Barnaby Rogerson is a writer, publisher and television presenter.
Barnaby has appeared on the BBC Life of Muhammad, Al Jazeera's
Caliph and in many of Pilot productions, Muslim Empires series.
Barnaby was born in Scotland in 1960. Travel was a vital aspect of
his childhood which followed in the wake of his father's career in
the Royal Navy with postings to Gibraltar, Malta, Skye and
Virginia. A degree in History from St Andrews University proved to
be adequate preparation for work as a barman, tutor for a child
star in a film made on a Greek island and a pony boy on a Highland
estate. He worked for two independent publishers which led to a job
in the press department of the Afghanistan Support Committee. A
chance encounter in the Outer Hebrides led to his first commission
to write a guidebook: Morocco (which went into six editions) was
followed by Tunisia, Cyprus, Istanbul and Libya. Research for these
guidebooks was partly funded by working as a lecturer, tour guide
and journalist. A scrapbook of over three hundred articles (written
for Cornucopia, TLS, Independent, Guardian, Telegraph and Country
Life) has subsequently been pasted up on a website, Barnaby
Rogerson.com
The birth of two daughters encouraged him to stay at home more
often, so he wrote a History of North Africa, followed by a
Biography of the Prophet Muhammad, then an account of the early
Caliphate, The Heirs of the Prophet. The Last Crusaders (1415-1580)
was an ambitious attempt to show how the Crusades against North
Africa and the Ottoman Empire led to the emergence of the first
colonial conquest states. This would be followed by In Search of
Ancient North Africa, which tells the complex story of conquest and
assimilation through six lives. He has recently finished A House
Divided, a book looking at conflict zones within the Middle East
complicated by the Shia-Sunni schism within Islam.
Barnaby has also worked on a number of joint projects. He
contributed the text for Don McCullin's photographic study of Roman
North Africa and the Levant, Southern Frontiers, co-edited a
collection of the contemporary travel writing Ox-Tales for the
charity Oxfam, edited a collection of the travel literature of
Marrakech, a collection of contemporary travel encounters with
Islam; Meetings with Remarkable Muslims, a collection of English
Orientalist verse, Desert Air, and a collection of the poetry of
place of London. He has also put together a collection of the
sacred numbers of the world, Rogerson's Book of Numbers.
Barnaby was on the advisory board of Critical Muslim, the editorial
board of Middle East in London and is a Fellow of the Royal Asiatic
Society and the Royal Geographical Society and a member of the
Royal Society of Asian Affairs. He was elected a Fellow of the
Society of Antiquaries and a made an honorary member of The
Travellers Club.
His day job is running Eland, a publishing house, which specializes
in keeping classic travel books in print: www.travelbooks.co.uk
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