Ronald Hutton (born 1953) is an English historian who specialises in Early Modern Britain, British folklore, pre-Christian religion and contemporary Paganism.
He is a professor in the subject at the University of Bristol.
Hutton has written fourteen books and has appeared on British television and radio.
He held a fellowship at Magdalen College, Oxford and is a Commissioner of English Heritage.
Born in Ootacamund, India Hutton's family returned to England, and he attended a school in Ilford and became particularly interested in archaeology.
He volunteered in a number of excavations until 1976 and visited the country's chambered tombs.
He studied history at Pembroke College, Cambridge and then Magdalen College, Oxford before becoming a Reader in history at the University of Bristol in 1981.
Specialising in "Early Modern Britain", he wrote three books on the subjectThe Royalist War Effort (1981), The Restoration (1985) and Charles the Second (1990).
During the 1990s he wrote books about historical paganism, folklore and contemporary Paganism in Britain; The Pagan Religions of the Ancient British Isles (1991), The Rise and Fall of Merry England (1994), The Stations of the Sun (1996) and The Triumph of the Moon (1999), the latter of which would come to be praised as a seminal text in the discipline of Pagan studies.
In the following decade he wrote on other topics, writing a book about Siberian shamanism in the western imagination, Shamans (2001), a collection of essays on folklore and Paganism, Witches, Druids and King Arthur (2003) and then two books on the role of the Druids in the British imagination, The Druids (2007) and Blood and Mistletoe (2009).