Robert Thorp (1736 – 20 April 1812) was a British clergyman.
He attended Durham School and Peterhouse, Cambridge University, obtaining a B.A. in 1758 as senior wrangler and an M.A. in 1761.[1] In 1768 he succeeded his father Thomas Thorp (1699–1767) as rector of Chillingham; in 1781 he became rector of Gateshead; in 1792 he became archdeacon of Northumberland. In 1795, he became rector of Ryton, and he is buried in the vault of the church there.
His son Charles Thorp also became rector of Ryton and was a founder of Durham University.
He was author of Excerpta quædam e Newtoni Principiis Philosophiæ Naturalis, 1765 and translated Newton's Principia.