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Professor Jonathan Conlin

Professor of Modern History

Research interests

  • History of Heathrow Airport
  • The Chevalière Deon and her place in trans history
  • Late Ottoman Empire/Middle East and 1923 Lausanne Treaty

More research

Accepting applications from PhD students.

Connect with Jonathan

Profile photo 
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Name 
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Job title 
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Research interests (for researchers only) 
Add up to 5 research interests. The first 3 will appear in your staff profile next to your name. The full list will appear on your research page. Keep these brief and focus on the keywords people may use when searching for your work. Use a different line for each one.

In Pure (opens in a new tab), select ‘Edit profile’. Under the heading 'Curriculum and research description', select 'Add profile information'. In the dropdown menu, select 'Research interests: use separate lines'.

Contact details 
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ORCID ID 
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Accepting PhD applicants (for researchers only) 
Choose to show whether you’re currently accepting PhD applicants or not in Pure (opens in a new tab). Select ‘Edit profile’. In the 'Portal details' section, select 'Yes' or 'No' to indicate your choice. 

About

I am a historian of cultural history from c. 1750 to the present, currently researching the social and cultural history of Heathrow Airport - an interest I developed after several years' activity as a volunteer befriender inside IRC Harmondsworth, a secure immigration detention facility next to Heathrow. This history will consider what the history of Heathrow's lounges, hotels, shops, Animal Reception Centre as well as the communities who settled nearby to work in the catering and service sectors can tell us about modern Britain. 

I recently finished work on a biography of the Chevalière Deon (1728-1810), the French trans diplomat and spy. Please click on the "Research" tab for more on this project. This project built on previous scholarship on Anglo-French cultural and political relations, including Tales of Two Cities, the first comparative history of Paris and London. 

In 2017 I co-founded The Lausanne Project (TLP), which explores the legacy of the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne a century on, in particular its role in shaping attitudes towards identity and migration in Greece, Turkey and the world at large. This project emerged from a biography of the Anglo-Armenian oil magnate, financier and art collector Calouste Gulbenkian (1869-1955). To date TLP has organized three conferences and four workshops for academics, high school history teachers and their pupils, as well as hosting a podcast (70 episodes and counting), and publishing a graphic novel and lesson plans for high school classroom use (in Greek, Turkish and English).

My PhD addressed the early history of the National Gallery (London), and I remain active in the field of museum studies. In 2024 I published The Met: A History of a Museum and Its People The National Gallery commissioned me to write their authorized bicentenary history. I appeared alongside Claudia Winkleman, Michael Palin and others in the 2024 documentary film My National Gallery, which was shown in over 300 cinemas across the UK (as well as in the US), before being broadcast over the Christmas period on ITV.

You can update this in Pure (opens in a new tab). Select ‘Edit profile’. Under the heading and then ‘Curriculum and research description’, select ‘Add profile information’. In the dropdown menu, select - ‘About’.

Write about yourself in the third person. Aim for 100 to 150 words covering the main points about who you are and what you currently do. Clear, simple language is best. You can include specialist or technical terms.

You’ll be able to add details about your research, publications, career and academic history to other sections of your staff profile.