In 1974, he was appointed Professor of European Studies. As such, he worked on building Lancaster's interdisciplinary School of European Studies and was its first director. From 1979 to 1984, he was Head of the History Department. During this time, he founded the Lancaster Pamphlets, edited by the History Department, to which he also contributed three titles, France before the Revolution (1983), Louis XIV (1986) and International Relations in Europe, 1689–1789 (1995). In 1985, he was appointed provisional Chancellor and in 1993 he was appointed Deputy Vice-Chancellor of the university. In 1998, he retired.[1][2]
Publications
Shennan, J. H. (1968). The Parlement of Paris. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press. ISBN9780750918305.
Shennan, J. H. (1969). Government and Society in France, 1461–1661. London: George Allen and Unwin Ltd. ISBN9781000395808.
Shennan, J. H. (1974). The Origins of the Modern European State, 1450–1725. London: Hutchinson. ISBN9780091190309.
Shennan, J. H. (1979). Philippe, Duke of Orléans, Regent of France, 1715–1723. London: Thames and Hudson. ISBN978-0500870099.
Shennan, J. H. (1983). France before the Revolution. Lancaster Pamphlets (Rev. 1995 ed.). London: Methuen. ISBN9780415119450.
Shennan, J. H. (1986). Liberty and Order in Early Modern Europe: The Subject and the State, 1650–1800. London: Longman. ISBN9780582494640.
Shennan, J. H. (1986). Louis XIV. Lancaster Pamphlets (Rev. 1993 ed.). London: Methuen. ISBN9780415090681.
Shennan, J. H. (1995). International Relations in Europe, 1689–1789. Lancaster Pamphlets. London: Routledge. ISBN9780415077804.
Shennan, J. H. (2007). The Bourbons: The History of a Dynasty. London: Hambledon Continuum. ISBN9781852855239.