Autumn Lecture Series 2025: Here I stand with Mary Beard
(Monday 17th November 2025)
When watching live, you can increase the quality of the video to 720p by pressing the ‘settings cog’ button on the video menu. You can also unmute and change the volume.
Dame Mary Beard is a preeminent British classicist, author, and television presenter, renowned for making ancient history accessible and engaging to a wide audience. Mary Beard stands for a rigorous, accessible, and critically engaged approach to history and the classics, with a strong commitment to challenging ingrained societal biases, particularly those related to gender and power. Educated at Newnham College, Cambridge, she became Professor of Classics at Cambridge University and a Fellow of Newnham College.
Mary Beard’s extensive bibliography includes acclaimed works like SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome and Women and Power: A Manifesto. She is a regular media commentator, celebrated for her insightful yet often provocative perspectives, and has presented numerous BBC documentaries, solidifying her role as a leading public intellectual and a refreshingly direct, challenging and insightful voice in academia.
Please let us know what you thought of tonight’s lecture and submit any suggestions for future themes and speakers by following this link here.
You may also like
Morning Song (18.06)
Join Revd Catherine Duce and the Choral Scholars of St Martin-in-the-Fields for this service of sung Morning Prayer.
Great Sacred Music: Choral Blessings
Great Sacred Music: Choral Blessings (Thursday 17th June)Great Sacred MusicChoral Blessings Led by...
Bread for the World (16.06)
Join us for this informal Eucharist, tonight at 6.30pm, with reflection from Simon Thomas and Steve Adams from the Eco-Church group at St Martins
Choral Evensong (14.06)
Join Revd Richard Carter and our Choral Scholars for this week’s service of Choral Evensong, live from St Martin’s.
The Song and the Story: Innocence and Experience (13.06)
Join us live from St Martin’s this afternoon for an exploration of William Blake’s influential poetry collection Songs of Innocence and Experience, as set by Vaughan Williams.
Two kinds of Faith
A sermon preached at St Martin-in-the-Fields on Sunday 13 June 2021 by Revd Dr Sam Wells.
Contemplative Prayer (12.06)
Contemplative Prayer from the Old English Garden, Battersea Park with Revd Richard Carter.
Parish Eucharist (13.06)
Join us in person or online this Sunday for our 10am Eucharist, with Revd Dr Sam Wells preaching.
Morning Song (11.06)
Join our Choral Scholars and Revd Harry Ching for this week’s service of sung Morning Prayer.
Great Sacred Music: The world is charged with the grandeur of God
In this week’s Great Sacred Music, Red Dr Sam Wells and St Martin’s Voices mark the life and work of poet Gerard Manley Hopkins.
Bread for the World (09.06)
Join us for Bread for the World, an informal Eucharist, with reflection from Revd Jonathan Evens.
Choral Evensong (07.06)
Join our Choral Scholars for this service of Choral Evensong, led by Jeff Claxton.
Together for the Common Good
A sermon preached at St Martin-in-the-Fields on Sunday 6 June 2021 by Revd Jonathans Evens.
Parish Eucharist (06.06)
Join us for our Parish Eucharist, with preacher Revd Jonathan Evens, live-streamed from St Martin’s at 10am on Sunday.
Contemplative Prayer (05.06)
Nazareth Contemplative Prayer from St Cuthbert’s Way to Holy Island, Northumberland.
Morning Song (04.06)
Join Revd Richard Carter and our Choral Scholars for this service of sung Morning Prayer.
Great Sacred Music: Where does the uttered music go?
In this week’s Great Sacred Music, we mark the life and work of poet John Masefield, with music from St Martin’s Voices.
Bread for the World (02.06)
Join us live from St Martin’s for our informal Eucharist, with reflection from Christian Saguyan, Jamie Poncia, Phyllis SantaMaria and Revd Richard Carter.
The Ocean of God
A sermon preach at St Martin-in-the-Fields on Sunday 30th May 2021 by Revd Richard Carter.
Contemplative Prayer (30.05)
Nazarteth Community Contemplative Prayer from Hampstead Heath and Kenwood House.














