The Friendly Recluse
Medieval hermits were the agony aunts of their day.
Medieval hermits were the agony aunts of their day.
Foreign traders were attracted to the City of London by England’s prosperous trade in wool and cloth. They were not always made welcome.
The changing shape of the slave trade in the medieval Mediterranean.
As Britain got hooked on tobacco in the 17th century, smoking paraphernalia became ubiquitous. These items provide an insight into the anxieties and aspirations of the early modern psyche.
Perhaps the greatest disaster to ever befall humanity, the pandemic of 1918 is strangely overlooked.
Few episodes in the history of the British Labour movement have been as mythologised as that in which six Dorset farm labourers were shipped to Australia for their trade union activities.
Laughing at experts is nothing new. Kate Davison explores our long history of puncturing the powerful with satire and humour – to keep them in line and just for the fun of it.
Volunteer rationing in the First World War depended on patriotism, but that could only go so far.
How one man did battle with fake news in the 17th century.
The world does not influence Britain’s native culture, the world is its culture, as anyone with a grasp of the country’s history will understand, argues Suzannah Lipscomb.