Richard Wilkinson
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Richard Wilkinson charts the highs and lows of Winston Churchill in 1940-45. Published November 30 2011
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Richard Wilkinson finds much to enjoy in the opening volumes of a comprehensive new series on British social history. Published August 19 2011
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Richard Wilkinson argues against the prevailing orthodoxy. Published August 19 2011
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Richard Wilkinson is enthusiastic about a new biography. Published August 19 2011
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Richard Wilkinson elucidates the paradoxical career of one of the key figures of English Protestantism. Published November 22 2010
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Richard Wilkinson enjoys a social history of life in Georgian London, by Dan Cruickshank. Published October 5 2010
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Richard Wilkinson enjoyed this recent biography of the prime minister who led Britain into the Second World War. Published October 5 2010
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Richard Wilkinson is impressed, up to a point, with a new revisionist study on Tudor religious controversies. Published November 26 2009
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Richard Wilkinson has immersed himself in a new study of the Second World War. Published November 26 2009
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Richard Wilkinson reviews a book on the history of the English Civil Wars. Published December 1 2008
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Richard Wilkinson questions the motives of important historical figures, and of historians writing about them. Published November 27 2008
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Richard Wilkinson recreates the contest that marked, and marred, the British war effort in 1914-18. Published August 28 2008
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Richard Wilkinson, our regular reviewer, has been reading books on the early modern and modern periods. Published February 28 2008
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Richard Wilkinson shows that good history is never dull. Published August 20 2007
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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 Bartley has immersed herself in a major new history of the Magyars. Published February 19 2007
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From The Current Issue
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Tim Stanley
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Hywel Williams
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Anthony Kelly
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Marilyn V. Longmuir
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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.
















