Onyeka Nubia
Onyeka Nubia is a pioneering and internationally recognised historian, writer and presenter who is reinventing our perceptions of the Renaissance, British history, Black Studies and intersectionalism. Onyeka is a leading historian on diversity in pre-colonial England from antiquity to 1603. Onyeka is also an expert on historical methodologies and historicism. He has helped academia and the general public to entirely new perspectives on otherness, colonialism and imperialism. But Onyeka began his research on contemporary British history, and is also an authority on: contemporary movements and national identities. Onyeka is an Assistant Professor at University of Nottingham, Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, and a recipient of numerous prizes. He has written over forty articles on: Englishness and historical methodologies and they have appeared in the most popular UK historical magazines and periodicals including History Today and BBC History Magazine. Onyeka is an internationally renowned speaker and has been a keynote presenter at venues such as the Houses of Parliament, the National Portrait Gallery and the National Portrait Gallery of Scotland. He has also been a keynote presenter at universities throughout the UK and the USA, including SOAS University London, Vanderbilt University (USA), Georgia State and Clarke Atlanta Universities (USA). Onyeka has been a consultant and presenter for television programmes including the BBC's History Cold Case Episode 1, Series 1 the "Ipswich Man" and Channel 4's "Skeletons of the Mary Rose;" and "Crossrail Discovery: London's Lost Graveyard."