Fantastic Beasts and Where I Found Them

Join us for the first in a revamped series of Professorial Inaugural Lectures as Professor Richard Thomas discusses his research into human-animal relationships.

The Professorial Inaugural Lecture series is free to attend and features newly appointed professors at the Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ discussing their areas of expertise in front of a public audience. This first lecture will be held on Monday 9 December in the Peter Williams Lecture Theatre at 5.30pm.

In this lecture you can find out how five animals have shaped thinking about the complexity of past human-animal relationships. Delve in to the stories of a Manx shearwater, a spur-thighed tortoise, an African elephant, a domestic cow and a broiler chicken. Each animal illuminates the centrality of animals in human lives, as markers of identity, companions, magical beings, celebrities and commodities.

Professor Richard Thomas has been at the Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ since 2003 with teaching and research interests centring on the study of animal bones from archaeological sites.

His research has two main strands:

  • The reconstruction of past human-animal relationships, predominantly in medieval and early modern England;
  • Palaeopathology – the study of animal health and disease in the past.

For the past five years, he has co-directed the Bradgate Park Fieldschool. This project blends student training, public engagement and research and explores 15,000 years of human activity in the upland landscape of Bradgate Park, Leicestershire. A highlight of this project has been identifying the probable childhood home of Lady Jane Grey beneath the standing ruins on the site.

To book your place for this fascinating lecture, .

All our inaugural lectures are open to the public and free to attend. A drinks reception will follow the lecture.