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Before the Assassination: Archduke Ferdinand and the General

Before the Assassination: Archduke Ferdinand and the General

Was the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand a failure of intelligence or a consequence of ambition?

Bosnia and Herzegovina was a hotly disputed territory in 1914. It had been annexed by the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy in 1910 from the crumbling Ottoman Empire, but was also claimed by neighbouring Serbia and had a growing nationalist movement that wanted it to be part...

Henry III & the Truce with Navarre

Henry III & the Truce with Navarre

Was Theobold II of Navarre looking to stab Henry III in the back?

In the autumn of 1266 Henry III was bogged down at Kenilworth castle in Warwickshire, besieging the Montfortian garrison. While focused on crushing the revolt in England, the king also had other pressing business to attend to. While the siege was in progress, he...

Crazy Rich Georgians: Elizabeth Chudleigh & Friends

Crazy Rich Georgians: Elizabeth Chudleigh & Friends

While Britain’s American colonies are fighting bitterly for independence, the trial of Elizabeth Chudleigh enthralled London high society.
Catherine Ostler

A scandal of such allure that the House of Lords, the judicial system, the British press and London society ignored a turning point in the American War of Independence, possibly the last moment peace might have broken out: this was the trial for bigamy of Elizabeth...

Liberating Libya

Liberating Libya

The author of a new history of Libya introduces Britain's relationship with the North African country.
Rupert Wieloch

Writing history in a post-feminist era, when readers are especially alert to issues of social and racial justice, requires a sensitive approach to modern opinions. Authors today have to accept that many influential academics are highly critical of government authority...

Napoleon’s Hat

Napoleon’s Hat

As a recent auction has shown, interest in Bonaparte's bicorne is alive and well.

Napoleon's Hat Joseph J Sullivan’s 1888 music hall song poses a question that has been asked by auction houses around the work since 1815, albeit that the enquiry invariably refers to one specific model of ‘tile’: that worn by Napoléon from 1800, shortly after he...

Army Girls at the National Museum

Army Girls at the National Museum

To mark the release of her latest book, Army Girls, historian and author Tessa Dunlop chairs an exclusive panel featuring some of the last surviving female soldiers of the Second World War. In December 1941, for the first time in its history, Britain introduced...

Olivia Jordan

Olivia Jordan

Olivia Jordan served in France during the Phoney War, and then translated for the Free French and drove for de Gaulle during his exile in London.

In 1940 Olivia Jordan, then Matthews, drove an ambulance under fire in France, escaped to Britain as the Germans closed in and became Charles de Gaulle’s driver-translator in London. Subsequently she was awarded the Croix de Guerre, though talking of her war work last...

Historical Heroes: Dante Alighieri

Historical Heroes: Dante Alighieri

Dante Alighieri, the Florence native, was a forerunner of the Renaissance and the mind behind one of the greatest works of world literature, The Divine Comedy.

In 1308, the exiled Florentine poet Dante Alighieri described how, midway through his life, he found himself lost amidst a dark wood, with no sign of a path. He had no idea how he had arrived where he was. His mind was fogged; it was as if he had woken from a deep...

Flesh and Blood: The Iron Chancellor

Flesh and Blood: The Iron Chancellor

Otto von Bismark was a titan of Europe, but Katja Hoyer gives an intimate account of the man behind the statesman.
Katja Hoyer

‘Please just let me see my Johanna again’ – those were the whispered last words of the once towering figure of Otto von Bismarck, breathed out as he lay on his death bed on 30 July 1898. He had spent a lifetime building up a reputation as a tenacious politician with a...

John of Gaunt: Father of Monarchy, by Helen Carr

John of Gaunt: Father of Monarchy, by Helen Carr

The author of a new biography gives us an overview of the ‘Red Prince’.
Helen Carr

In 1376, the Lords and Commons of England gathered at Westminster Palace to attend the first Parliament held in almost three years, with the intention to reform what they considered to be a corrupt government; this would later be called the ‘Good Parliament’ and would...