Professor Caroline Dodds Pennock (she/her)
B.A., M.St., D.Phil. (Oxon), FRHistS
School of History, Philosophy and Digital Humanities
Professor in International History
Department Director of One University


+44 114 222 2579
Full contact details
School of History, Philosophy and Digital Humanities
Jessop West
1 Upper Hanover Street
ºù«Ӱҵ
S3 7RA
- Profile
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I have been at ºù«Ӱҵ since 2010, and am probably best known as the only British Aztec historian, though my current research has branched out across the Atlantic, bringing Indigenous histories into a global framework.
I have just published a major trade book, , telling the stories of the Indigenous Americans who ‘discovered’ Europe in the sixteenth century. The story of these Indigenous Americans abroad is a story of abduction, loss, cultural appropriation, and, as they saw it, of apocalypse - a story that has largely been absent from our collective imagination of the times.
As well as pestering people on twitter , I also work as a popular history writer, consultant, and ‘talking head’ expert for TV and radio, having appeared on programmes for broadcasters including the BBC, Channel 4, Sky, the Smithsonian Channel and Netflix.
My first degree was Ancient and Modern History at Corpus Christi College, Oxford, where I stayed on to read Women's Studies (MSt) before receiving my D.Phil. in Aztec history in 2004. Having been a Temporary Lecturer and then Research Fellow in Cambridge, I spent three years as Lecturer in Early Modern History at Leicester before moving to the lovely city of ºù«Ӱҵ, where I’ve been happily settled ever since.
- Research interests
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Having started out as an Aztec-Mexica historian, the scope of my work has broadened in recent years, and I have just published a book about the thousands of Indigenous Americans who travelled to Europe before the founding of Jamestown in 1607. When we think of the early modern period, we imagine Christopher Columbus ‘discovering’ America. But, at the same instant, the great civilisations of the Americas discovered Europe. Tens of thousands of Native Americans made the journey across the Atlantic from the very moment of that first encounter, and these Indigenous pioneers forged the course of European civilisation, just as surely as Europe changed America. Some of the findings from this research were recently published in (free access through this link).
My first book (which came out in paperback in 2011) won the Royal Historical Society’s Gladstone Prize for 2008. The book explored how human sacrifice could be a comprehensible part of everyday life and existence, and violence has remained a major theme of my work, forming the focus of several international collaborations, including co-editing a volume of the new .
Pursuing my wider interest in global history, I have also recently completed an article about '' with my colleague Amanda Power, and am part of several international networks focusing on topics ranging from Global Middle Ages to .
- Publications
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- Books
- Edited books
- Journal articles
- Chapters
- Book reviews
- Website content
- Theses / Dissertations
- Other
Books
Edited books
Journal articles
Chapters
Book reviews
Website content
Theses / Dissertations
Other
- Research group
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Research supervision
I am keen to supervise research students in Indigenous American (particularly Mexican), Spanish American, colonial and Atlantic history, particularly those interested in Native travellers, gender, violence and early colonial sources. I would also be happy to discuss projects related to cultural exchange, imperial and Indigenous histories and Native American cultures.
- Completed students
- Hannah Slack - Animals and the Shaping of the Early English Atlantic Experience, 1550-1630.
- Harriet Smart - Choreography, Flexibility and Conformity in Postclassic Nahua Rituals.
- Teaching interests
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I see teaching as central to my work, and I have received teaching awards from Leicester and ºù«Ӱҵ, related to my interests in innovative teaching, learning and assessment, particularly in the field of e-learning.
I teach on a range of early modern, Indigenous, American and colonial topics, as well as on public history and questions of decolonisation. I particularly enjoy encouraging students to engage with the relevance of history in the contemporary world.
- Teaching activities
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Undergraduate:
- HST2028 - Tenochtitlan, City of Blood and Flowers: Aztec Society in the Early Sixteenth Century
- HST2502 Understanding the Aztecs: Life and Death in Early Sixteenth-Century MExico
- HST31207 - Cannibals and Christians: Mexico and Spain c. 1492-1600
Postgraduate:
- HST6043 - Burying the White Gods: Indigenous People in the Early Modern Colonial World
- Professional activities and memberships
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- - Fellow (FRHistS)
- - Member
- - Member
- - Member
Previous administrative roles
- Employability and Careers
- Director of Learning and Teaching
- Digital Media and Communications Co-ordinator
- Public engagement
I am keen on communicating history to a broad audience, and my latest book, is a popular history, published by W&N in the UK and Knopf in America. As well as giving public lectures and school talks, I have media experience as a historical writer, consultant and expert ‘talking head’ for TV, radio, websites, publishers and popular magazines. I also work with schools and with the educational group , who regularly feature my research on their website. You can find me on twitter .
In the media:
In January 2023, On Savage Shores was the Radio 4 and I appeared discussing my research on Radio 4’s and Radio 3’s . I also discussed my book on podcasts including , , and as well as being interviewed by the Smithsonian Magazine and BBC History Magazine.
History Today put me ‘’ with their probing questions in July 2017. In January 2018, I responded to media reports of the possible discovery of cocoliztli: the germ responsible for killing 15 million Aztecs. As well as , I was interviewed by both and on Radio 4. You can also hear me talking about the Aztecs on the , shedding light on the history featured in the TV series, and on the acclaimed BBC podcast, , which brings together historians and comedians to learn and laugh about the past
I have appeared on TV programmes for global broadcasters including the BBC, the Science Channel, Sky, Channel 4 and the Smithsonian Channel and have featured on on Radio 4. Most recently, I went in search of the , which was broadcast on Channel 4 in the UK. I have also acted as a historical consultant for several TV projects, including for the BBC and for the History Channel.
You can see me talking about early modern Dutch map-making in the BBC's [at c.0.58 and 2.24] or hear me talking about the and the on In Our Time. I have also appeared repeatedly on BBC History
Magazine's , Dan Snow’s History Hit and Suzannah Lipscomb’s Not Just The Tudors.My other TV appearances include: Secrets: The Golden Raft of El Dorado and Secrets: A Viking Map?; Ancient Black Ops: Aztec Eagle Warriors; and Masterpieces of the British Museum: The Aztec Double-Headed Serpent [ and ].
You can also hear me on the acclaimed history and comedy podcast , as well as on the , shedding light on the Aztec history featured in the TV series.
Popular History Writing
As well as writing articles for popular publications such as History Today and BBC History Magazine, I have also consulted on a number of fiction and children’s books, as well as blogging for . I was also invited to be a guest blogger for Scientific American on ''.
My popular publications include:
- Co-authored with Leila Blackbird, 'How Making Space For Indigenous Peoples Changes History' in Helen Carr and Suzannah Lipscomb (eds), What is History, Now? (2021_, pp.247-62
- ‘Head to Head: Are Empires Always Bad? The Aztec Empire’, History Today (July 2019)
- ‘When Moctezuma Met Cortés’, BBC World Histories Magazine (December 2018)
- ‘Have scientists really found the germ responsible for killing 15m Aztecs?’, The Conversation (January 2018)
- 'In Search of the Real Aztecs', BBC World Histories Magazine (November 2017)
- 'Fall of the Aztecs: Moctezuma: Collaborator or victim?', BBC Knowledge Magazine (April 2012)
- 'Moctezuma: Collaborator or victim?', BBC History Magazine (October 2009)
- 'Cortés and Montezuma', BBC History Magazine (November 2007)