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Early Modern (16th-18thC)

The English diet has been mythologised as one of roasted meats and few vegetables but, as Anita Guerrini concludes from a survey of early modern writings on the subject, the nation’s approach to food has been rather more complicated than that.

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Frederick the Great, the man who made Prussia a leading European power, was born on January 24th, 1712.

Dunia Garcia Ontiveros charts the little-known history of the Sami population and the life of Knud Leem, the first person to study their language and culture.

Published in History Today, 2011

The Duke of Marlborough was dismissed from the office of captain-general on December 31st 1711.

The first performance of The Tempest on record was at court on All Hallows’ Day, on November 1st 1611.

Colin Jones and Emily Richardson reveal a little-known collection of obscene and irreverent 18th-century drawings targetting Madame de Pompadour, the favourite mistress of Louis XV of France.

An insight into the London Library's remarkable collection of early English versions of the Bible, at the heart of which is a copy of the King James Bible of 1611.

Published in History Today, 2011

What was behind Colonel Thomas Blood’s failed attempt to steal the Crown Jewels during the cash-strapped reign of Charles II and how did he survive such a treasonable act? Nigel Jones questions the motives of a notorious 17th-century schemer.

There is nothing new or exceptional about the recent English riots and they will have little long-term impact, argues Tim Stanley.

Jez Ross corrects misunderstandings about the origins and significance of disturbances in 1549.

William Beckford was the model of an 18th-century progressive and aesthete. But the wealth that allowed him to live such a lifestyle came from the slaves he exploited in his Caribbean holdings. Robert J. Gemmett looks at how an apparently civilised man sought to justify his hypocrisy.

Ben Sandell examines the origins, influence and significance of a group of often misunderstood radicals.

The English philanthropist was born on August 24th, 1759. Ian Bradley explains how his reputation as a champion of the abolition of slavery, evangelical and politician has undergone a series of reassessments.

Graham Goodlad examines differing interpretations of the part played by King Charles I in the outbreak of the civil war.

Patrick Williams reveals the courage of Henry VIII's Spanish wife.

Richard Wilkinson argues against the prevailing orthodoxy.


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