The Blog
News, reviews, and commentary on the world of history
Paul Lay previews the February issue of the magazine, which is out next week. By Paul Lay | Posted Thu 12th January, 12:55
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The winner of the Longman-History Today Book Prize was announced at our annual award ceremony. Here is a collection of photographs from the event. By Paul Lay | Posted Thu 12th January, 11:30
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A letter written by Ludwig van Beethoven in 1823 and estimated to be worth up to €150,000 has been rediscovered in Germany. By Kathryn Hadley | Posted Wed 11th January, 12:30
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'Crisis? What crisis?' was Prime Minster James Callaghan's response to Britain's Winter of Discontent in 1979. However, he never actually said those words. A compendium of wrongly-attributed quotations. By Christopher Winn | Posted Wed 11th January, 09:05
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After decades of advance, democracy in Europe has begun to look curiously vulnerable. By Paul Lay | Posted Tue 10th January, 08:25
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Juliet Gardiner reviews John Forster's biography of Charles Dickens. By Juliet Gardiner | Posted Tue 10th January, 07:30
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A pictorial history of the London Zoological Society, which in the 1820s set about collecting specimens that would form the basis of the capital's zoo. By Kathryn Hadley | Posted Mon 9th January, 12:03
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The author of Courtiers: The Secret History of Kensington Palace (Faber & Faber), and presenter of the BBC TV series, If Walls Could Talk: An Intimate History of the Home discusses her work with Paul Lay. By Paul Lay | Posted Mon 9th January, 08:30
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In this month's edition we discuss the difficult legacy of the Treaty of Versailles, and the origins of the medieval poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. By Dean Nicholas | Posted Sun 8th January, 17:25
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Joan of Arc was born 600 years ago today. An insight into how she has been used as a political symbol and been an incarnation of French national pride for the past six centuries. By Kathryn Hadley | Posted Fri 6th January, 12:22
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146 volumes of veterinary medicine reports from the collections of the National Library of Scotland have been digitised and are freely available on the Medical History of British India website. By Kathryn Hadley | Posted Thu 5th January, 11:15
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Simon Armitage, author of a recent translation of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, goes on the hunt for the medieval poem's origins. By Dean Nicholas | Posted Thu 5th January, 09:30
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A pair of new books offer differing takes on the stoicism of British explorers in search of geographical extremes. By Henry Nicholls | Posted Wed 4th January, 14:35
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A new interactive website allows users to overlay data over historical maps of London. By Dean Nicholas | Posted Wed 4th January, 08:50
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January 2012
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From The Archive
In 1844 the people of the former Spanish colony of Santo Domingo rose in rebellion against the Haitians who had occupied their island since 1822. But instead of trying to establish genuine independence for their Dominican Republic, its political leaders did their best to trade it off to France and then to Spain which briefly re-annexed it in 1861. |
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On This Day In History
Josip Broz, known as Tito since the 1930s, was elected President of the Federal Assembly of Yugoslavia on January 13th, 1953.