Michael Biddiss
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Michael Biddiss looks at how the victorious Allies dealt with the unprecedented prosecution of genocide and mass atrocities by the Nazi leadership and how fair the proceedings were to those in the dock.
Published April 30 1995
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Published April 30 1994
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by Maurice Cranston
Published April 30 1991
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This winter I shall be rereading A la recherche du temps perdu. It is not, I concede, everyone's idea of evening relaxation by the fire-side. But those who have come to love this sinuous masterpiece will know well the kind of delights I anticipate.
Published December 1 1985
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For readers of this magazine the quality of the articles presented in its pages month by month will have provided, one hopes, ample evidence for the continuing intellectual vitality of historical scholarship, and indeed ample confirmation of the value of communicating this to the widest possible audience.
Published July 31 1985
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Michael Biddiss on the tale of a French village massacred by the SS in June 1944.
Published May 31 1985
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War is prominent among the forms of human experience that have most readily stimulated poetry. In combat both mind and body strain at the end of their tether.
Published March 31 1985
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Nicola Phillips
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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. |
















