Anastasios Christodoulou

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Anastasios Christodoulou in 1996.

Anastasios Christodoulou

CBE (1 May 1932 – 20 May 2002), often known as Chris Christodoulou, was a British-based Greek Cypriot university administrator. He was the Secretary General of the Association of Commonwealth Universities and the Foundation Secretary of the Open University
.

Early years

Christodoulou was born in Cyprus in 1932, the oldest of three sons of Yianni Christodoulos, a cobbler, and his wife, Maria, née Haji. He came to London when he was three to join his father who was working as a kitchen porter in Soho. He hardly knew his mother, who died giving birth to twin sons, who lived. These twin brothers later went to live in Barbados with foster parents. Christodoulou had been born on Easter Day and was named 'Anastasios' by his parents, meaning 'Resurrection'.[1] He lived with his father above a Soho restaurant and early on displayed a precocious intelligence. He went to a local primary school aged five, not knowing a word of English, but by half-term was interpreting for much of the local Greek Cypriot community. Aged 11 he won a place at St Marylebone Grammar School.[2]

The Open University

After graduating in 1955 from

Queen's Birthday Honours.[4] In May 1981, he was awarded an honorary degree from the Open University as Doctor of the University.[citation needed
]

Later career

Christodoulou was the Secretary General of the

Richmond, The American International University in London, and in 1997 received an honorary doctorate in International relations from that university.[7] He also received honorary doctorates from the University of Ottawa and the University of Auckland. In 1995 he received the National University of Lesotho's fiftieth anniversary award for distinguished service to African education.[2]

Christodoulou retained his links with Cyprus. With Loucas Haji-Ioannou, the father of Stelios Haji-Ioannou, the founder of EasyJet, he attempted to set up a new Cyprus university, but, to his disappointment, Haji-Ioannou pulled out. Shortly before his death Christodoulou returned to the village where he had been born but was unhappy to discover that it had been occupied by Turkish troops. During his last years he was affected by eyesight problems and was treated for cancer.[3]

On 10 December 1955, he married Joan Patricia Edmunds, a librarian and the daughter of John Samuel Edmunds, an engineer. They had two sons and two daughters.

Anastasios Christodoulou died from cancer at the General Hospital, Milton Keynes, on 20 May 2002.

The grave of Anastasios Christodoulou in 2023

He was buried in the churchyard of the now deconsecrated Church of St Michael of the Open University located in the grounds of the university in Walton, Milton Keynes.

Publications

  • 'The Commonwealth of Universities: The Story of the Association of Commonwealth Universities, 1963–1988' by Hugh W. Springer, Alastair Niven, Anastasios Christodoulou, Association of Commonwealth Universities Staff Published by Association of Commonwealth Universities,

References

  1. ^ 'Resurrection' on the Electronic Translator.
  2. ^
    Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, online edition, Oxford University Press
    , January 2006; online edition, January 2009 (subscription required). Retrieved 14 April 2009.
  3. ^ a b Anastasios Christodoulou—Brilliant administrator and founding father of the Open University, The Guardian, 28 May 2002. Retrieved 14 April 2009
  4. ^ "No. 47549". The London Gazette (Supplement). 2 June 1978. pp. 6235–6236.
  5. Brunel University
  6. Brunel University
    .
  7. Richmond, The American International University in London
    .