Malcolm Todd

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Malcolm Todd is a British historian and archaeologist with an interest in the interaction between the Roman Empire and Western Europe.

He graduated from the University of Wales and Brasenose College, Oxford and became Reader in Archaeology at the University of Nottingham. He was Professor of Archaeology at the University of Exeter from 1979 until 1996, when he took a Chair at the University of Durham and became Principal of Trevelyan College. He is a Senior Research Fellow of both the British Academy and the Leverhulme Trust. He retired in 2000.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Everyday Life of the Barbarians: Goths, Franks and Vandals. London, 1972
  • The Coritani. London, 1973
  • The Northern Barbarians: 100 BC - AD 300. London, 1975. [Rev. ed. Oxford, 1987]
  • The Walls of Rome. London, 1978
  • Roman Britain 55 BC - AD 400: the province beyond ocean. Brighton, 1985
  • The South West to AD 1000. London, 1987 [with contributions by Andrew Flemming]
  • The Early Germans. Oxford, 1992
  • Migrants & invaders: the movement of peoples in the ancient world. Stroud, 2001
  • (ed.) A Companion to Roman Britain. Malden, Mass., 2004

[edit] External links

This biographical article about an archaeologist is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Languages