Professor David Parrott

David Parrott

Penry Williams Fellow, Tutor in History, Precentor; Professor of Early Modern European History
History and Economics
History
History and Politics
MA DPhil Oxf

After taking his BA and DPhil in History at Oxford (Christ Church and Wolfson College), David was appointed a lecturer at the University of York. He returned to ֶƵ as Fellow and Tutor in 1992, and is Professor of Early Modern European History in the Faculty of History. 

 

Teaching

David teaches European history in the period 1500-1700, with special reference to the history of France and Italy and to European political, military and cultural history. He teaches elements of the first year outline courses in historiography and methodology and more specialized courses on the Spanish New World, early modern Court Culture and the Thirty Years' War.

 

Research Interests 

David's research interests are in early modern European history, primarily the political, social and military history of 17th-century France, but with interests in Northern Italy in the same period. He has written and published on many aspects of European warfare in this period, with a particular interest in mercenaries and private military organization. His present research project involves a return to the study of France and the crisis of the mid-seventeenth century. 

 

Selected Publications

  • Richelieu’s Army.  War, Government and Society in France, 1624-42, Cambridge, CUP, 2001.
  • The Business of War. Military enterprise and military revolution in early modern Europe.  Cambridge: CUP, 2012
  • “The Mantuan Succession, 1627-1631: A sovereignty dispute in early modern Europe”, English Historical Review, cxii, 1997, 20-65.
  • “War and International Relations in Seventeenth-Century Europe”, in J. Bergin (ed), The Oxford History of Seventeenth-Century Europe, Oxford: OUP, 2001.
  • "From military enterprise to standing armies: war, state and society in Western Europe, 1600-1700", in F. Tallett, D. Trim (eds), European Warfare, 1350-1750.  Cambridge: CUP, 2010.
  • “War and the State” in G. Campbell (ed), The Oxford Illustrated History of the Renaissance, Oxford: OUP, forthcoming.
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