Gender
The artistic images of women depicted as witches were varied and constitute unusual 'pieces of history' by preserving a visual record of the intellectual origins of the witchcraze, as Dale Hoak discusses here. |
Patrick Williams reveals the courage of Henry VIII's Spanish wife. Published in History Review, Issue: 69, 2011
|
Susan Walters Schmid puts a new study into historiographical context. |
R. E. Foster sifts myth from reality in the life of the 'Lady with the Lamp', who died 100 years ago. |
Robin Waterfield looks at the influence of the mother of Alexander the Great in the years following her son’s death. |
Courtly love, celebrated in numerous songs and poems, was the romantic ideal of western Europe in the Middle Ages. Yet, human nature being what it is, the realities of sexual desire and the complications it brings were never far away, says Julie Peakman. |
Abortion was legalised in Britain on 14th July, 1967. There is a widespread belief that to be a feminist means to advocate abortion. Angela Kennedy and Mary Krane Derr argue, however, that many feminist pioneers opposed a 'woman's right to choose'. |
‘Complex marriage’, ‘male continence’ and the selection of the perfect partner were all themes propounded by a 19th-century cult in New York State. Clive Foss explores the influence of Plato’s Republic on John Humphrey Noyes and his Perfectionist movement. Published in History Today, Volume: 60 Issue: 12
|
The idea of a female monarch was met with hostility in medieval England; in the 12th century Matilda’s claim to the throne had led to a long and bitter civil war. But the death of Edward VI in 1553 offered new opportunities for queenship, as Helen Castor explains. Published in History Today, Volume: 60 Issue: 10
|
R.C. Richardson describes the fortunes of young women driven by poverty into domestic service in early modern England. A number fell victim to predatory masters and ended up with illegitimate children, only to be ejected form households into penury or, worse, executed for infanticide. Published in History Today, Volume: 60 Issue: 2
|
Martin Greig reveals the intimate relationship between the powerful Earl of Lauderdale, Charles II's Secretary for Scotland in the 1660s, and a Scottish spinster who became the earl's 'Presbyterian conscience' during a tumultuous period for kirk and crown. Published in Volume: 60 Issue: 9
|
Giles MacDonogh visits the History Today archive to examine Nancy Mitford’s 1968 article on one of the ‘oddest’ biographies ever written, Thomas Carlyle’s massive study of Frederick the Great. Published in History Today, Volume: 60 Issue: 4
|
Michael Scott looks at how a time of crisis in the fourth century BC proved a dynamic moment of change for women in the Greek world. |
Sex, scandals and celebrity were all part of a blame and shame culture that existed in the 18th century, one that often fed off the misfortune of women at the hands of men. Julie Peakman looks at how prostitutes, courtesans and ladies with injured reputations took up the pen in retaliation. |
Eamon Duffy explores the relationship between Mary I and her Archbishop of Canterbury Cardinal Pole. Pole’s advice to his queen about attitudes to Henry VIII and in dealing with heretics show he played a far more energetic role in the restoration of the ‘true religion’ than he has been given credit for. |
Patricia Fara recounts the moving story of a gifted contemporary of Isaac Newton who came to symbolise the frustrations of generations of female scientists denied the chance to fulfil their talents. Published in History Today, Volume: 59 Issue: 4
|
- 1 of 8
- ››
- Home
- Location
- Period
- Themes
- Magazine
- Subscribe
- Archive
- eBooks
- Students
- Blog
- Contact
Related Blog Posts
Posted May 18 2011
|
Posted January 4 2011
|
Posted October 22 2009
|
Posted September 17 2009
|
Posted March 6 2009
|
This Month's Magazine
January 2012
Full contents
Buy this issue
Print subscription
Online access
Give as a gift
Newsletter
From The Current Issue
Antony Lentin
|
Peter Ling
|
Gervase Phillips
|
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. |
Available To Subscribers
Follow Us
The History Today Blog
Posted 17 hours 23 min ago
|
Posted 18 hours 48 min ago
|
Posted 1 day 17 hours ago
|
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.