Stephen Church


Stephen Church, is a writer and professor of medieval history at the University of East Anglia and is regarded as an expert on King John. In 2015 his book King John: England, Magna Carta, and the Making of a Tyrant was one of the Financial Times best books of the year.

History

Church is an expert in Medieval History, specifically the 12th Century and works at the University of East Anglia School of History department which he joined in 1995 after completing his postgraduate work in London. Preceding this Stephen had worked in several trades including a bank clerk; a labourer; a buyer of cardboard boxes and plastic bottles, and a housing liaison officer for Camden Council. He is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and the Society of Antiquaries of London. He is also a trustee of the Allen Brown Memorial Trust, where he organises the R. Allen Brown Memorial Lecture that is given at the opening of the Battle Conference on Anglo-Norman Studies. The Trust also gives conference bursaries for postgraduate students and sponsors sessions at other conferences and a postgraduate reading group.
Since 1994 he has written several articles and books on Medieval History, and is a regular conference organiser and speaker on the subject of King John. Stephen has been regularly acknowledged as strong support to fellow Historians in their writing and has lectured in Europe on the subject of the Plantagenet Empire. In 2010 he co-lead with Professor Elisabeth Tyler two reading groups which aimed to read Orderic Vitalis's Historica ecclesiastica from start to finish and reflect on its content. In 2015 he appeared on Saturday Extra on Australian station ABC Radio with Nicholas Cowdery to discuss why does Magna Carta still matter, and co-presented the BBC programme The Last Journey of the Magna Carta King, part of the BBC Taking Liberties season, with archaeologist Dr Ben Robinson.

Books