• Alexander Guerds BA, MA, PhD. Associate Professor, School of Archaeology at Oxford who has researched the Mixteca Alta, Mexico, Honduras, Colombia, Panama, the Lesser Antilles, Peru, Chile, the U.S. and Europe.
  • Helen Gittos BA, MSt, DPhil. Associate Professor in the Early Medieval History of the British Isles at Balliol College, Oxford, currently working on English as the forgotten language of the pre-Reformation Church.
  • Linda Grant, BA, MA, PhD. An Early Modernist working on book history, Renaissance ‘pornography’, the early modern body, and rape and sexual violence.
  • Charlotte Hedenstierna-Jonson BA, MS, MSc. PhD. Senior Researcher in the Dept. of Archaeology & Ancient History at Uppsala University and is a specialist in the Viking Age.
  • Norman Jones MA, PhD. Emeritus Professor of History specialising in the Tudor period, especially politics and religion.
  • Robert Kinsey, MA, PhD. Development Editor at an academic publisher with research interests in the medieval English gentry and nobility, funerary monuments and heraldry.
  • Joseph Koerner BA, MA, PhD. Victor S. Thomas Professor of the History of Art and Architecture at Harvard University with research interests in the visual culture of northern Europe.
  • Karen Limper-Herz MA, PhD. Lead Curator, Incunabula and Sixteenth Century Printed Books at The British Library with expertise in the history of early printed books, book collecting in the 18th–19th centuries, and the history of bookbinding.
  • John Ljungkvist BA, PhD. Senior Researcher in Dept. of Archaeology & Ancient History at Uppsala University focusing on the Scandinavian Late Iron Age
  • (c.400-1050 CE) with an emphasis on the Vendel Period.
  • Alice Minter BA, MA, MA. Curator of the Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Collection at the V & A, with expertise in Huguenot goldsmiths, snuffboxes, Jewish collectors and the potter, Bernard Palissy.
  • Paul Nash, PhD. Editor of the Journal of the Printing Historical Society; librarian, bibliographer, printing historian and historical printer.
  • Marina Papa-Sokal PhD. Honorary Lecturer at the Institute of Archaeology, UCL, whose research has focused on the protection of world cultural heritage.