Brian Lavery

Brian Lavery
Native name Brian Lavery
Born 18 July 1945
Residence United Kingdom
Academic work
Main interests Maritime history, Horatio Nelson

Brian Lavery MA, (born 18 July 1945) is a British naval historian, author, and Curator Emeritus at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich.

Biography

He was born in Scotland and brought up in Dumbarton .[1] Upon graduating, Lavery worked first as a teacher, then in the printing industry, before gradually fulfilling his interest in maritime heritage as an author, consultant and curator, building a solid reputation as a highly respected authority in the field.[1] He worked at Chatham Historic Dockyard on the Wooden Walls exhibition. During 14 years in the National Maritime Museum at Greenwich he developed the modern collecting policy, and worked on numerous exhibitions such as Seapower, All Hands, and several of the galleries in the Neptune Court development. He has lectured regularly on cruise ships, including many trips on the square rigger Sea Cloud, and he undertakes maritime tours in the United Kingdom and Europe. Traditional Boats & Tall Ships refers to him as ‘one of the world's leading naval historians.’[2] He has since published over 30 books, covering marine architecture, ship construction (including several in Conway's Anatomy of the Ship series), and naval warfare from its infancy to present day. He is a leading expert in the career of Nelson and the broader Royal Navy. Patrick O’Brian found Nelson's Navy (1989) to be ‘the most nearly regal that I have come across in many years of reading on the subject.’[3] The Times labelled the same book a "masterpiece on life in the Senior Service under England's favourite seafaring son."[4]

In addition to editing works such Deane's Doctrine of Naval Architecture 1670, Lavery produces articles which feature regularly in maritime magazines and journals.

Lavery was an historical consultant on Peter Weir's 2003 blockbuster Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World, starring Russell Crowe and Paul Bettany. His naval expertise was also utilised "on the replica constructions of Captain Cook's Endeavour and the emigrant ship Susan Constant", the latter being the subject of his 1988 book.[5]

In 2007, Lavery released Churchill Goes to War, which was, according to the Mail on Sunday, "a well-researched and at times deeply inspiring book".[6] In November of the same year, Lady Mountbatten presented Lavery with the Desmond Wettern Maritime Media Award at a ceremony aboard the MV Silver Sturgeon. According to the Maritime Foundation, the award "was made to Mr Lavery as an author, broadcaster and adviser on major feature films, which have contributed to our understanding of the social structure of Britain's maritime power and all maritime aspects of British national life."[1] The following year, he was awarded the Society for Nautical Research's Anderson Medal.

In 2009, Lavery wrote a The Sunday Times bestselling book to accompany the BBC series Empire of the Seas, presented by Dan Snow, which, as The Sunday Express explains, "looks at the growth off Britain thanks to the Royal Navy, from Drakes defeat of the Armada to the First World War."[7]

Awards

Bibliography

References

  1. 1 2 3 Maritime Media Awards 2007 Archived October 19, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
  2. ‘Book Review: The Frigate Surprise’, Traditional Boats & Tall Ships, p. 12
  3. Patrick O’Brian
  4. The Times
  5. Brian Lavery - Dorling Kindersley Authors - Dorling Kindersley
  6. Andrew Roberts, The Mail on Sunday (23 December 2007)
  7. Sunday Express (17 January 2010)
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