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Winceby: The Finest Hour of the Rising Cromwell

Winceby: The Finest Hour of the Rising Cromwell

This lesser known battle was fine preparation for Cromwell ahead of his victories at Marston Moor and Naseby
Ronald Hutton

I have just published a study of the formative years of Oliver Cromwell’s career, up until the end of the Great Civil War in 1646 when he was established as the leading cavalry commander of the victorious Long Parliament, and as such one of its main agents in the...

Five Books By My Bed

Five Books By My Bed

The author of Berlin: The Story of a City and Partition writes about his favourite books to read this Summer.

Five Books By My Bed Maybe holidaying at home will give me more time to read this summer. I do hope so. I have never found the Mediterranean combination of sun and sand to be very hard back friendly but hopefully this year the garden and coastal breezes of the West...

Paul Strathern

Paul Strathern

Paul Strathern was born in London, and studied at Trinity College, Dublin, after which he served in the Merchant Navy over a period of two years. He then lived on a Greek island. In 1966 he travelled overland to India and the Himalayas. His novel A Season in Abyssinia won a Somerset Maugham Award in 1972.
Paul Strathern

Books Click on any of the books covers below to either buy or get more information on Amazon Articles Click on the links below to read the full article [dpdfg_filtergrid custom_query="advanced" use_taxonomy_terms="on" multiple_taxonomies="name_of_author"...

Generalship from Marlborough to Wellington

Generalship from Marlborough to Wellington

The acclaimed historian writes about the art of generalship among key British leaders of the long 18th century.
Jeremy Black

Never easy, the assessment of generalship becomes more difficult when you go back in time and the sources are less extensive. All-too-often the discussion becomes that of battles lost and won as in Hannibal must be good because he won at Cannae or Napoleon at...

Nicola Cornick

Nicola Cornick

Nicola Cornick discusses historical fiction and her writing.

Nicola Cornick, what prompted you to choose the period that you wrote your first book in? My very first book was a Regency romance inspired by my enjoyment of Georgette Heyer’s writing more than anything else! However, when I changed genre to write dual-time...

Nicola Cornick

Nicola Cornick

Nicola Cornick

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The Wolfson History Prize Interviews

The Wolfson History Prize Interviews

We talk to the nominees of the prize about subjects such as child survivors of the Holocaust, Haitian revolutionaries, knowledge under attack, and more.

The Wolfson History Prize 2021 Rebecca Clifford Rebecca, congratulations on your nomination for the Wolfson History Prize of 2021 from Aspects of History. Why did you choose your particular subject? This is a two-pronged answer. Most important prong, I’ve worked with...

The Honey and the Sting, by EC Fremantle

The Honey and the Sting, by EC Fremantle

The bond between three sisters is put to the test.

In this lyrically written, highly anticipated novel, E C Fremantle cements her place as one of Britain’s foremost writers of historical fiction. She is to be especially commended for her exploration of periods which are not well covered (her Jacobean The Poison Bed...

Deliverance, by John Pilkington

Deliverance, by John Pilkington

Let there be Justice.
Amy Thomas

Deliverance is the final instalment of John Pilkington’s gripping trilogy, which returns to 17th century England and the life of the now-retired Justice Robert Belstrang. Despite Belstrang’s plans for quiet, the world seems to have other ideas, and what follows...