Volume 64 Issue 6 June 2014
In 1812 the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley and his wife, Harriet, travelled to Dublin to assist the Irish cause and promote revolution. Eleanor Fitzsimons explains how the harsh realities of the experience swiftly shattered their juvenile idealism.
The country was renamed on 23 June 1939.
The heiress to the crowns of England and Ireland died on June 8th, 1714.
Maximilian of Austria acceded to the imperial throne of Mexico on June 12th, 1864.
The handover of the strategically important but troublesome Ionian Islands was an act rare for its time.
Joanne Bailey argues that gender history is no faddish digression from the historical route, but an advanced tool of analysis that is here to stay.