Christopher Wickham

Christopher John Wickham, FBA, FLSW (born 18 May 1950) is Chichele Professor of Medieval History at the University of Oxford and Fellow of All Souls College. He was Professor of Early Medieval History at the University of Birmingham from 1997 to 2005.

Biography

Wickham was educated at Millfield and at Keble College, Oxford, where he obtained first a BA and then in 1975 a DPhil with a thesis entitled Economy and society in 8th century northern Tuscany.

He spent nearly thirty years of his career at the University of Birmingham, as Lecturer (1977–87), Senior Lecturer (1987–89), Reader (1989–93), and Professor of Medieval History (1993–2005). In 2005 he was appointed Chichele Professor of Medieval History in the University of Oxford and Fellow of All Souls College.

In 1998 he was elected Fellow of the British Academy.

He is a member of both the Labour Party and Democratici di Sinistra (Democrats of the Left).

He is married to Byzantine art historian, Professor Leslie Brubaker.

Scholarship

His main area of research is Medieval Italy - and more specifically Tuscany and central Italy - from the end of the Roman empire through to about 1300. His emphasis has largely been social and economic, though he has undertaken study into the legal and political history of the area as well. More generally Wickham has worked under a modified Marxist framework on how European society changed from late antiquity and the early Middle Ages, and has pioneered comparative socio-economic analysis in this period.

In 2005 his work Framing the Early Middle Ages was published, which claims to be the first synthesis of early medieval European history since the 1920s. It is exceptional for its use of hitherto unincorporated evidence from both documentary and archaeological sources as well as its bold use of comparative methods and rejection of national narratives. It has been recognised by various prizes, including the Wolfson History Prize in 2005, the Deutscher Memorial Prize in 2006 and the American Historical Association awarded its James Henry Breasted Prize in January 2007. He has recently just edited Marxist History Writing for the Twenty-First Century, a volume that sees various academics discuss the status and profile of Marxist historiography, and has now produced a general history of early medieval Europe, published by Penguin, which examines cultural, religious and intellectual developments of the period not covered in his previous socio-economic study.

References

Published works

Books

Recent major articles

External links