HA short course: The World of the Normans

September–December 2026

Published: 24th June 2026

Before and After 1066 and Bayeux

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(Registration is via Cademy which opens in a new window. Please read the course terms and conditions before registering)

What does the course cover?

2026 will see the Bayeux Tapestry exhibited in the UK for the first time. 2027 is the 1000-year anniversary of the birth of William the Conqueror and the designated Year of the Normans. That means there will be a lot of articles, stories, documentaries and fluff about the period. Some of it will be well researched and some of it less so. That is why we have a new short course on the World of the Normans that is bringing together some of the best British based university scholars currently researching and working on this area. They will explore Britain before the pivotal 1066 date as well as what really know about the Normans and their impact across the British Isles, and far beyond into the Mediterranean.

  • How is the course structured and delivered?

    This course will run from September to December 2026 and will be delivered entirely online. It will include ten live lectures with discussion led by one of the academics on the course but will be supported by the other academics taking part.

    Throughout the course you will have access to a specially selected bank of online resources to support your learning and understanding of the topic. Recordings of the live sessions will be added to the resource unit around a week after they have taken place.

    Those who sign up for the course can dip in and out as they wish, attend the live lectures, or catch up on the recordings afterwards; however, we encourage live participation in these lectures and workshops to make the most of the experience. There are no requirements for participants to produce any output or assessment for the course – just to take part and enjoy the opportunity to learn about a fascinating subject from leading academics in the field.

    Unless otherwise stated, all sessions will take place between 7.30–9.00pm (45mins lecture, 45mins chat, discussion and Q&A). You need to book for the course to receive the meeting link details and access to the accompanying resource unit.

    Sessions include:

    • • 29 Sept: The Settlement of Normandy | Leonie Hicks 
    • • 6 Oct: Edward the Confessor: Normans before Conquest | Levi Roach
    • • 13 Oct: The Normans in the Mediterranean: Southern Italy and Sicily (c.1000-c.1100) | Paul Oldfield
    • • 20 Oct: William the Conqueror and the Case for Conquest | Levi Roach
    • • 3 Nov: The Bayeux Tapestry | Emily Winkler
    • • 10 Nov: Writing about the Conquest in the 12th century: Confronting the stereotypes | Emily Winkler
    • • 17 Nov: The Normans and the Origins of English Imperialism | Colin Veach
    • • 24 Nov: Conquest and Colonisation: Wales and Ireland | Colin Veach
    • • 1 Dec: Norman identity and material culture | Leoni Hicks
    • • 8 Dec: The ‘Other’ Realm’: The Kingdom of Sicily until c.1200 | Paul Oldfield
  • What does it cost?

    This course is free to all current HA members, subject to booking. You must have a valid membership at the time of booking and attending the course. If you have a corporate membership, the additional staff users on your account can also register for free.

    The course is charged at £90 (including VAT) for non-members. Registration is available online only through Cademy, and payment must be made at the point of booking by credit or debit card.

    Did you know? It costs less than the course fee to become an HA member* and gain access to this and all HA short courses for free, plus a range of other benefits all year round. Find out more about our membership options
    (*for individual Historian (general) membership)

    To access the module content, you will either need to have an active HA membership or a free basic account. Become a member or register for a free basic account.

  • Who is it for?

    The course is open to everybody but is particularly designed for lifelong learners. It is available to anybody with an interest or curiosity in the topic who wants to learn more while developing their historical knowledge and skills, without the pressure of any form of assessment. It is ideal for those who prefer a flexible pace of learning and who would like the opportunity to interact with the course leaders and participants. You do not need any prior knowledge of the topic to take part.

  • Who are the course lecturers?

    Professor Leoni Hicks is professor of medieval studies at Canterbury Christ Church University. She has written widely on aspects of Norman religious, social and cultural history and is currently finishing a book on landscapes in Norman historical writing. From 1 September 2023-31 August 2025 Leonie will hold a Leverhulme Major Research Fellowship to complete her project 'Landscape of the Normans: Ways of Seeing'.

    Professor Paul Oldfield is Professor of Medieval History at the University of Manchester and his research focuses primarily on Medieval Southern Italy and Sicily c.1000-c.1300. He has published four monographs (including Sanctity and Pilgrimage in Medieval Southern Italy, 1000-1200 (Cambridge University Press, 2014), and Documenting the Past in Medieval Puglia, 1130-1266 (Oxford University Press, 2023)), two co-edited volumes (Crusading and Pilgrimage in the Norman World, with Kathryn Hurlock (Boydell Press, 2015) and Rethinking Norman Italy: Studies in Honour of Graham A. Loud, with Joanna H. Drell (Manchester University Press, 2021)) and multiple journal articles and book chapters in edited volumes. Paul’s research explores urban cultures, and sanctity in Southern Italy and Sicily, including the impact of the intervention of the Normans in the region and the creation of the Kingdom of Sicily which was founded by descendants of the Norman Hauteville dynasty.

    Professor Levi Roach studied at the Universities of Cambridge and Heidelberg, receiving his PhD from the former in 2011. Since 2012, he has taught at the University of Exeter, where is presently Professor of Medieval History and Diplomatic. His research and teaching interests lie in the political and ecclesiastical history of western Europe between the ninth and twelfth centuries. He has published four books on these themes, including a popular history of the Normans (Empires of the Normans).

    Dr Colin Veach is a historian of politics, culture and society in medieval Britain and Ireland. His first monograph Lordship in Four Realms: The Lacy Family 1166-1241 (Manchester, 2014) utilised the lens of ‘lordship’ to look at how one family adapted its strategies of domination in four distinct polities: England, Ireland, Wales and Normandy. He is currently writing a monograph on the English invasion of Ireland for Yale University Press. He is Head of History at the University of Hull and Director of the Victoria County History: Yorkshire, East Riding.

    Dr Emily Winkler is a historian of culture and society in the central Middle Ages at Oxfpord University. She works on historical thinking, emotional history, and colonial experience in the high Middle Ages, with interests in the British Isles, the Anglo-Norman world, and the North Sea zone. Her publications include a monograph Royal Responsibility in Anglo-Norman Historical Writing, and she has co-edited four books: Rewriting History in the Central Middle Ages (Turnhout, 2022), The Normans in the Mediterranean (Turnhout, 2021), Designing Norman Sicily: Material Culture and Society (Woodbridge, 2020), which is an interdisciplinary study of art, architecture, archaeology in high medieval Sicily, and a book about a twelfth-century chronicler and ‘Renaissance man’, Discovering William of Malmesbury (2017).

  • How do I take part?

    Book your place here. The course is free for members or £74 for non-members. More information about membership can be found here.

    (Registration is via Cademy which opens in a new window. Please read the course terms and conditions before registering)