Teachers Telling Tales
Richard Kennett calls on his fellow history teachers to embrace narrative. There is no better way to inspire the historians of the future.
Richard Kennett calls on his fellow history teachers to embrace narrative. There is no better way to inspire the historians of the future.
Meyrick H. Carré introduces an Irishman who personified the genius of experimental inquiry and did much to influence the Enlightenment in England.
Graham Dukes traces the birth of the press to the English Civil War period.
As English universities seek more diverse means of funding, Jill Pellew looks at the ways in which philanthropists helped to establish universities in three very different locations during the early 20th century.
Charles Johnston describes how, during the latter half of the fourth century, one of the last of the Roman poets was appointed by Valentinian I, Emperor of the West, to undertake the education of his hopeful son Gratian.
E.G. Dunning finds that traditional football was a game with few rules, played riotously through the streets and across country. The nineteenth century saw its evolution on the playing fields of the public schools into the two main forms we know today.
Elizabeth Wiskemann finds that the German students’ societies have played an unusual and a characteristic part in the history of modern Germany, and yet one which their mysterious rites and code of honour have obscured, even among their compatriots.
The Whig interpretation of the past is a moral fable more akin to theology than history, argues Tim Stanley.
Walter Elliott on how an illustrious institution has weathered countless storms.
On its centenary, Maurice Powicke traced the history of the Lanchashire educational establishment.