The concept of the Reformation as a discrete event, with a beginning and an end, is a relatively belated development. For ...
T he battle of Rorke’s Drift of 22-23 January 1879 was refought in 2018 when a London Underground employee wrote an account of the siege on Dollis Hill Tube station’s notice b ...
In the 1820s London was the largest city in the world. With more than a million inhabitants, it lay at the heart of an expanding empire. It was a city of learning – medical students received training ...
Following its conquest by the English in 1284, medieval Wales needed a new origin story that established its place in Britain ...
Demosthenes: Democracy’s Defender by James Romm looks for hope amid the sound and fury surrounding the great orator of ...
At the end of the Cold War, Russia and the West seemed set on a path towards cooperation. Why did it veer into renewed ...
The Thirty Years War devastated continental Europe, killing millions and creating as many refugees. How did they experience ...
Linda Colley is Shelby M.C. Davis 1958 Professor of History at Princeton University. Her latest book is The Gun, the Ship and ...
On Pedantry: A Cultural History of the Know-It-All by Arnoud S.Q. Visser explores the long history of anti-intellectualism ...
At dawn on March 27th, 1941, white flags of surrender fluttered on the summit of Mount Sanchil, more than 6,000 feet above sea-level and the highest feature of the natural fortress of mountains ...
The Act of Uniformity passed by the House of Lords on January 15th, 1549, abolished the Latin mass in England. Prayers in English had already been included in the Latin services, and complete English ...
1960s San Francisco is remembered as the capital of gay liberation, but it also saw the birth of conversion therapy.