Clare Downham is an English academic, a medievalist and historian of Ireland and Britain and the Vikings, specialising in the era 400 to 1350.[1]

She studied for degrees in Medieval History at the University of St Andrews and in Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic at the University of Cambridge, completing a PhD at the latter in 2003.[2][3]

In 2004, she took up a John O'Donovan scholarship in Celtic Studies from the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies,[4] before taking a lectureship in the Celtic department at the University of Aberdeen and then in Irish Studies at the University of Liverpool.[2] Subsequently, at Liverpool, she became Professor of Medieval History with the Institute of Irish Studies.[1]

Select publications

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  • "The Chronology of the Last Scandinavian Kings of York, AD 937–954", Northern History 40 (2003), pp. 25–51
  • "Eric Bloodaxe – axed? The Mystery of the Last Viking King of York" Mediaeval Scandinavia 14 (2004), pp. 51–77
  • Viking kings of Britain and Ireland : the Dynasty of Ivarr to AD 1014 (Edinburgh : Dunedin Academic, 2007)
  • "'Hiberno-Norwegians' and 'Anglo-Danes': Anachronistic Ethnicities in Viking Age England", Mediaeval Scandinavia 19 *2009), pp. 139-69
  • No horns on their helmets? essays on the insular Viking-age (Centre for Anglo-Saxon Studies and the Centre for Celtic Studies, University of Aberdeen: Aberdeen, 2013)
  • (ed.) Jocelin of Furness : proceedings of the 2011 Conference (Donington: Shaun Tyas, 2013)
  • Medieval Ireland (Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2018)

References

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  1. ^ a b Liverpool Profile, University of Liverpool, retrieved 2024-10-15
  2. ^ a b "Clare Downham (L 91-93)", The Old St. Beghian, no. 179, The St. Beghian Society, January 2011, retrieved 2024-10-15
  3. ^ Britain and Scandinavian Ireland: the dynasty of Ívarr and pan-insular politics to 1014. University of Cambridge Library, University of Cambridge, retrieved 2024-10-15
  4. ^ Downham, Clare (2001), Medieval Ireland, Cambridge: University of Cambridge, ISBN 1107031311, p. i (author profile).
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