CATEGORIES

ANNE BOLEYN'S FINAL BATTLE
BBC History Magazine

ANNE BOLEYN'S FINAL BATTLE

Anne Boleyn, Henry VIII’s second wife, famously lost her head at her husband’s behest. Tracy Borman, the presenter of a new TV series on Anne’s fall from grace, delves into the queen's dramatic final days

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10 mins  |
October 2020
Churchill ‘considered nuclear attack' on the USSR
BBC History Magazine

Churchill ‘considered nuclear attack' on the USSR

The statesman was prepared to deploy extreme measures against the forces of communism, new research reveals.

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3 mins  |
October 2020
A life lived to the full
BBC History Magazine

A life lived to the full

DIANE ATKINSON salutes an impressive new biography charting the action-packed life of Sylvia Pankhurst, from suffragette hunger strikes to secret missions to revolutionary Russia

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4 mins  |
October 2020
Lost and found
BBC History Magazine

Lost and found

RICHARD SUGG delves into the murky depths of Britain’s social history with a book that dredges up the hidden stories of everything we have chucked away over the last 500 years

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2 mins  |
July 2020
Who's holding the baby?
BBC History Magazine

Who's holding the baby?

Since the turn of the 20th century, Britain’s working mothers have been faced with the ultimate juggling act: holding down a job while raising a family. Helen McCarthy traces women’s attempts to solve the childcare conundrum

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10 mins  |
July 2020
Under the shadow
BBC History Magazine

Under the shadow

DAVID LAVEN considers an important, but disappointing, new survey of Fascist Italy at war, from the invasion of Ethiopia to the alliance with Nazi Germany

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2 mins  |
July 2020
MY HISTORY HERO: Beatrice shilling 1909–90
BBC History Magazine

MY HISTORY HERO: Beatrice shilling 1909–90

Cathy Newman, journalist and broadcaster, chooses

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2 mins  |
July 2020
Garibaldi was feted by our Victorian ancestors in an unprecedented way
BBC History Magazine

Garibaldi was feted by our Victorian ancestors in an unprecedented way

DAVID OLUSOGA explores lesser-known stories from our past

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3 mins  |
July 2020
Family fortunes
BBC History Magazine

Family fortunes

MARK CORNWALL recommends a masterful account of a dynasty that dominated Europe for more than four centuries and spread its influence across the globe

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5 mins  |
July 2020
THE FIGHT TO THE END... AND BEYOND
BBC History Magazine

THE FIGHT TO THE END... AND BEYOND

As Britons celebrated VE Day, German troops were engaged in pitiless clashes on the Dutch island of texel against rebel fighters-from Georgia, Eric Lee tells the story of the final battle of Europe's second World War

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9 mins  |
June 2020
The 14th Century… When Things Weren't What They Used To Be
BBC History Magazine

The 14th Century… When Things Weren't What They Used To Be

Hannah Skoda explores how late medieval Europe saw an upsurge in misty-eyed yearning for the ‘good old days’

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8 mins  |
Christmas 2016
Politicians cherry pick from history, if they take much notice of it at all
BBC History Magazine

Politicians cherry pick from history, if they take much notice of it at all

Why do so many politicians write history books? Does a knowledge of the past help with the challenges of today? And should MPs pay more attention to history? Our reviews editor, Matt Elton, headed to Westminster to ask a panel of history-loving politicians.

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9 mins  |
Christmas 2016
The Great American U-Turn
BBC History Magazine

The Great American U-Turn

In November 1916, US president Woodrow Wilson won re-election on an isolationist ticket. But just a few months later, he was issuing an impassioned call to arms. On the centenary of its entry into the First World War, Adam IP Smith traces America’s journey from neutrality to committed combatant.

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9 mins  |
April 2017
Verona, Italy
BBC History Magazine

Verona, Italy

For the latest in our historical holiday series, Paul explores the romance of Verona, a veritable Mecca for lovers across the world.

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4 mins  |
April 2017
Field Marshal Bill Slim - 1891-1970
BBC History Magazine

Field Marshal Bill Slim - 1891-1970

Comedian, actor and television presenter Griff Rhys Jones chooses.

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3 mins  |
January 2018
The Anglo - Saxons' Last Stand
BBC History Magazine

The Anglo - Saxons' Last Stand

The spirit of the Anglo-Saxons didn’t die at the battle of Hastings. William I faced years of resistance from a populace resentful of the Norman takeover. Marc Morris charts the defiant attempts to fight the conquerors

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9 mins  |
January 2017
How should history remember Fidel Castro?
BBC History Magazine

How should history remember Fidel Castro?

To many, he was a heroic champion of the disenfranchised; to others, a cruel tyrant. Following Fidel Castro’s death in November, we asked five historians to offer their verdicts on the Cuban leader’s life and legacy

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6 mins  |
January 2017
A Surgeon With A Secret
BBC History Magazine

A Surgeon With A Secret

As part of our occasional series profiling remarkable yet unheralded characters from history,  introduces Dr James Barry, the medical pioneer and eminent surgeon to aristocracy, who was forced to conceal a fundamental fact – that ‘he’ was in fact a ‘she’.

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5 mins  |
February 2017
7 Ways To Say “I Love You”
BBC History Magazine

7 Ways To Say “I Love You”

In medieval Europe, young lovers used all manner of media to declare their passion for one another – from exquisite French songbooks to lowly pieces of cattle bone. With Valentine’s Day fast approaching, Kimberley-Joy Knight introduces seven tokens of love from the Middle Ages

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5 mins  |
February 2017
Paupers' Brave New World
BBC History Magazine

Paupers' Brave New World

In the 1840s, the government began sparing Britain’s most deprived children the Dickensian hell of the workhouse and placing them in schools that promised good food, healthcare and an education. But did the reality live up to the ideal?

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8 mins  |
March 2017
Elizabethi's Irish Nemesis
BBC History Magazine

Elizabethi's Irish Nemesis

Hiram Morgan tells the story of the Irish earl Hugh O’Neill, a brilliant warrior and slippery negotiator who ran rings around Elizabeth I’s greatest generals and almost ended English rule in Ireland

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8 mins  |
March 2017
BBC History Magazine

Margaret Beaufort Mother of the Tudors

She was pregnant at 12, widowed by the Wars of the Roses and almost died at the hands of Richard III. But, writes Michael Jones, nothing could prevent the indomitable Margaret Beaufort from engineering the rise of her son, Henry VII, to the English throne

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10+ mins  |
January 2017
BBC History Magazine

When Britons were slaves in Africa

Between the 16th and 18th centuries, pirates operating out of north Africa enslaved thousands of men, women and children from the British Isles. Adam Nichols describes the often faltering attempts to release the captives from a life of hard labour and torture

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9 mins  |
January 2017
Napoleon III Surrenders To The Prussians
BBC History Magazine

Napoleon III Surrenders To The Prussians

The ailing French emperor suffers a humiliating defeat at the battle of Sedan.

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1 min  |
September 2017
What Lies Beneath
BBC History Magazine

What Lies Beneath

NICK RENNISON enjoys a lurid tale of treasure hunting, murder and mayhem set in 19th-century England

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1 min  |
September 2017
Not So Sweet Stuff
BBC History Magazine

Not So Sweet Stuff

DAVID OLUSOGA admires a new work tracing the history of our damaging love affair with sugar

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3 mins  |
September 2017
Why Separatism Is Turning Up The Heat On European States
BBC History Magazine

Why Separatism Is Turning Up The Heat On European States

As the dust settles on Catalonia’s contested independence referendum, Dr Angel Smith offers a historical perspective on the region’s relationship with Madrid. Then Professor Martin Conway considers why Spain is far from the only European country to be convulsed by a separatist movement

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4 mins  |
December 2017
“Our View Of Imperialism Needs Constant Interrogation”
BBC History Magazine

“Our View Of Imperialism Needs Constant Interrogation”

“Our View Of Imperialism Needs Constant Interrogation”

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3 mins  |
December 2017
Lettice Knollys Was A Favourite Of Elizabeth I… Then She Stole The Queen's Sweetheart
BBC History Magazine

Lettice Knollys Was A Favourite Of Elizabeth I… Then She Stole The Queen's Sweetheart

Nicola Tallis tells the story of a Tudor love triangle

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8 mins  |
December 2017
Why Is Sex Such An Explosive Issue In The Corridors Of Power?
BBC History Magazine

Why Is Sex Such An Explosive Issue In The Corridors Of Power?

Recent months have seen Westminster rocked by allegations of sexual impropriety by male politicians. We asked two historians for their perspective on why sex scandals have dogged the British establishment for the past two centuries.

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4 mins  |
January 2018