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Historian Steven Gunn uncovers what thousands of fatal accidents can tell us about everyday existence in 16th-century England ...
Physicist Frank Close traces how British science – and fear of a Nazi bomb – lit the fuse for the nuclear age ...
Traversing the landscape of medieval Europe, they sang of longing, power and – whether implicitly or explicitly – sex. They moved from castle to court, debated morals and aphrodisiacs, and ...
Historian Bettany Hughes reveals what growing up in the ancient Roman Empire was really like – from knucklebones and wooden ...
This is how a royal Frankish dynasty turned flowing locks into a political weapon, and why cutting them could mean deadly ...
Behind the myth of the Minotaur lies the ancient Minoan civilisation – a culture steeped in ritual, rich in symbolism, and ...
A landmark US law passed more than 50 years ago helped build the world’s most successful national women’s football team. Historian Jean Williams explains how Title IX changed the game, and why the ...
During the Second World War, thousands of Allied pilots were deployed on a mission so dangerous, and so overshadowed by the rest of the conflict, that many referred to themselves grimly by the acronym ...
In 14th-century England, the prevailing experience wasn’t of medieval splendour, of chivalric knights, illuminated manuscripts and mighty monarchs. From the early 1300s to the century’s close, England ...
What was everyday life like for a solider fighting across the Roman empire’s expansive, ever-shifting frontlines? Look to Hollywood, and you’ll see images of gleaming figures in polished armour, ...
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