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‘When That Man Is Dead and Gone’: The Curious Death of Adolf Hitler

‘When That Man Is Dead and Gone’: The Curious Death of Adolf Hitler

Adolf Hitler’s death promised closure, but instead unleashed competing narratives, each of them revealing just how wartime fantasies, propaganda and post-war politics shaped the meaning of his demise.
Caroline Sharples

From 9pm on Tuesday 1 May 1945, the programming on North German radio underwent an abrupt tonal shift. Light, uplifting tunes gave way to sombre music, interspersed with urgent instructions to ‘stand by’ for an important government message. 90 minutes later, three...

Gladiators and the Roman Mind: In Conversation with Harry Sidebottom

Gladiators and the Roman Mind: In Conversation with Harry Sidebottom

Toned biceps on show during a deadly bout on the sands of the arena – but is the Hollywood depiction of gladiator less interesting than the actual truth?

It is telling just how few mainstream films have tackled ancient Rome in the 21st century, with two notable exceptions… you know the ones I mean. Gladiators and the arches of the Colosseum are two of the most iconic images we have of the Romans and the Eternal City’s...

Marshal Ney: Myths and Questions

Marshal Ney: Myths and Questions

When Marshal Ney was shot in the Luxembourg Gardens, the man was already eclipsed by his legend. His career exposes the limits of battlefield brilliance in a world where wars were already fought on paper and in courts.

“Soldiers, when I give the command to fire, fire straight at my heart. Wait for the order. It will be my last to you. I have fought a hundred battles for France and not one against her…. Soldiers! Fire!” The oft-quoted last words of Michel Ney, Marshal of France,...

‘Monarchs Actually Did Something Back Then!’: Richard Foreman Interviews Charlie Higson

‘Monarchs Actually Did Something Back Then!’: Richard Foreman Interviews Charlie Higson

The author and podcaster shares his reflections on a thought-provoking journey through a thousand years of British kings and queens that mixes personal curiosity with expert insight.

Can you first tell us about the genesis of the podcast and book – Willie, Willie, Harry, Stee? It all started for me at an old-fashioned, very minor, prep school in the 1960s. I’m probably from the last generation of British children who was taught a straightforward,...

Has 2026 Changed the World of Assassination?

Has 2026 Changed the World of Assassination?

A timely inquiry proposes that assassination today remains a fixture of statecraft as recent targeted killings continue to pervade the geopolitical sphere but rarely deliver clear strategic success.
Simon Ball

If the question posed above were possible, states have already pushed assassination even further to the fore since the publication of Death to Order: A Modern History of Assassination in the summer of 2025. However, if we look underneath the headlines, then the trends...

The Ghosts of Winceby

The Ghosts of Winceby

The 1643 skirmish was as surprising as it was significant in the English Civil Wars, when Cromwell’s charge helped secure Parliamentarian control in Lincolnshire.

Lincolnshire has played a pivotal role in the history of England on more than one occasion with the Rising of 1536 being one such example which was itself a precursor to the larger Pilgrimage of Grace. Just over a century later, the county would again play an...

Nuremberg: The Translator’s Tale, by Helen Fry

Nuremberg: The Translator’s Tale, by Helen Fry

An account of Howard Triest, a Jewish interpreter at the Nuremberg Trials, lays out the personal toll of psychologically examining the perpetrators of the Holocaust

80 years ago, one of the great courtroom dramas of the 20th century took place in Germany: the Nuremberg trials of the top Nazi leaders. But while the whole world was focusing on events in the court room, a second, less well-known drama was also taking place in their...

Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes

Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes

A glance back at Sergei Diaghilev and the Ballets Russes, their bold collaborations and innovations which transformed ballet into its modern form.
Anna M Holmes

On 31st March 1875, Sergei Diaghilev was born into a wealthy Russian family. I salute the man who did so much to haul ballet into the 20th century. My historical novel, Dance of the Earth, spanning 1875 – 1921, is largely set in London. During this tumultuous era,...

‘So The World May Know He Loved Me Once’: Catherine Dickens’s Story

‘So The World May Know He Loved Me Once’: Catherine Dickens’s Story

On her deathbed, Mrs Dickens asked her daughter to give her letters from Charles to the British Museum ‘so the world may know he loved me once.’
Αnnie Elliot

The world might have found it hard to believe. After 22 years of marriage and having made her pregnant at least 12 times, Dickens, aged 46, built a wall in their bedroom to keep his wife, Catherine, out, forced her to visit his 18-year-old mistress to quell rumours,...