Michael Wood (historian)
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Michael Wood (historian)
Michael Wood (born Michael David Wood, 23 July 1948 in Moston, Manchester) is a popular English historian and broadcaster. He has presented numerous television documentary series. Wood was educated at Manchester Grammar School and at Oriel College, Oxford. His special interest was Anglo-Saxon history. In the 1970s Wood went to work for the BBC in Manchester. He was first a reporter, then an assistant producer on current affairs programmes, before returning to his love of history with his 1981 series In Search of the Dark Ages for BBC2. This explored the lives of leaders of the period, including Athelstan, King Arthur, and Eric Bloodaxe. Wood quickly became popular with many viewers for his blond good looks (he was humorously dubbed "the thinking woman's crumpet" by British newspapers), his deep voice, and his habit of wearing tight jeans and a sheepskin jacket. However, his ability to present history in striking and memorable ways has drawn a diverse audience. To date, he has over sixty documentary films to his name. Many of his recent documentaries are based on India including the latest The Story of India (2007). Wood's work is also well known in the United States, where it receives much airplay on PBS and on various cable television networks. The series Legacy (1992) is one of his more frequently broadcast documentaries on U.S. television. In 2006, Wood joined the British School of Archaeology in Iraq campaign, aiming to train and encourage new Iraqi archaeologists, and has lectured on the subject.[1] His partner for several years in the late 1970s and early 1980s was journalist and broadcaster Pattie Coldwell. He currently lives in North London with his wife and two daughters, Minakshi and Jyoti. His younger daughter, Minakshi, is said to have been model spotted by Storm earlier this year and will soon be joining their agency.
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