Researcher
Timothy Slonosky
Department of Humanities
Faculty
Expertise
Timothy Slonosky’s research focuses on sixteenth century Reformation and urban history, particularly in Scotland. His book, Civic Reformations and Religious Change in Sixteenth Century Scottish Towns (Edinburgh University Press, 2024) argues for the crucial role of Scottish townspeople in securing the Scottish Reformation of 1560. His current project studies the role of town governments in implementing public health regulations during the Early Modern Period.
Publications
- Civic Reformations and Religious Change in Sixteenth Century Scottish Towns (Edinburgh, 2024)
- “Burgh government and Reformation: Stirling c.1530-65” in Scotland’s Long Reformation: New Perspectives on Scottish Religion, c. 1500-c.1660, ed. John McCallum (Leiden: Brill, 2016)
Education
- PhD. History, University of Pennsylvania, 2014
- M.A. History, Simon Fraser University, 2005
- B.A. History, McGill University, 2002