Volume: 36 Issue: 1
Contents of History Today, January 1986 |
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Paul Rich argues that while the official response to post-war immigration was slow to develop, the tensions and white backlash of the late fifties marked its... |
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Michael House examines the life of the unconventional poet. |
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John Palmer explores the new development of computerising the Domesday day book and what the effects will be. |
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Elizabeth Hallam reflects on the usage and abusage of William the Conqueror's Domesday book. |
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David Cannadine raises questions about the transition from student life into the working world |
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Michael Lee questions the use of using political historical sources. |
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Mark Kishlansky discusses the change for historians with the ever increasing use of computers. |
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Competing interests as much as ideology fuelled the functioning of the Third Reich, augmented by forced labour and the plunder of Occupied Europe. |
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A round up of the latest texts on the complex subject of the Norman Conquest. |
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Without their Welsh connections, the Tudors could never have made good their rags-to-riches ascent to the English throne, argues Peter R. Roberts. |
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Editor Gordon Marsden rounds up what is to come in History Today, 1986. |
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European history is whatever the historian wants it to be. It is a summary of the events and ideas political, religious, military, serious, romantic, prosaic, near at... |
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