Skip to main content

School of History

Research Centres

Australian Centre for Indigenous History

Centre for Environmental History

National Centre of Biography

  • Home
  • About us
    • Support us
    • Contact us
  • People
    • Director
    • Academics
    • Professional staff
    • Research officers
    • Visitors
      • Past visitors
    • Current PhD students
    • Graduated PhD students
    • ADB Editorial Board
    • ADB Working Parties
    • ADB Editorial Fellows
  • Events
    • Biography Workshop
    • Writing Lives
  • News
    • Media
  • Study with us
  • Research projects
    • Colonial Beginnings
    • First Nations Biography Australia
    • Colonial Women Project
    • Dictionary of the House of Representatives
    • Great Expectations: Sydney College 1835-50
  • Publications
    • Biography Footnotes
    • Biography Series, ANU Press
    • Australian Journal of Biography and History
    • NCB News
    • Life Sentences

ARC Laureate Program

Resources

  • Australian Dictionary of Biography
  • Obituaries Australia
  • People Australia
  • Digitised Biographies

School of History

  • Back to School main pages

Related Sites

  • ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences
  • Research School of Social Sciences
  • Australian National Internships Program
  • Australian Journey
  • One Hundred Stories

Administrator

Breadcrumb

HomeWelcome To The National Centre of BiographyNCB Upcoming EventsSpying On a Spy: A Dutch Agent For The British, Marguerite Wolters, 1723–1800
Spying on a Spy: A Dutch Agent for the British, Marguerite Wolters, 1723–1800

Dirk Langendijk, Anti-British demonstration in Rotterdam (1781).

This workshop is on entirely new work for me, a biography of an unknown Dutch woman called Marguerite Wolters who headed a Europe-wide spy agency for nearly twenty years (1771–1790). She sold her intelligence exclusively to the British government, who used it to consolidate its rising superpower position in the world, especially in the aftermath of the disastrous American Revolution. I am still in the research phase of this project. In the talk I’ll speak about some of its key challenges. These include language difficulties, handwriting difficulties, and sheer volume – there are more than 10,000 pages of her intelligence in Britain’s National Archives. I’ll speak about the mixed blessings of Generative AI in solving these issues. The biggest problem, however, is in getting to know a subject who by definition did not want to be known. Biographies of spies amplify issues common to much historical biography. 

Kate Fullagar FAHA is a Professor of History at the Australian Catholic University, and currently Vice President of the Australian Historical Association. She is the author of The Savage Visit: New World Peoples and Popular Imperial Culture (Univ. of California Press, 2012) and The Warrior, the Voyager, and the Artist: Three Lives in an Age of Empire (Yale Univ. Press, 2020). Her most recent book is Bennelong & Phillip: A History Unravelled (Simon & Schuster, 2023).

Date & time

  • Thu 26 Feb 2026, 11:00 am - 12:00 pm

Location

Seminar room 6.71, Level 6, RSSS Building, 146 Ellery Cres AND Zoom (bit.ly/BioWorkshop2022)

Speakers

  • Professor Kate Fullagar

Event Series

Biography Workshop

Contact

  •  Dr Michelle Staff
     Send email

Image Gallery

File attachments

AttachmentSize
fullagar-flyer.pdf(832.88 KB)832.88 KB