‘Shakespeare’s Sisters’ by Ramie Targoff review
Shakespeare’s Sisters: Four Women Who Wrote the Renaissance by Ramie Targoff refutes the claim by Virginia Woolf, that the women of Tudor England left only empty bookshelves.
Shakespeare’s Sisters: Four Women Who Wrote the Renaissance by Ramie Targoff refutes the claim by Virginia Woolf, that the women of Tudor England left only empty bookshelves.
When it was first named in 17th-century Switzerland, nostalgia was a very real – and very dangerous – disease.
Wills in early modern England tell us much more than simply who left what to whom, and should not be discarded lightly.
How Finland Survived Stalin: From Winter War to Cold War by Kimmo Rentola argues that political guile as much as military might stopped the Soviets in their tracks.
‘What is the most common misconception about my field? That it’s a sideshow of a sideshow.’
On 5 April 1889 John Hore died aged only seven years old. His adventures in East Africa saw him immortalised by Victorian evangelicals as ‘the boy missionary’.
What is the most boring history book you have read, and why? Excruciating tedium can have intellectual value, says George Garnett.
On 3 April 1897 a young Gustav Klimt led a group of artists in open revolt, seceding from Vienna’s cultural establishment.
Impossible Monsters: Dinosaurs, Darwin and the War between Science and Religion by Michael Taylor revels in the tangles of Victorian thought.
On 28 March 1964, Radio Caroline hit the waves. How did pirate radio discover its winning formula and what happened next?