Nigel Saul
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Nigel Saul reviews 'one of the masterpieces of historical writing of our time'. Published September 13 2011
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Nigel Saul reviews John Goodall's account of castle history. Published August 17 2011
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Medieval knights were the sporting superstars and military heroes of their day, who performed before an adoring public in the tournament. Nigel Saul explains their appeal. Published May 16 2011
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Nigel Saul reviews Edmund King's account of the civil war during King Stephen's reign. Published April 20 2011
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Nigel Saul salutes his colleague’s achievement of 100 authored books on a wide range of historical subject matter. Published November 16 2010
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Nigel Saul reviews a biography of Edward II. Published August 24 2010
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Nigel Saul investigates the building of Salisbury Cathedral, the Gothic masterpiece built in double-quick time.
Published February 14 2008
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Nigel Saul explores a new general history of Dark Age Britain
Published April 20 2005
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Nigel Saul looks at a building which embodied much of England’s religious and political life in the later Middle Ages, and which staged the blessing of the Prince of Wales’s marriage on April 9th 2005. Published March 23 2005
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Nigel Saul reads a major study of medieval popular culture and religion.
Published June 15 2004
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Nigel Saul examines two new theories surrounding the demise of the Plantagenet king.
Published April 13 2003
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Published October 22 2002
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Nigel Saul tells how, in spite of famines and visitations of the plague, conditions were better than ever before for those living in 1400. Published June 30 2000
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Nigel Saul explores the deposition of Richard II, arguing that the king’s malice and misrule forced Henry Bolingbroke to destroy him.
Published August 31 1999
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Nigel Saul reviews a work by C. M. Woolgar Published June 30 1999
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Anthony Kelly
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From The Archive
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The Hudson's Bay Company was one of the central forces moulding the development of the vast tracts of land that today are Canada - but as Barry Gough explains here, the circumstances of its launch in 1670 also reveal much about the commercial forces, personalities and rivalries of Restoration England. |
On This Day In History
Richard Cavendish describes the massacre of the 'slave hounds' at the settlement of Pottawatomie Creek on May 24th, 1856.















