History Review, Issue: 57
denotes subscriber-only content. To access more than 11,000 articles in our archive, see our full range of subscription options. |
Richard Wilkinson has enjoyed two books on 17th-century France; Jonathan Dudley has enjoyed a biography of the journalist and political campaigner Henry Nevinson; Paula... |
|
Tim Clancey advises on how to use historians’ writings to your best advantage. |
|
Robert Pearce highlights Giuseppe Mazzini’s role in the Risorgimento. |
|
John Plowright examines the career of one of the key ministers in Attlee’s postwar governments. |
|
Robert Carr dissects a book frequently referred to but seldom read. |
|
Nick Smart welcomes a new and authoritative study of a key figure in interwar Britain. |
|
Robin Evans examines the connections between language, culture and national identity in 19th-century Galicia. |
|
Graham Goodlad surveys the variety of interpretations offered by historians of Cromwellian rule in the 1650s. |
|
John Swift examines the events that led the world to the brink of nuclear catastrophe. |
|
Robert Pearce introduces the First Reform Act and asks why parliamentary reform succeeded in 1832 when earlier reform bills had failed. |
|
Fiona Kisby provides practical help for those preparing for the challenging History AEA. |
|
Simon Lemieux explain why witch-hunting ended when so many Europeans supported it. |
|
Will Saunders asks whether one of the ‘villains’ of the English Reformation deserves his reputation. |
- Home
- Location
- Period
- Themes
- Magazine
- Subscribe
- Archive
- Ebooks
- Reviews
- Blog
- Contact








