Attlee
Blair has a hard act to follow, according to Robert Pearce's assessment of the architect of the previous Labour landslide in 1945.
Blair has a hard act to follow, according to Robert Pearce's assessment of the architect of the previous Labour landslide in 1945.
Richard Bellamy demonstrates the contemporary relevance of an eighteenth-century debate.
Jeremy Black shows how historical atlases have for centuries recorded more than objective fact.
Geoffrey Treasure reassesses a tarnished reputation.
Graham Darby argues that the Bolshevik success of 1917 was rooted in the failings of the Provisional Government and the aspiration of ordinary people.
Michael Mullett looks at the contradictory attitudes and mixed achievements of a courageous reformer.
John Plowright reconsiders a lost leader and the battle he won to maintain public order.
Pawn of elder statesmen or, as Matthew Christmas argues, another Henry VIII in the making?
John Dunne follows historians along the trail signposted by Geyl fifty years ago.
Patrick O'Brian evaluates the costs and benefits of Hanoverian and Victorian government.