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  • The Historian 37

      The magazine of the Historical Association
    Featured articles: 3 Feature: Byron, Romanticism and the Independence of Greece, Julian Robinson  9 Update: Anglo-Scottish Relations, 1500-1707, Michael Lynch 12 Education Forum: Museum Education and the National Currculum, Maureen Lochrie
    The Historian 37
  • The Historian 70: Myth and Reality: A necessary marriage at 12th Century Glastonbury

      The magazine of the Historical Association
    Featured articles: 4 Novelty and Amusement? Visiting the Georgian Country House - Richard Wilson (Read Article) 10 The Tower and The Victorians: Politics and Leisure - Peter Hammond (Read Article) 15 The Duke of Wellington and the little man on the cob - Patrick Abbott (Read Article) 18 Myth and...
    The Historian 70: Myth and Reality: A necessary marriage at 12th Century Glastonbury
  • The Historian 68: Eighteenth Century Britain and its Empire

      The magazine of the Historical Association
    Featured articles: 4 The Wonderful Land of Oz - Douglas Horlock  12 Eighteenth-Century Britain and its Empire - P. J. Marshall (Read Article) 18 ‘The Generous Turk’: Some Eighteenth-Century Attitudes - Hugh Dunthorne (Read Article) 23 ‘The Mouth Of Hell’: Religious Discord at Brailes, Warwickshire, c.1660-c.1800 - Colin Haydon (Read Article)
    The Historian 68: Eighteenth Century Britain and its Empire
  • The Historian 67: William Morris, Art and the rise of the British Labour Movement

      The magazine of the Historical Association
    Featured articles: 4 William Morris, art and the rise of the British Labour movement - Chris Wrigley (Read Article) 11 Czech Uranium and Stalin's Bomb - Z.A.B. Zeman (Read Article) 18 Bombing and the air war on the Italian Front 1915-1918 - A.D. Harvey (Read Article) 22 The reign of Edward VI:...
    The Historian 67: William Morris, Art and the rise of the British Labour Movement
  • The Historian 66: Shakespeare's Glendower and Owain Glyn Dwr

      The magazine of the Historical Association
    Featured articles: 4 The Value of Biography in History - Antonia Fraser (Read Article) 10 Cholera and the fight for Public Health Reform in mid-Victorian England - Dr Geoff Gill MA, MSc, MD, FRCP (Read Article) 17 Ottawa: Canada's evolving capital - John Talyor 22 Shakespeare's Glendower and Owain Glyn Dwr...
    The Historian 66: Shakespeare's Glendower and Owain Glyn Dwr
  • The Historian 35

      The magazine of the Historical Association
    Featured articles: 3 Feature: Charlemagne, Stuart Airlie 10 Update: Did the Liberals still have a Future in 1914?, Geoffrey Searle 13 Record Linkage: Perceptions of the Public Record Office, Sarah Tyacke 16 Anniversary: The Massacre of Glencoe, Allan Macinnes 19 Report: History in Higher Education: A Change That's Purely Academic,...
    The Historian 35
  • The Historian 65: Cooling Memories

      Article
    Featured articles: 4 From Ashes to Icon: The creation of the National Botanic Garden of Wales - Charles Stirton (Read article) 10 Wanted, The elusive Charlie Peace: A Sheffield killer of the 1870s as popular hero - Dr John Springhall (Read article) 17 Cooling memories: Why we still remember Scott...
    The Historian 65: Cooling Memories
  • The Historian 34

      The magazine of the Historical Association
    3 Feature: Looking Back on the Levellers, Austin Woolrych 10 Update: The Vietnam War, Peter Riddick 13 Education Forum: History in the National Curriculum and All That: Year One, Ian Coulson 14 Communications: County Records Office, F.B. Stitt 18 Local History: Managing the Past: Archaeology in the National Parks, Robert...
    The Historian 34
  • The Historian 63: Why did People Choose Sides in the English Civil War?

      The magazine of the Historical Association
    Featured articles: 4 Why did People Choose Sides in the English Civil War? - Professor The Earl Russell (Conrad Russell) (Read article) 10 What's new about 'New Labour'? - Andrew Thorpe (Read article) 16 1939 after sixty years - Patrick Finney (Read article) 22 Louis, John and William: The 'Dame Europa'...
    The Historian 63: Why did People Choose Sides in the English Civil War?
  • The Historian 62: Catherine de Medici

      The magazine of the Historical Association
    Featured articles: 4 Is History Dangerous? - Eric Hobsbawm (Read article) 6 Britain and the formation of NATO - Carl Watts (Read article) 12 Sir William Petty: Scientist, Economist, Inventor 1623-87 - John Adams (Read article) 15 Durham: a personal perspective - G.R. Batho (Read article) 18 Catherine de Medici and the...
    The Historian 62: Catherine de Medici
  • The Handing Back of Hong Kong: 1945 and 1997

      Article
    Andrew Whitfield examines the recovery of Hong Kong from the Japanese, 52 years before its return to China. As the clock ticks ever closer to midnight on 30 June 1997, the sun will set on Britain’s last major colonial outpost. Thousands of miles from the motherland, the colony originally acted...
    The Handing Back of Hong Kong: 1945 and 1997
  • The Historian 61: The Press and the Public during the Boer War

      The magazine of the Historical Association
    Featured articles: 4 Vichy France and the Jews - Julian Jackson (Read article) 10 The Press and the Public during the Boer War - Jacqueline Beaumont Hughes (Read article) 16 Cambridge - Elisabeth Leedham-Green (Read article) 21 The Vikings in Britain - Henry Loyn
    The Historian 61: The Press and the Public during the Boer War
  • The Historian 60: The Knights Templars

      The magazine of the Historical Association
    Featured articles: 4 The Rise and Fall of The Knights Templars - Malcolm Barber (Read article) 10 The Resistible Rise of Napoleon Bonaparte - Malcolm Crook (Read article) 16 The Pilgrimage of Grace - Michael Bush (Read article) 21 The Cambridge Anthropological Expedition to the Torres Strait 1898-1899 (Read article)
    The Historian 60: The Knights Templars
  • The Irish historians' role and the place of history in Irish national life

      Historian article
    The debate on the nation and its history is new to England; and there is, perhaps, a tendency to assume that what is new in England is new everywhere. In Ireland, the debate has been going on since the 1970s, fuelled by what is called ‘revisionism’; or rather, by a...
    The Irish historians' role and the place of history in Irish national life
  • The Historian 30

      The magazine of the Historical Association
    3 Feature: Images: Catherine II of Russia, Enlightened Absolutism, and Mikhail Gorbachev, Roger Bartlett 10 Update: Disraeli, Ian Machin 12 Portfolio: The Secret 'Iron Tongs' of Midwifery, Joyce Rushen 14 Terylene, Rex Collins 16 Local History: The Ordnance Survey: A Quick Guide for Historians, Richard Oliver
    The Historian 30
  • Images of Ukraine through western lenses

      Historian article
    How has the understanding of what Ukraine is and, therefore, its image changed through the centuries? What did the word ‘Ukraine’ mean in the Middle Ages, the early modern times, or in the twentieth century? Even during the last four decades, this image has transformed dramatically, and the first association...
    Images of Ukraine through western lenses
  • Affirmative mysticism and John Woolman in colonial America

      Historian article
    Joshua M. Reinke introduces the American Quaker abolitionist, John Woolman. This seventeenth-century diarist’s encounter with Christ took him on a journey that led across the American colonies and provoked him to voice his fierce opposition to human bondage and the slave trade...
    Affirmative mysticism and John Woolman in colonial America
  • The year that lost eleven days

      Historian article
    From its Roman origins to the dating of the tax year, David Fleming describes how the changes made to the British calendar in 1752 came about and their effect on everyday life, both at the time and since...
    The year that lost eleven days
  • Out and About: Newcastle’s 1650 Witch Trial

      Historian feature
    A.D. Bergin’s research for a work of historical fiction led him to Newcastle, where one of the largest witch trials in English history took place in 1650. Despite the scale of the proceedings, the event remains much less well known than the infamous Pendle trials or Matthew Hopkins’ East Anglian witch hunts.
    Out and About: Newcastle’s 1650 Witch Trial
  • My Favourite History Place: The Great House of Mercers Creek

      Historian feature
    The tropical island of Antigua is a tourist heaven, but Gabriella Howell’s research into her family property, the Great House of Mercers Creek, shows how over the centuries, a varied history has shaped the experience of visitors and residents alike. From the enslaved and missionaries to admirals and film stars,...
    My Favourite History Place: The Great House of Mercers Creek
  • In conversation with Ulinka Rublack

      Historian feature
    The Historian discusses with Ulinka Rublack her latest book, Dürer’s Lost Masterpiece: Art and Society at the Dawn of a Global World (2023), which takes a fresh look at this major Renaissance artist, telling the story of his life and times, and reassessing some of his best-known works...
    In conversation with Ulinka Rublack
  • Opinion: History, anti-history, and historical fiction

      Historian feature
    As he gives a lecture to the Historical Association’s Virtual Branch, novelist, historian and BBC New Generation Thinker Oskar Jensen shares his thoughts on history, fantasy and the need to engage with the past on its own terms.
    Opinion: History, anti-history, and historical fiction
  • Update: Space, place and social constructs: the Spatial Turn in history

      Historian feature
    Ryan Hampton explains how ‘things’ and people combine to make space an important consideration in human history. Focusing on the German Peasants’ War of 1524-26, he examines how advances in our understanding of space might affect our knowledge of this important conflict...
    Update: Space, place and social constructs: the Spatial Turn in history
  • Environmental history and the challenges of the present

      Historian article
    In a wide-ranging survey of the field, Amanda Power explains what it means to do environmental history at a time of climate crisis, and points to the opportunities and challenges in this thriving area of research...
    Environmental history and the challenges of the present
  • Sensory streetscapes: people and urban environments 1930–1975

      Historian article
    Urbanisation is a defining characteristic of the modern age in Britain. The physical construction and management of urban environments has consumed the attention of historians since the late 1960s. In this article, Lucy Faire and Denise McHugh turn their attention to the citizens’ sensory experience of the modern town and...
    Sensory streetscapes: people and urban environments 1930–1975