Recently published
Latimer and Ridley Burned at the Stake
The Oxford Martyrs were killed on 16 October 1555.
The Fauves at the Salon d’Automne
The exhibition that opened in Paris, on October 15th, 1905, 'shocked many who saw, and many more who did not.'
Winston Churchill, the H-Bomb and Nuclear Disarmament
Geoffrey Best considers Winston Churchill’s growing alarm about the possibility of nuclear war, and his efforts to ensure that its horrors never happened.
The French Conquest of Algiers
How France became caught up in an unexpectedly complicated imperial adventure in 1830, eventually adding almost all of what is now Algeria to its empire.
George IV: A Sketch
Kenneth Baker looks at the foibles and achievements of one of Britain’s most controversial monarchs through the eyes of his caricaturists.
Pootering About
Peter Morton reminds us that, a century before Adrian Mole, there was Charles Pooter.
The Morrill Majority
In the twenty-eighth and final essay in this series, Daniel Snowman meets John Morrill, historian of the Civil War, Oliver Cromwell and the recurrent political instability of the ‘Atlantic Archipelago’.
The Search for Dido
Sarah Minney, a genealogist-researcher, solves the mystery of the later life of a famous black beauty of the late 18th century.
Lawrence in Arabia
Diplomat and traveller Hugh Leach draws on his experience of working with Arab tribes to examine T.E. Lawrence’s strategy in the Arab revolt, in anticipation of a new exhibition at the Imperial War Museum.