The Battle of Sandwich: England's Lost Victory
A little-known encounter between the English and French navies should rank alongside Trafalgar and the defeat of the Armada.
A little-known encounter between the English and French navies should rank alongside Trafalgar and the defeat of the Armada.
In his pursuit of Anne Boleyn, Thomas Cromwell was guided by a prophecy foretelling treason.
Francis Drake’s exploits in the New World made him perfect material for the English gutter press and a figurehead for rising Hispanophobia.
Along with Robin Hood, the romantic highwayman is one of the great myths of English outlawry. But the model for this most gallant of rogues was a Frenchman name Claude Duval, who carried out audacious robberies with a touch of Parisian flair.
The small city of Hereford became one of England’s most important pilgrim sites due to the many miracles attributed to a local saint.
The world does not influence Britain’s native culture, the world is its culture, as anyone with a grasp of the country’s history will understand, argues Suzannah Lipscomb.
The often overlooked importance of maritime affairs on the course of the Civil Wars.
A look at John Ogilby's Britannia road atlas.
It was during the Tudor age that the first British antiquarians emerged, detailing the nation’s history and geography – or so the traditional story goes. But, as Nicholas Orme explains, William Worcester had laid the groundwork for their advances and anticipated their interests a century before.
Unpicking a tangle of history, myth and misunderstanding reveals why, for so long, we believed King Harold was shot through the eye at the Battle of Hastings.