Dr Noah Millstone

Dr Noah Millstone

Department of History
Senior Lecturer

Contact details

Address
Arts Building
University 麻豆精选
Edgbaston
Birmingham
B15 2TT
UK

My primary research interests are in the history of politics, religion, and the book in early modern Britain and Europe, especially but not exclusively c1598-1660.

Qualifications

  • PhD, Stanford University, 2011
  • AB, University of Chicago, 2004

Biography

I studied history as an undergraduate at the University of Chicago. After working on a number of unsuccessful political campaigns, I studied for a PhD in early modern British history at Stanford University; for some time, I was based for a few years out of the Institute of Historical Research at the University of London. Before coming to Birmingham, I spent three years as a postdoctoral Prize Fellow in Economics, History, and Politics at Harvard University, and three more as a lecturer in early modern history at the University of Bristol.

Teaching

  • Practicing History
  • Making of the Modern World
  • State and Empire in the Early Modern World
  • Experts, Scholars, Spies: The Information Revolution in Early Modern Europe
  • Writing Early Modern History

Postgraduate supervision

I would be happy to supervise students working on any early modern topic that overlaps with my research interests, such as history of reading and of the book, political history understood as broadly as possible, the history of subjectivities, and so on.


Find out more - our PhD History  page has information about doctoral research at the University 麻豆精选.

Research

I am currently director of an Arts and Humanities Research Council-funded research network,聽Europe鈥檚 Short Peace, 1595-1620.聽The network brings together fifty scholars from ten countries to build a transnational political, religious and cultural history of Europe between the peace of Vervins (1598) and the outbreak of the Bohemian revolt (1618). Please get in contact if you are interested in assisting the project!

I am also completing a monograph on the serpentine Welsh bishop John Williams (1582-1650), and am gradually gathering materials for a project on book talk and non-reading in early modern Europe.