Professor John Blair FBA

The society, culture and landscape of early medieval England, especially the Church and parochial organisation; historical and archaeological sources and approaches
Fellow type
UK Fellow
Year elected
2008
Subjects
Archaeology, Medieval studies

Summary

As both a historian and an archaeologist of the early middle ages, I use written and physical evidence in equal measure: the interplay between environment, buildings, objects, and human activities has always fascinated me. My focus has been on England, but I have regularly pursued comparisons, especially with Francia, eastern Europe and Scandinavia. I have worked and published extensively on medieval social, economic and cultural history; on material culture and technology; on buildings and domestic environments; and on popular belief and religion. I have long practical experience in field archaeology, excavation, and the recording of buildings. Several years of work on the Anglo-Saxon local Church culminated in a substantial monograph published in 2005. During 2010-13, I investigated the material culture and built environment of Anglo-Saxon England with the support of a Leverhulme Major Research Fellowship, which provided the material for my Ford Lectures in 2013. Since then, I have been pursuing (with two colleagues, and supported again by the Leverhulme Trust) one remarkable outcome: the recognition that technically sophisticated grid-planning, based on Roman surveying techniques, was widely used in Anglo-Saxon England.

Current post

Professor of Medieval History and Archaeology, University of Oxford; Fellow and Praelector, The Queen's College

Publications

Early Medieval Surrey 1991

The Church in Anglo-Saxon Society 2005

Anglo-Saxon Oxfordshire 1994

The dangerous dead in early medieval England Early Medieval Studies in Memory of Patrick Wormald 2009

Grid-Planning in Anglo-Saxon Settlements: the Short Perch and the Four-Perch Module Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History, 18 2013

Building Anglo-Saxon England forthcoming 2017

Other Fellows of the British Academy

Professor Susan Rankin FBA

Western medieval music and its transmission and notation from the origins to the 13th century and the development of the Latin liturgy, with an especial focus on ritual

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Professor Marta Mirazón Lahr FBA

Professor in Human Evolutionary Biology and Prehistory, Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge

Marta Mirazon Lahr FBA

Professor John Gowlett FBA

The evolution of early human advanced capabilities; origins and development of design form and proportion in artefacts; investigation of early hominin fire use and its effects

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