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Professor Matthew Seligmann
Professor of Naval History

Marie Jahoda 212

Summary

I Joined Brunel as a Reader in 2012 and became a professor in 2015. I am a specialist on intelligence, threat assessment, security, armaments races and the the origins of modern wars. My main focus is on how the the British government responded to the German challenge in the first decades of the twentieth century, with particular emphasis on the naval competition between the two countries. I have published widely on these topics, including authoring or co-authoring over ten books, many book chapters and numerous articles and reviews. My teaching tends to focus on questions of intelligence, security and conflict, but I am also interested in how we (individually and as societies) fashion a past useful for the purposes of the present.

Qualifications

D.Phil History (Sussex)

M.A.(Hons) History (Edinburgh)

Responsibility

Director of Internationalisation

Academic Exchanges and Partnerships

Newest selected publications

Seligmann, MS. (2023) 'Competing Narratives on Economic Warfare: The Unlikely Origin of Archibald Bell’s Unwanted History of the Blockade of Germany'. The International History Review, 0 (ahead of print). pp. 1 - 13. ISSN: 0707-5332 Open Access Link

Journal article

Seligmann, M. (2023) 'Sir Henry Newbolt, the Naval Staff, and the Writing of the Official History of the Origins and Inauguration of Convoy in 1917'. Journal of Military History (US), 87 (1). pp. 125 - 144. ISSN: 0899-3718

Journal article

Seligmann, M. (2022) '‘Mass anywhere on Sea or Land’: Catholicism and the Royal Navy, 1901-1906'. War in History, 29 (4). pp. 763 - 781. ISSN: 0968-3445 Open Access Link

Journal article

Seligmann, MS. (2022) 'Review of The War Lords and the Gallipoli Disaster: How globalized trade led Britain to its worst defeat of the First World War'. The Mariner's Mirror, 108 (1). pp. 102 - 107. ISSN: 0025-3359

Journal article

Seligmann, M. (2021) '‘The Special Service Squadron of the Royal Marines’: The Royal Navy and Organic Amphibious Warfare Capability before 1914'. Journal of Strategic Studies, 44 (5). pp. 715 - 736. ISSN: 0140-2390 Open Access Link

Journal article
More publications(56)
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