThe Truth About Food1. From Tastebuds to Toilet 2. How Food Makes Us 3. The Big Food Hack
2025Maggie Aderin-PocockIs There Life Beyond Earth?1. Destination Moon 2. Searching the Solar System 3. To the Stars and Beyond

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