Victoria Whitworth

Anglo-Scots novelist, archaeologist and art historian From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Victoria (V.M.) Whitworth (née Thompson; born in London 1966[1]) is a British writer, archaeologist and art historian. Her published writings, which focus on Britain in the later first millennium AD, include novels, academic works and a memoir.

Born
Victoria Thompson

1966 (age 5960)
London
NationalityBritish
Genrenon-fiction
Quick facts Victoria Whitworth FSA FSA Scot, Born ...
Victoria Whitworth

Born
Victoria Thompson

1966 (age 5960)
London
NationalityBritish
Alma materSt Anne's College, Oxford
University of York
Genrenon-fiction
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Biography

Victoria Whitworth studied English (specialising in Medieval languages, literature and archaeology) at St Anne's College, Oxford, before doing an MA and a D.Phil. in York. From 2012 to 2016 she was a lecturer at the Centre for Nordic Studies on the Orkney campus of the University of the Highlands and Islands. Her research has primarily focused on Pictish, Scottish and Anglo-Saxon stone sculpture. Whitworth has published three historical novels set in Viking Age England.[2]

On 27 September 2020 a letter in support of J. K. Rowling for her stance on transgender issues was published in the Sunday Times to which Whitworth was one of 58 signatories.[3]

In 2025, Whitworth suggested that since the Book of Kells contains elaborate display capital letters in a style similar to the sculptures at the Pictish monastery in Portmahomack in Northeast Scotland, it may derive from there, not from Iona.[4]

Honours and distinctions

Books

Fiction

  • The Bone Thief (Ebury Press, 2012), ISBN 978-0091947231
  • The Traitors’ Pit (Ebury Press, 2013), ISBN 978-0091947187
  • Daughter of the Wolf (Head of Zeus, 2016), ISBN 978-1784082147

Non-fiction

References

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