Today’s featured articles
Who should claim Scotland’s royal jewels? After the forced abdication of Mary, Queen of Scots, the answer was not clear cut.
As mentioned on the Empire podcast, Cecil Rhodes was once described as the single biggest threat to peace in southern Africa. In 1898 a bitter election campaign did little to suggest otherwise.
As mentioned on the Empire podcast, Scotland’s short-lived, catastrophic Central American colony exposed its precarious relationship with England. Was closer union an inevitable result?
Most recent
Is it Possible to Forgive and Forget?
Where fraught national histories are concerned, do policies of remembrance and education work, or is it better to wipe the slate clean?
The Allure of Medieval Churches
The ancient stones of churches are portals to the past. Each new generation becomes a custodian.
Doc Holliday: The Perennial Sidekick
Misfit, Old West villain or tragic hero of the O.K. Corral: who was the real Doc Holliday?
‘The Last Dynasty’ and ‘The Fall of Egypt and the Rise of Rome’ review
Can The Last Dynasty: Ancient Egypt from Alexander the Great to Cleopatra and The Fall of Egypt and the Rise of Rome: A History of the Ptolemies fashion a finale for the pharaohs?
How to Win an Election in Ancient Rome
Ancient Roman election advice suggested some uncomfortable campaign strategies. Evidence from Pompeii suggests many candidates followed it enthusiastically.
The Conservative Party Popularity Contest
How the first Conservative leadership election modernised the party in the 1960s.
The Tudor War on Libel
As rude rhymes and rumours threatened reputations, the Elizabethan government attempted to regulate barbed language.
‘The Writers’ Castle’ by Uwe Neumahr review
In The Writers’ Castle: Reporting History at Nuremberg, Uwe Neumahr discovers that it wasn’t just the men in the dock who had scandalous social lives and hidden agendas.
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In the November issue:
Violence in Medieval monasteries, winning an election in Ancient Rome, why Uruguay legalised duelling, East German solidarity with North Korea, Tudor libel and the politics of forgiveness.
Plus: reviews, opinion, crossword and much more!
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