Professor Anne Curry
Staff profile – University
of Southampton
Anne is Professor of Medieval History at the University
of Southampton. She took her BA at Manchester University, and continued
her studies there for an MA by research, focusing on Cheshire in the
reigns of Henry IV and V. She was then appointed a Research Assistant
at Teesside Polytechnic, where she began her doctoral studies on Military
Organisation in Lancastrian Normandy, 1422-1450. She taught at the
University of Reading from 1978 to 2004, serving as head of History
and Faculty Director of Teaching and Learning in Arts Humanities, before
moving to her present post at Southampton. She is a member of the AHRC
Postgraduate Committee and also of the RAE 2008 sub-panel for History.
She is also editor of the Journal of Medieval History, and co-editor
of the medieval volume of the Cambridge History of War.
She has worked extensively in the archive repositories of England
and France and has given papers worldwide on her researches, as well
as appearing on several TV and radio programmes. Her publications include
The Hundred Years War (Macmillan Press, 1993, second edn. 2003), The
Battle of Agincourt. Sources and Interpretations (Boydell 2000), Agincourt.
A New History (Tempus Publishing, 2005), as well as scores of articles
in English and French. She was also editor of the Henry VI sections
of the Parliament Rolls of Medieval England (PROME). (SD Editions and
Boydell, 2005).
She first began to be interested in the use of databases for analysis
of armies when the British Academy made an award to enter all of the
names of the men-at-arms who had served in Lancastrian Normandy. She
has since extended this database to the campaigns of Henry V. She is
now developing new research projects on the treaty of Troyes, and on
women in the Hundred Years War, as well as completing a major study
for OUP on The English Army in Normandy, 1415-1450.
The School of Humanities at the University of Southampton is one of
the largest of the University’s twenty-two Schools, with some
290 staff, 3500 students (2300 FTE), and an annual income of around £13
million. Most academic staff are based in one of our seven disciplines:
Archaeology, English, Film, History, Modern Languages, Music and Philosophy.
We have several interdisciplinary groupings and research-based Centres,
such as the Centre of Antiquity and the Middle Ages. The School has
a strong research culture, which is reflected in a high level of publications
across all disciplines, and a vigorous programme of disciplinary and
interdisciplinary seminars and conferences. There are excellent library
facilities. The University has just invested £10m. in a major
refurbishment and extension of the Hartley Library, which also holds
the Wellington, Palmerstone and Mountbatten papers. The History discipline
has 23 staff, with research interests ranging from late antiquity to
the present, and received a 5 rating in the 2001 RAE.
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