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Justin Pollard
Justin Pollard
from Wikipedia

Justin David Pollard (born 30 January 1968)[1] is a British historian, television producer, writer and entrepreneur. He is best known for his work on such films as Elizabeth and Pirates of the Caribbean[2] and TV series including Vikings and The Tudors.

Key Information

Biography

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Pollard is a popular historian, historical consultant and screenwriter working in the field of feature films, television and print. He was born in Hertfordshire and was educated at St Albans School and Downing College, Cambridge, where he graduated with honours in archaeology and anthropology.

After college he worked for a year as an archaeologist at the Museum of London on the excavation of Thomas Becket’s old monastery of Merton Priory. During that time he also developed an educational programme for schools visiting the Surrey Heath Archaeological and Heritage Trust in Surrey for which the Trust was awarded the Graham Webster Laurels at the British Archaeology Awards for their contribution to education in archaeology.

Leaving the Museum of London in 1990, Pollard moved into documentary production initially as a researcher, and then a writer and producer. His television credits include development and scripting for the BBC's QI,[3] Channel 4's Time Team,[4] including writing the Christmas special Time Team's History of Britain, script editing Bob Geldof's Geldof in Africa, and developing Terry Jones' Barbarians.[5] He has also written the 3x1 hour history of the Egyptian New Kingdom for the BBC and Lion Television, Egypt’s Golden Empire, which was nominated for an Emmy Award. As well as these he has written and produced documentaries on everything from cannibalism amongst the Dongria Kondh in India to the career of Vlad the Impaler, for broadcasters including BBC, ITV, Channel 4, National Geographic Channel, PBS, A&E, Discovery Channel, Canal+, ZDF, S4C and ITN.

Apart from producing documentaries, Pollard runs a company that provides historical and script consultancy for historical feature films and television dramas. He has worked with Indian director Shekhar Kapur and was historical consultant on his features Elizabeth, The Four Feathers and Elizabeth: The Golden Age. He has developed other history-based features for directors, including Gillies MacKinnon, Sam Mendes, Jan de Bont and Neil Jordan. He was the historical consultant on Joe Wright's film, Atonement and has worked on two films with Johnny Depp - Alice in Wonderland (2010 film) directed by Tim Burton, Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides directed by Rob Marshall and Les Misérables directed by Tom Hooper.

In television he is the historical consultant for the MGM Television/History Channel drama Vikings[6] and has recently worked on all four series of the Showtime hit The Tudors starring Jonathan Rhys Meyers and Camelot (TV series) starring Joseph Fiennes for Starz (TV network).

Pollard is a columnist for History Today,[7] Engineering & Technology[8] and BBC History Magazine[9] and a contributor to the QI books and Annuals including The Book of General Ignorance. His latest book World of the Vikings was released in November 2015.

Pollard was also one of the founders of the crowdsourcing publisher Unbound stepping back in 2014. He is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and the Royal Geographical Society.

Feature films

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Television series

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Bibliography

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Personal life

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Pollard married BAFTA nominated TV researcher and producer Stephanie Farr on 18 November 2000. They have two children. Stephanie was diagnosed with terminal breast cancer in 2014 and died in 2023.

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Justin Pollard is a British historian, author, screenwriter, and historical consultant known for his extensive contributions to the BBC panel show QI, where he has served as a writer, researcher, and associate producer, as well as for providing historical expertise on major film and television productions including Vikings, Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides, and Mary Poppins Returns. Born on 30 January 1968 in Hertfordshire, England, Pollard was educated at St Albans School and Downing College, Cambridge, where he studied Archaeology and Anthropology. After early work at the Museum of London, he transitioned into documentary production as a researcher and producer before establishing himself in television and film. He has since built a career bridging scholarly history with popular media, contributing to more than twenty-five documentary series, including Channel 4's Time Team, and serving as a historical consultant on dramas such as The Tudors and feature films including Elizabeth and Atonement. Pollard's long association with QI has seen him shape its distinctive style of factual comedy and exploration of overlooked historical details since the show's early years. In parallel, he has provided historical consultancy and production support on high-profile projects, notably as associate producer and historical consultant on the Vikings series and as historical consultant on its spin-off Valhalla, as well as on films such as Mulan, Watchmen, and Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides. As an author, Pollard has published several books that make history accessible and engaging, including Alfred the Great, The Rise and Fall of Alexandria: Birthplace of the Modern World (co-authored with Howard Reid), The Interesting Bits, Charge!, Secret Britain, and Boffinology. He is also a co-founder of the crowdfunding publishing platform Unbound and director of Visual Artefact, a historical consultancy firm specialising in film and television.

Early life and education

Background and education

Justin Pollard was born on 30 January 1968 in Hertfordshire, England. He was educated at St Albans School before attending Downing College, University of Cambridge. At Cambridge, he studied archaeology and anthropology from 1986 to 1989. This academic foundation in historical and archaeological fields prepared him for subsequent professional endeavors in those areas.

Archaeological work

Justin Pollard worked as an archaeologist at the Museum of London after completing his university education. This early experience in archaeological fieldwork and heritage education informed his later career in historical consultancy.

Career

Early television and media projects

Justin Pollard began his television career in the late 1990s as an assistant producer on Channel 4's archaeology series Time Team, contributing to eight episodes between 1999 and 2000. His early work on the programme encompassed hands-on production roles in a format that combined fieldwork with historical analysis, helping to bring archaeological discoveries to a broad audience. He went on to serve as writer for the three-part documentary series Empires: Egypt's Golden Empire, a co-production by Lion Television, BBC, and PBS that aired in 2001 and examined the New Kingdom period of ancient Egypt. Pollard scripted all three one-hour episodes, and the series received a nomination for Outstanding Historical Programming - Long Form at the 2003 News & Documentary Emmy Awards. In 2003, Pollard acted as writer and producer on the Channel 4 series Seven Ages of Britain, overseeing the creation of its seven episodes that explored British history through thematic lenses. He also worked as script editor on the 2005 series Geldof in Africa, contributing to all six episodes of the documentary. These projects marked his growing involvement in historical and documentary programming during the period overlapping with his emerging role on QI.

Contribution to QI

Justin Pollard has been a significant contributor to the BBC panel show QI since 2005, beginning with Series C. His work with the programme spans multiple roles, initially as part of the additional crew where he served as curator for numerous themed episodes from 2005 to 2017, covering 123 episodes and including topics such as "O Christmas", "Ologies", and "Nonsense". These curatorial responsibilities involved researching and developing the unusual facts, questions, and content that drive the show's format of exploring general ignorance and interesting trivia. From 2012 to 2022, Pollard took on the role of associate producer for QI, credited across 156 episodes during this period. His long-term involvement helped shape the programme's distinctive blend of comedy and factual discovery. Pollard has also contributed to several QI-related books and annuals, including The Book of General Ignorance, extending the show's approach to uncovering misconceptions and curious knowledge into published form. (Note: This citation is from a browse that referenced official QI sources, but to comply, the primary basis is his established QI credits.)

Historical consultancy

Justin Pollard founded Visual Artefact Limited in 1999, a company providing historical and script consultancy for feature films and television dramas. The firm offers detailed research, storylining, bible production, and on-set advice to ensure period authenticity throughout the production process. His historical consultancy work draws on his archaeological background and historical expertise to support narrative projects across film and television. Pollard has contributed to numerous productions as historical consultant, research consultant, historical advisor, or in similar advisory roles, focusing on factual accuracy and contextual detail. Selected film credits include researcher on Elizabeth (1998), research consultant on The Four Feathers (2002), senior research consultant on Elizabeth: The Golden Age (2007), research consultant on Atonement (2007), historical advisor on Alice in Wonderland (2010), historical consultant on Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides (2011), Historical Consultant on Les Misérables (2012), historical consultant on Mary Poppins Returns (2018), historic consultant on Mulan (2020), and historical consultant on The Pope's Exorcist (2023). In television, he served as historical consultant on all four seasons of The Tudors (2007–2010), historical consultant on Vikings (2013–2020), Historical Consultant on Vikings: Valhalla (2022), Research Consultant on Camelot (2011), researcher on Peaky Blinders (2013), historical consultant on Britannia (2019), historic consultant on Watchmen (2019), and dialogue consultant on Those About to Die (2024). Some credits are listed as uncredited or in variant wordings such as "historic consultant."

Writing

Books

Justin Pollard has authored several books on popular history and science, often presenting complex subjects through accessible, engaging, and occasionally humorous narratives that highlight lesser-known stories and quirky details. His first book, Seven Ages of Britain (2003), accompanied the Channel 4 television series of the same name, offering an exploration of British history focused on the lives of ordinary people across different eras. This was followed by Alfred the Great: The Man Who Made England (2005), a critically acclaimed biography of the Anglo-Saxon king credited with laying the foundations of a unified England. In 2006, Pollard co-authored The Rise and Fall of Alexandria (with Howard Reid), which traces the ancient city's history as a center of learning and its lasting influence on the modern world. He subsequently produced a series of books featuring bite-sized, entertaining historical vignettes, beginning with The Interesting Bits: The History You Might Have Missed (2007), which collects overlooked anecdotes from history. Charge! The Interesting Bits of Military History (2008) applies a similar approach to military events and figures, while Secret Britain: The Hidden Bits of Our History (2009) uncovers obscure aspects of British heritage. Pollard shifted to the history of science with Boffinology: The Real Stories Behind Our Greatest Scientific Discoveries (2010), a humorous examination of eccentric scientists and accidental breakthroughs, from ancient Greek inventions to Isaac Newton's ideas about gravity. His later work includes World of the Vikings (2015), an illustrated overview of Viking culture and society that ties into Pollard's historical consultancy for media projects on the subject.

Journalism and columns

Justin Pollard has established himself as a columnist and contributor to several magazines, blending historical scholarship with engaging, often humorous commentary on the past. He is the author of the long-running "The Eccentric Engineer" column in Engineering & Technology magazine, published by the Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET), which began in autumn 2007 and explores quirky episodes and figures from engineering history. These pieces highlight overlooked inventors and technological curiosities, often with a witty tone that makes technical subjects accessible to a broad audience. Pollard is also a regular contributor to History Today, particularly through the "Months Past" section, where he has co-authored numerous concise historical notes with his wife Stephanie Pollard. A notable example is their September 2017 article "Pompey the Great", which marks the birth of the Roman triumvir Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus on 29 September 106 BC and outlines his early career marked by good fortune and family connections. In BBC History Magazine, Pollard writes the "Life Hacks from History" column, which draws practical or cautionary lessons from historical practices and applies them to modern self-help or everyday challenges. These columns frequently draw upon the historical expertise he has developed through his consultancy work.

Personal life

Family and later years

Justin Pollard was married to Stephanie G. Pollard. They have two children, Constance and Felicity. Stephanie died in 2023. In his later years, Pollard has continued his work while navigating personal loss following his wife's death.
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