News
‘I Humbly Beg Your Speedy Answer’: Letters on Love and Marriage from the World’s First Personal Advice Column by Mary Beth ...
Hertha Ayrton’s experiment in a bathtub may have saved lives in the trenches, but it caused ripples among the ranks of the ...
The tour that the Quapaws gave French explorers Louis Jolliet and Jacques Marquette in 1673. English, Spanish, French, and a ...
How did a Gulf backwater become a global powerbroker? Saudi Arabia: A Modern History by David Commins explores the uneasy ...
Britain’s first book-of-the-month club – the Book Society – brought reading to a vast new audience. But not without some controversy.
In Language and Social Relations in Early Modern England Hillary Taylor listens in the archives for the voices of ordinary ...
Early 17th-century machines were intricate, impressive, responsive, and lively in equal measure. Even so, for Descartes just ...
America, América: A New History of the New World by Greg Grandin finds a place for Latin America and its ideals in the story of the United States.
The Illegals: Russia’s Most Audacious Spies and the Plot to Infiltrate the West by Shaun Walker sheds light on the Soviet Union’s undercover intelligence gathering.
In September 1099 a letter addressed to Pope Paschal II sent from Latakia, in present-day Syria, recounted a number of important events taking place during the First Crusade. As well as Latin ...
On 8 October 1982 Margaret Thatcher told the Conservative Party Conference that ‘the National Health Service is safe with us’. This would prove to be among her most memorable lines. However, as ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results