Bijan Omrani | |
---|---|
Born | 1979 York, England |
Occupation | Writer, scholar, teacher |
Nationality | British |
Subject | Travel, Classical History, Afghanistan and Central Asia, Middle Eastern Current Affairs |
Spouse | Samantha Knights KC |
Website | |
bijanomrani |
Bijan Omrani is a British historian, journalist, teacher, barrister and author of Persian descent. His work ranges from Classical scholarship to current affairs across Asia.
Omrani was born in York, England, in 1979. He studied at the Wellington College, Berkshire before reading Classics and English Literature at Lincoln College, Oxford. He later studied at King's College London. He has a doctorate in Classics and Ancient History from the University of Exeter.[1]
Omrani is related to one of the British Army officers responsible for demarcating the northern boundary of Afghanistan in 1885 and surveying Afghan tribal territories in the North West Frontier Province, the artist and surveyor Lt Richard Eyles Galindo.[2]
His paternal family is from north-western Iran, and his maternal one from England, though with the British Empire in India in the 18th–19th century.
He is married to Samantha Knights KC, a barrister at Matrix Chambers.
Omrani taught Classics at Eton College and Westminster School where he contributed new Latin verse to school ceremonies. He was editor of the Asian Affairs journal from 2014-2022. He was called to the Bar in 2018.[3] He is an Honorary Associate Research Fellow in the department of Classics and Ancient History at the University of Exeter.[4] He also lectures at the British Museum, Royal Society for Asian Affairs, SOAS, King's College London, and the Pakistan Society. He is a trustee of the Royal Society for Asian Affairs.
He is the author of several books, as well as a frequent contributor for specialised articles pertaining the Afghanistan-Pakistan border problems. His 2005 book on Afghanistan, co-authored with Matthew Leeming, was described in The Telegraph in 2022 as "one of the best books of any genre ever written about the country".[5] He has previously questioned the legal basis of the Durand Agreement but now he considers it to be valid but unsatisfactory, and that there is an urgent need for a wider regional solution to the problem perhaps based on a recognition of the line but combined with shared sovereignty in the neighbouring tribal areas.
Omrani was interviewed by France 24 in 2011 about the Afghan-Pakistani border problems,[6] and was also featured in The New York Times in 2011, after an incident on the Pakistani border.[7]
His 2017 book, Caesar's Footprints: Journeys to Roman Gaul, has the distinction of being endorsed both by the British Prime Minister, Boris Johnson,[8] as well as the French Prime Minister Édouard Philippe, who took the book to read whilst on the road campaigning during the European Elections in May 2019.[9] Omrani was interviewed about the book on the BBC Radio 4 Today Programme after its UK launch in June 2017.[10] The book was shortlisted in 2018 for the American Library in Paris Book Award, for "the most distinguished book of the year, written and published in English, about France or the French."
He is a regular contributor to the Literary Review,[11] The Critic,[12] and The Oldie.[13] In public debates has critiqued the notion of cultural appropriation. [14] [15]
In 2021, Omrani led a successful campaign to keep the National Trust property Shute Barton open to the public.[16] [17]