Helen H. Carr


Helen Maria Hallett Carr is a writer and historian of Medieval England.

Early life and education

Carr was born in Peterborough. She has an undergraduate degree in History of Art from the University of York, graduating in 2010 and a Research Master's degree in Medieval History from the University of Reading graduating in 2014.
She is currently working on a PhD at Queen Mary University London under the supervision of Professor Miri Rubin. She is married to Henry Charlton-Weedy.

Career

Writer/producer

Carr has presented several documentaries for HistoryHit TV, including Captain Cook's Endeavour and The Trail of Guy Fawkes.
Carr has appeared as an expert on as part of the Medieval Kings series and presented a documentary for Cambridge University on its history, shared globally.
She has produced history documentaries for BBC4, BBC2, SkyArts, Discovery, CNN and HistoryHit TV and has worked on BBC Radio 4’s In Our Time.
Carr is a regular features writer for BBC History magazine and . She has also contributed to the New Statesman, The TLS, The Spectator and History Today.
Between 2019 and 2021, Carr produced and presented the podcast .
Carr covered the death and funeral of Queen Elizabeth II for and in September 2022 and the coronation of King Charles III for CNN, NBC and CityNews in May 2023.

Author

In April 2021, Carr published her first book, The Red Prince: John of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster.
This title was featured as a Times and Sunday Times best book of 2021 and became a Times best-seller in March 2022.
The Red Prince: John of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster was shortlisted for the 2022 Elizabeth Longford Prize for Historical Biography in May 2022.
Carr is the co-author and editor of What Is History, Now?, alongside Professor Suzannah Lipscomb. This book, published in September 2021 by Weidenfeld & Nicolson was a follow-up to What Is History?, the seminal work by her great-grandfather, the historian and diplomat E. H. Carr. According to historian Dan Snow:
Carr's next book, This England, will be published by in 2024.
In July 2022, Carr was elected a fellow of the Royal Historical Society