Daniel Maudlin, FSA Scot, is a historian and academic.
He then worked at the Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice and the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, before returning to St Andrews in 1998 to complete a doctorate supported by the British Academy; his PhD was awarded in 2002 for his thesis "Highland planned villages: the architecture of the British Fisheries Society".
As well as working as an inspector for Historic Scotland, he was appointed to a Leverhulme postdoctoral research fellowship at Dalhousie University, before joining the University of Plymouth in 2005 as a lecturer.
He was promoted firstly to a senior lectureship (in 2008) and then to a professorship (in 2012) at Plymouth.
[1][2] Maudlin's research focuses on Atlantic History and the relationship between built space and everyday life.