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Peter Furtado

Published November 9 2009
Published February 16 2009
Published November 12 2008
Peter Furtado reports on new developments.
Published August 11 2008
Peter Furtado joins the celebrations of the Victorian Society as it commemorates half a century of defending the country’s nineteenth-century heritage.
Published July 14 2008
 Peter Furtado reflects on this issue and his time as Editor of History Today.
Published July 14 2008
 Tibet, the ‘Forbidden Land’ ever since 1793 when it banned foreigners from entering, has long been an object of fascination, perhaps to Britons especially, since Colonel Francis Younghusband forced his way to Lhasa in 1904.
Published June 13 2008
One of the great – but relatively ignored – atrocities of the twentieth century was the rape of Nanjing (formerly Nanking) by the Japanese Imperial Army in early December 1937, during which some 200,000 Chinese were massacred and perhaps another 20,000 raped.
Published May 14 2008
Recently the prime minister has urged soldiers to wear their uniform proudly even when off-duty, and there certainly seems to be an attempt to foster civic pride in the military, with regiments returning from Iraq or Afghanistan parading through the streets, to be greeted by flag-waving shoppers.
Published May 14 2008
 Happenings were the in-thing in the 1960s, and the late 1960s – 1968 specifically – are the in-thing at the moment: so much so that the BBC is devoting a daily programme to the sounds of the year, a degree of attention that it has not accorded even to equally crowded turning-points such as 1945 or 1989.
Published April 9 2008
Published March 13 2008
 How should a society acknowledge the history of minority communities within its borders, particularly minorities that have suffered at the hands of the majority?
Published March 11 2008
 History Today announces its awards for the best of 2007.
Published February 14 2008
‘A week is a long time in politics’: the phrase is one of the enduring legacies of the Harold Wilson era. This month we report on our Annual Awards for 2007, and curiously two of our prize-winners wrote histories located in British cultural and political life of the 1960s, while the third is celebrated for his attempt to break free of the constraints of such short-term thinking.
Published February 14 2008
Peter Furtado previews a show of the British response to the Post-Impressionist view of modern life, at Tate Britain.
Published January 15 2008

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