News

In The Blood in Winter: A Nation Descends, 1642 Jonathan Healey holds Juntos and ‘jittery times’ responsible for England’s ...
When Francisco Franco died in November 1975 the enduring image of the country he had ruled for almost four decades was of a ...
A routine Native American cattle round-up at the US-Mexico border in 1898 became an international incident.
The Graces: The Extraordinary Untold Lives of Women at the Restoration Court by Breeze Barrington looks beyond the warming ...
Depending on one’s vantage point, the meaning of the French Revolution varies. The First Republic succumbed to an imperial ...
The wine trade in medieval Tunis was lucrative, but it caused a moral quandary for the ruling Hafsids.
Though his relics are reviled, his impact is more keenly felt than ever. Can The Colonialist: The Vision of Cecil Rhodes by ...
In March 1960 Julius Nyerere – then leader of the Tanganyika African National Union (TANU) – sat down with former first lady Eleanor Roosevelt on her roundtable discussion programme Prospects of ...
How to reform an ancient Greek tyrant? Plato’s final advice to Dionysius the Younger was not well received.
The names ‘Alcock’ and ‘Brown’ – when appearing together – have faded so far from public awareness that they are most likely to appear as the unexpected answer to a trivia question about the identity ...
As a young man, the not-yet-famous philosopher René Descartes lived for a while in a very famous place: Saint-Germain-en-Laye, 20 km outside Paris, where French kings had been building magnificent ...
How did a Gulf backwater become a global powerbroker? Saudi Arabia: A Modern History by David Commins explores the uneasy alliance between oil, autocracy, and Wahhabism.