Joanna Story

Joanna Story
Professor Story in 2019
Academic background
Alma materDurham University
Academic work
DisciplineHistorian
Sub-discipline
InstitutionsUniversity of Leicester

Joanna Elizabeth Story is a British historian whose speciality is the history of and relationship between Anglo-Saxon England and Carolingian Francia.

Biography

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Story completed her doctorate at Durham University in 1995 with a thesis titled "Charlemagne and Northumbria: The influence of Francia on Northumbrian politics in the later eighth and early ninth centuries".[1]

A Professor of Early Medieval History at the University of Leicester, she has published a number of academic articles, and is the editor of a collection on Charlemagne. Her monograph Carolingian Connections: Anglo-Saxon England and Carolingian Francia, c. 750–870 was praised as "revealing, relevant, and a valuable contribution to medieval history and an extremely useful addition to the corpus of texts on this period in European history".[2] Story worked closely with colleagues at the British Library on their major international exhibition and associated exhibition catalogue Anglo-Saxon kingdoms: Art, Word, War which ran from October 2018 to February 2019.

Monograph

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  • Carolingian Connections: Anglo-Saxon England and Carolingian Francia, c. 750–870 (Ashgate, 2003)
  • Anglo-Saxon Kingdoms: Art, Word, War (Exhibition catalogue with Claire Breay (British Library Publishing 2018)

Edited collections

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  • Charlemagne: Empire and Society (Manchester: Manchester UP, 2005). ISBN 978-0719070884.
  • Anglo-Saxon England and the Continent (with Hans Sauer; Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2011). ISBN 9780866984423.

References

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  1. ^ Story, Joanna Elizabeth (1995). Charlemagne and Northumbria: The influence of Francia on Northumbrian politics in the later eighth and early ninth centuries (PDF). Durham: Durham University (Thesis). Retrieved 24 September 2019.
  2. ^ Sprey, Ilicia J. (2006). "Review of Story, Carolingian Connections". Speculum. 81 (1): 279–81. doi:10.1017/s0038713400020297. JSTOR 20463698.
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