History Review, Issue: 32
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Richard Wilkinson considers how useful students will find new books on the early modern period. |
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Edgar Feuchtwanger considers new books on modern Germany history. |
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Martin Pugh reassesses the long career of one of the most unorthodox but charismatic and constructive figures in modern British history. |
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In assessing the achievements of the Catholic Monarchs, Geoffrey Woodward has to distinguish between propagandist myth and historical reality in order to reach a... |
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Claire Cross shows how the experiences of English Protestant exiles on the Continent, and Continental exiles in England, affected Protestantism in the Sixteenth Century... |
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In defending the study of history, Richard J Evans argues that the extreme exponents of Postmodernism are Emperors with No Clothes. |
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Carl Peter Watts examines a set of reforms which held out the prospect of modernising Russia but whose failure paved the way for revolution. |
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Jayne Rosefield looks at the interaction between the composer and the dictator. Winner of the 1998 Julia Wood Prize. |
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Barry Coward grapples with a question which has become more difficult to answer as a result of recent scholarship. He finds the answer lies in the New Model Army, in... |
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Jeremy Black takes a fresh look at the complex and controversial career of the First Earl of Chatham, the 'great outsider' of Hanoverian Britain. |
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In examining British politics from 1940 to 1945, Kevin Jefferys explains why the man who was widely perceived as winning the war lost the 1945 election. |
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