Showbiz | Celebrity News I would like to be emailed about offers, event and updates from Evening Standard. Read our privacy notice . An award-winning Scottish historian who became a household name when he wrote and presented a landmark TV series has been knighted in the King’s Birthday Honours list.

Professor Sir Niall Ferguson , whose 16 books include The Pity Of War and The Ascent Of Money: A Financial History Of The World, first came to the attention of many in the UK with the hit 2003 Channel 4 series Empire: How Britain Made The Modern World, and a best-selling book of the same name. Born in Glasgow in 1964 and educated at the city’s Glasgow Academy, Sir Niall went on to study at Magdalen College, Oxford, before pursuing an academic career that has seen him a hold a number of prestigious posts at universities in Europe and the USA. Sir Niall, who is married to author and women’s rights activist Ayaan Hirsi Ali, is now a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford, a senior faculty fellow of the Belfer Centre for Science and International Affairs at Harvard, and a visiting professor at the London School of Economics.

He has written biographies of banker Siegmund Warburg, and the first part of a two-volume biography of former US secretary of state Henry Kissinger , who also formed the subject of a full-length 2011 documentary by his film company Chimerica Media. Responding to the news he was being made a knight for services to literature, Sir Niall was keen to .