Following a Junior Research Fellowship at Girton College, Cambridge, and a Warwick Research Fellowship at the University of Warwick, Steve Hindle was appointed Professor of History at Warwick in 2003. After sixteen years in the Warwick History Department, he assumed the W. M. Keck Foundation Directorship of Research at The Huntington Library in San Marino, California in 2011, where he spent eleven years (including two as Interim President). He was appointed to the Hirst Chair in Early Modern British History at Washington University in St. Louis in 2022.
The book we have is excellent, particularly as an engaging and authoritative way for students and newcomers to the seventeenth century to immerse themselves in the experiences of daily life, to learn much of what they need to know, to see how much work is involved in mastering the subject, and hopefully to be inspired to do so by a historian whose mastery of the subject is evident on every page. * Henry French, Family and Community History vol. 26 /3 * The Social Topography of a Rural Community provides a fine example of how to use record linkage productively. * The Local Historian * The book we have is excellent, particularly as an engaging and authoritative way for students and newcomers to the seventeenth century to immerse themselves in the experiences of daily life. * Family & Community History, Vol. 26/3 * The Social Topography of a Rural Community provides a fine example of how to use record linkage productively. * The Local Historian *