Today’s featured articles
Pontius Pilate, the Roman governor who faced the ultimate politician’s dilemma, was put to use as a Christian convert by the early church.
The evolution of simnel cake, an English Easter delicacy associated with mothers and Tudor pretenders.
As Deterring Armageddon: A Biography of NATO and NATO: From Cold War to Ukraine, a History of the World’s Most Powerful Alliance make clear, at almost every point in the last 75 years the alliance's future has looked uncertain.
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Original Pirate Material
On 28 March 1964, Radio Caroline hit the waves. How did pirate radio discover its winning formula and what happened next?
‘Deterring Armageddon’ by Peter Apps and ‘NATO’ by Sten Rynning review
As Deterring Armageddon: A Biography of NATO and NATO: From Cold War to Ukraine, a History of the World’s Most Powerful Alliance make clear, at almost every point in the last 75 years the alliance's future has looked uncertain.
Sabbatai Sevi: The Lost Messiah
In the 17th century news spread that the Jewish messiah had finally arrived. Within a year he had converted to Islam. Who was he, and what had happened?
The Birth of Ovid
Writing from exile, the Roman poet Ovid revealed his birth date as 24 March 43 BC. But on the cause of said exile, he was unusually reticent.Challenging the ‘Ugliness’ of Anne of Cleves
Anne of Cleves became known to posterity as the ‘Flanders Mare’ and Henry VIII’s ‘ugly wife’, thanks to disparaging descriptions by ambassadors and diplomats. What motivated them?
William Adams: English Adviser to the Shogun
How an English navigator became one of the shogun’s most trusted advisers.
Northern Ireland’s Sex Scandal that Wasn’t
When four men were accused of an act of ‘gross indecency’ in 1950s Belfast, just three were put on trial. Despite efforts by the unionist government to protect a member of a prominent local family, not everyone was willing to be complicit in a cover-up.
The US Treasury’s Money Laundering Machine
The term ‘money laundering’ is often associated with mobsters, drug lords and morally dubious executives. But the expression’s first use was far less lawless.
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In the March issue: Mexico and the Spanish Civil War, medieval France, spycraft and the Glorious Revolution, challenging the ‘ugliness’ of Anne of Cleves, and Portugal’s Carnation Revolution.
Plus: reviews, opinion, crossword and much more!
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