"A watch is the most compressed object of civilisation ever created. Everything humanity has ever done is in there."
Nick Foulkes is a British author, journalist, and cultural historian best known in watch circles for a body of writing that situates horology within the broader sweep of history, culture, and human ambition. He has written more than thirty books, including major works on figures including Beau Brummell, Napoleon Bonaparte, and the Marquess of Queensberry, as well as dedicated horological volumes including works on Cartier, Chanel, and the history of the wristwatch. His writing for publications including the Financial Times, Town & Country, and Esquire over more than three decades has made him one of the most widely read voices at the intersection of luxury culture and historical narrative.
What distinguishes Foulkes from most watch writers is the depth of his historical and cultural context. Where the majority of horological journalism focuses on specifications and market positioning, Foulkes consistently situates watches within narratives of empire, technology, war, diplomacy, and aesthetic evolution. His approach has helped establish the intellectual case for treating watches as objects worthy of serious cultural analysis rather than merely expensive consumer goods. His 2019 book Tick Tock: The Turbulent Life & Times of the Wristwatch is among the most readable general histories of the subject available in English.
Foulkes has worked closely with several major brands as a historian and content collaborator, and his annual reports from Watches & Wonders in Geneva are among the most anticipated pieces of watch journalism produced each year. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, a distinction that reflects a body of work that extends well beyond watches, but his commitment to horology as a subject worthy of serious historical investigation has been consistent across his career.
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