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Piercefield: The Time and the Place

Piercefield: The Time and the Place

The story of Piercefield House near Chepstow, a once-celebrated estate overlooking the River Wye that later fell into ruin.

The setting of a story is vital for a historical novelist, perhaps even more than for those whose books are set in the present. This is for the blindingly obvious reason that a contemporary novel is set in a place or a milieu, whereas a historical novel has not only a...

No More Napoleons: How Britain Managed Europe from Waterloo to World War One, by Andrew Lambert

No More Napoleons: How Britain Managed Europe from Waterloo to World War One, by Andrew Lambert

As debate intensifies over Britain’s role in world security, Andrew Lambert offers a timely reassessment of the country’s 19th-century grand strategy.

It seems apt that the paperback edition of Andrew Lambert’s gripping analysis in No More Napoleons should be published as Britain’s contribution to the preservation of the security of the continent of Europe, and indeed the wider world, is under debate and our very...

No More Napoleons: Andrew Lambert Interviewed

No More Napoleons: Andrew Lambert Interviewed

In examining the 'Wellington System', the naval historian challenges the traditional view of complacent British diplomacy in Europe during the 19th century and up to WW1.
Andrew Lambert

Andrew Lambert, in No More Napoleons, you describe Britain’s strategy between 1815 and 1914 as “book-ended by existential total wars”. What prompted you to reconsider the 19th century not as an age of complacency, but instead a hundred years of vigilance? The tendency...

Sea Power, Strategy, and Europe

Sea Power, Strategy, and Europe

By securing the Low Countries and maintaining control of the seas, British statesmen including Wellington created a system that balanced the continent's powers and preserved stability for a century until 1914.
Andrew Lambert

While it is often thought that British military engagement in northwestern Europe ended with Waterloo in 1815 and resumed, a century later, with the First World War in 1914 – with a few periods of invasion anxiety surfacing around the middle of the 19th century –the...

Mickey Mayhew

Mickey Mayhew

Mickey Mayhew is a disabled author and historian from London, working mainly on Mary Queen of Scots, Anne Boleyn, and the Romanovs; his PhD covered the contentious online ‘cults’ surrounding both Mary and Anne. He wrote The Little Book of Mary Queen of Scots (The History Press) in 2014 and then I Love The Tudors (Pitkin Publishing) in 2016. House of Tudor – A Grisly History and Imprisoning Mary Queen of Scots – The Men Who Kept the Stuart Queen were released by Pen & Sword Books in 2022. Rasputin and his Russian Queen – The True Story of Grigory and Alexandra was released in March 2023, with the highly controversial The Anne Boleyn Bible following in November, both again courtesy of Pen & Sword Books.
Mickey Mayhew

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

Ibsen’s Ghosts at the Questors Theatre – A Review

Ibsen’s Ghosts at the Questors Theatre – A Review

A dark and emotionally charged production of Ghosts at the Questors Theatre.
Jasmine Guama

Henrik Ibsen’s Ghosts is not a play that tries to win you over gently, and the production at the Questors Theatre did little to soften its impact. Set firmly within the Alving household and unfolding without an interval, the evening pressed forward with an...

The Noose of Samuel Burrows, by Nick Kevern

The Noose of Samuel Burrows, by Nick Kevern

The story of Samuel Burrows, a hangman in the harsh world of Georgian Britain.
Nick Kevern

23rd April 1813   Samuel Burrows was more excited than ever. Today was going to be his day. He had held the position of Chester’s, and therefore Cheshire’s, executioner for four years. However, until this day, only a select few knew of his official duties. For...

Brian Williams

The author of a biography on Marshal Ney discusses the Napoleonic Wars and his historical influences

Brian Williams, what first attracted you to the period or periods you work in? My father was a history teacher and one of my abiding memories of childhood is of him spreading a map out on the dinner party and showing me where Waterloo was. I had come home from a visit...

Books of 2025 from Aspects of History

Books of 2025 from Aspects of History

Our authors and contributors recommend the titles they've enjoyed this year

Books of 2025 from Aspects of HistoryZeb Baker-Smith Editor of Aspects of HistorySeven Rivers by Vanessa Taylor explores how humanity and waterways have shaped one another across millennia, offering vivid historical portraits of the Nile, Danube, Ganges, Thames,...

Brian Williams

Brian Williams

Brian Williams is a British historian and the author of Marshal Ney: Fall from Glory which was published in August 2025.
Brian Williams

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"...