Dr Zubin Mistry (BA, MA, PhD)

Background

I grew up round the corner from Wembley Stadium in north-west London. A previous incarnation of this profile suggested that's what lies behind an amateur interest in the history of football. But I've since deleted this because my unusual ability to remember the hat-tricks scored by the former Arsenal, Middlesborough and Hull City footballer, Ray Parlour, was getting mistaken for some form of historical expertise. (Two hat-tricks, incidentally, against Werder Bremen and Newcastle United).

If I do have any expertise, it lies elsewhere. I studied Classics at Cambridge as an undergraduate before doing an MA in Ancient History and then a PhD, both at University College London, which makes it sound like this was always the plan. It wasn't. I originally wanted to be a ground-breaking investigative journalist who moonlighted as a satirist writing under a pseudonym. But, in a surprise development, things did not go to plan. Anyhow, originally a clean-cut classicist, I drifted into the post-Roman world as a PhD student and ended up a less than clean-cut medieval historian, though I retain a strong preference for dates with three digits. Throughout my postgraduate years I worked in a bookshop; if ever you catch me looking pensive, I'm probably reminiscing about the staff discount. While writing up the PhD I became one of those people who goes on about how good The Wire is.

We've now reached the point in the staff profile where established genre conventions require me to skip over patchier bits of my employment history, omit to mention many unsuccessful applications as well as a few embarrassing interview stories and certainly leave out the fact that during this period I re-watched The Wire, which was even better on a second viewing. 

So, let's just say I spent two years as a Teaching Fellow at University College London and, then, in 2014 moved to Queen Mary University of London as a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow. I moved up to Edinburgh in 2015 and morphed into a Lecturer in 2017. I was promoted to Senior Lecturer in 2022, which suggests that career progression is possible even for people who are not entirely sure what 'leading development activity' means. 

Within History, Classics and Archaeology I'm involved in the Histories of Gender and Sexuality research group and the History of Science, Medicine and Technology research Group

Responsibilities & affiliations

Centre for Medieval & Renaissance Studies, Centre for Late Antique, Islamic and Byzantine Studies

Fellow of the Royal Historical Society

Series editor, Global Histories of Premodern Health and Healing (Edinburgh University Press)

Undergraduate teaching

Pre-honours (years 1 and 2)

  • Historian's Toolkit [course organiser]
  • Medieval Worlds: A Journey through the Middle Ages
  • Introduction to Historiography
  • Transformation of the Roman World ca. 300-800: Towards Byzantium and the Early Medieval West

Honours (years 3 and 4):

  • Early Medieval Sexualities, c.500-1000 
  • Slavery in the Early Middle Ages

Postgraduate teaching

  • Debating Marriage between Antiquity and the Middle Ages
  • Historical Methodology

Open to PhD supervision enquiries?

Yes

Current PhD students supervised

Name - Degree - Thesis topic - Supervision type

  • Hayley Boulton - PhD - The social and cultural contexts of gynaecological texts in the early medieval west, c. 700-1000 - Joint supervisor
  • Joseph Dax - PhD - Concepts of community in late antique Provence - Second supervisor
  • Murdo Homewood - PhD - Medical Imagery and the Experience of the Audience in the Pastoral Work of Augustine of Hippo - Second supervisor
  • Aristotelis Nayfa - PhD - Self-sustainability of the Byzantine court: Exploring the inflows, outflows, and provincial diffusion of tenth-century aristocratic funds - Additional supervisor

Past PhD students supervised

Name - Degree - Thesis topic - Supervision type - Completion year

  • Emma Trivett - PhD - The significance of childlessness for thirteenth- and fourteenth-century English and Scottish royal couples - Joint supervisor - 2022
  • Jae-keong Chan - PhD - Conflict, dispute, and charismatic leadership: Lanfranc of Canterbury and his ecclesiastical leadership in Norman England - Second supervisor - 2022

Research summary

Places: 

  • Europe
  • Mediterranean

Themes: 

  • Culture
  • Gender
  • Ideas
  • Medicine, Science & Technology
  • Politics
  • Religion
  • Society

Periods: 

  • Antiquity
  • Medieval

Current research interests

I'm a historian of early medieval Europe between 500 and 1000 whose work focusses in particular on reproduction, medicine and healing. I have researched the history of abortion and infertility in relation to religious beliefs, legal regimes, political culture and medical practice. My first book (Abortion in the Early Middle Ages) explored the varying and even conflicting ways ecclesiastical authorities, secular powers and local communities reacted to abortion across several early medieval societies. While a lot of my research to date has been about how people thought, I am increasingly interested in what people did and experienced, and the material circumstances in which they did so. I would also like to look more at wider comparative histories of premodern reproduction and medicine.

Past project grants

The Sterility of their Wives: Handling Infertility in Carolingian Europe (Leverhulme Early Career Research Fellowship, 2014-17)

Book

Zubin Mistry, Abortion in the Early Middle Ages, c.500-900 (Woodbridge: Boydell and Brewer, 2015) 

 

Edited volume

Zubin Mistry (ed.), The Cultural History of Pregnancy and Childbirth in the Middle Ages (600-1500) (Bloomsbury, under contract) 

Zubin Mistry and Ahmed Ragab (eds), The Cambridge History of Medicine, Vol. 2. Medieval Medicine, c.600-1500 (Cambridge University Press, under contract)

 

Journal articles 

Zubin Mistry, 'Infertility in history and the history of reproduction', Gender & History 32.3 (2020), 657-75 

Rosemary Elliot and Zubin Mistry, 'Introduction: Gender and reproduction', Gender & History 32.3 (2020), 509-22

Zubin Mistry, 'Ermentrude's consecration (866): Queen-making rites and biblical templates for Carolingian fertility', Early Medieval Europe  27.4 (2019), 567-88 

Zubin Mistry, 'The sexual shame of the chaste: "Abortion miracles" in early medieval saints’ lives’, Gender & History. 25.3 (2013), 607-20.

 

Book chapters

Zubin Mistry, 'Fertility control', in Zubin Mistry (ed.), The Cultural History of Pregnancy and Childbirth in the Middle Ages (600-1500) (London: Bloomsbury, under contract) 

Zubin Mistry, 'Introduction', in Zubin Mistry (ed.), The Cultural History of Pregnancy and Childbirth in the Middle Ages (600-1500) (London: Bloomsbury, under contract)

Zubin Mistry, 'The body', in Elaine Pereira Farrell and Rob Meens (eds), Reading Medieval Sources: Penitential Books (Leiden: Brill, forthcoming) 

Zubin Mistry, 'The womb of the Church: Uterine expulsion in the Early Middle Ages', in M. Erica Couto-Ferreira and Lorenzo Verderame (eds), Cultural Constructions of the Uterus in Pre-Modern Societies, Past and Present (Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2018), 150-69