Michael Wood is the writer and
presenter of many critically acclaimed series on television, including Art
of the Western World, Legacy, In the Footsteps of Alexander the Great
and Conquistadors. He is author of over seventy TV films that
have been shown worldwide and of several best selling and highly praised
books.
He was educated at Manchester
Grammar School and Oriel College Oxford where he did postgraduate
research in Anglo-Saxon history. Since then he has worked as a
journalist, broadcaster and filmmaker. His films have centred on
history, but have included travel (Great Railway Journeys of the
World; River Journeys; The Sacred Way); politics (Saddam's
Killing Fields: an award winning account of the destruction of the
Marsh Arabs of South Iraq) and cultural history (the award winning Hitler's
Search for the Holy Grail, 1999: a study of the abuse of history and
archaeology under the Nazis)
Conquistadors,
his last four part series followed four epic journeys during the Spanish
Conquest of the New World. They were broadcast by the BBC in Nov/Dec
2000 (repeated July/Aug 2001) and in the US by PBS in May 2001. That
year the series shared with Inspector Morse the accolade of the best
reviewed TV series of the year.
Among Michael Wood's special
interests Greece has always figured prominently since he hitched around
it in his teens and slept out on the mountainsides of Mycenae, Mistra
and Crete. He has made 15 films in Greece and among his publications are
In Search of the Trojan War (on the archaeology of Homer and the
Bronze Age) and In the Footsteps of Alexander the Great (both
recently published in new editions by the BBC and, in the US, the
University of California Press) These books have been translated into a
number of European languages, including Greek. He hopes to start a
further series on ancient Greek culture next year.
Indian civilisation has also
long been a special interest: Over the years Michael Wood has made a
dozen visits to India and in addition to his films, Darshan and
Legacy, he has written The Smile of Murugan, about a small
town in Tamil Nadu and its annual pilgrimage: reissued by John Murray
May 2002 this was reviewed as "one of the most enlightening books
on South India ever written".
His academic background was in
early medieval English history; among his publications are In Search
of the Dark Ages and Domesday. He published a recent series of
medieval essays as In Search of England. Among its many reviews
the Times Literary Supplement said: "Better than any historian for
decades, Wood brings home not just the ways in which buildings,
landscapes
and written texts may be read,
but the sensual beauty of encounters with them". Michael Wood was
elected a fellow of the Royal Historical Society in 2001.
He is currently working on a
book and a four part TV series for BBC/PBS, The Life and Times of
William Shakespeare to be broadcast during spring 2003.
Michael Wood lives in North London with his
wife and their two daughters, who are already good travellers, and who
visit Greece every year.