CATEGORIES

Enter the dragon
BBC History UK

Enter the dragon

It's brought its own unique brand of magic to everything from Game of Thrones to Harry Potter. But how did the modern dragon come into being? Daniel Ogden traces the six stages of the creature's evolution in the west - from ancient serpent to medieval fire breather

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8 mins  |
September 2022
THE DIG THAT CHANGED (URBAN) HISTORY
BBC History UK

THE DIG THAT CHANGED (URBAN) HISTORY

Sixty years ago, one of Britain's most important archaeology projects was launched in Hampshire. Michael Wood reviews the groundbreaking discoveries of the dig at Winchester, once the showpiece of Alfred the Great's royal dynasty

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8 mins  |
September 2022
"Elizabeth I was a free woman in charge of her fate. Perhaps that's why Catherine de Medici despised her"
BBC History UK

"Elizabeth I was a free woman in charge of her fate. Perhaps that's why Catherine de Medici despised her"

Estelle Paranque talks to Rhiannon Davies about her new book exploring the 30-year rivalry of two of 16th-century Europe's most powerful queens

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10 mins  |
August 2022
A global revolution
BBC History UK

A global revolution

John Harris is impressed by a wide-ranging and clear-eyed work exploring the mechanisms of the slave trade and its enduring legacy in shaping the modern world order

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2 mins  |
July 2022
Down but not out
BBC History UK

Down but not out

FERN RIDDELL applauds an honest portrait of 19th-century street life in Britain's capital, highlighting the hopes, fears and toils of real people who strove for more than just survival

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4 mins  |
August 2022
How soap saved the BBC
BBC History UK

How soap saved the BBC

In the 1980s, the BBC devised a new weapon in its ratings battle against ITV: EastEnders. DAVID HENDY explores how a mix of masterful publicity and melodramatic plots propelled the drama to popular success

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7 mins  |
August 2022
Q&A
BBC History UK

Q&A

A selection of historical conundrums answered by experts

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4 mins  |
August 2022
How to repel a MONGOL INVASION
BBC History UK

How to repel a MONGOL INVASION

They swept across Asia with terrifying efficiency. Yet, as 13th-century Europe quaked at the prospect of a Mongol invasion, there was an empire that, as Nicholas Morton writes, learned to beat the invaders at their own game

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9 mins  |
August 2022
Dorothy Levitt Edwardian speed queen
BBC History UK

Dorothy Levitt Edwardian speed queen

By breaking records, winning titles and defeating her male adversaries, one fearless racing driver became a founding mother of women's motor sports. RACHEL HARRIS-GARDINER explores how Dorothy Levitt built her legend, both with her achievements behind the wheel and as a media sensation

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6 mins  |
August 2022
On the Wall
BBC History UK

On the Wall

The soldiers who garrisoned Hadrian's Wall were all men, but what of the many women of diverse backgrounds who lived on and around the frontier? Bronwen Riley selects six objects that offer precious insights into women's lives at the edge of the empire

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8 mins  |
August 2022
FRONTIER TOURISTS
BBC History UK

FRONTIER TOURISTS

Since its earliest days, the great barrier at the Roman empire's north-western edge has been a source of wonder. Rob Collins traces the history of tourism and souvenirs at Hadrian's Wall

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5 mins  |
August 2022
THE ROAD TO HADRIAN'S WALL
BBC History UK

THE ROAD TO HADRIAN'S WALL

From Caesar's first invasion in 55 BC to the construction of the famous barrier some 175 years later, Rome engaged in multiple battles to subdue the peoples of Britain. Archaeologist Richard Hingley talks to Rob Attar about how the Romans sought to take control of this distant province

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10+ mins  |
August 2022
Britain's Century of Boom and Bust
BBC History UK

Britain's Century of Boom and Bust

From the 1920s to the Winter of Discontent, inflation has haunted several British governments over the past 100 years. So, asks Phil Tinline, how does the current cost of living crisis compare with previous periods of soaring prices?

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8 mins  |
August 2022
'This was a time when losing a limb made you a hero, but losing a face made you a monster'
BBC History UK

'This was a time when losing a limb made you a hero, but losing a face made you a monster'

Lindsey Fitzharris talks to Rhiannon Davies about her book on a pioneering plastic surgeon who rebuilt men's shattered faces during the First World War

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10+ mins  |
July 2022
RUSSIA'S DOOMED REVOLUTION
BBC History UK

RUSSIA'S DOOMED REVOLUTION

With the world's attention fixed firmly on the invasion of Ukraine, Antony Beevor's new history of Russia's 1917 revolutions and subsequent civil war is especially timely. He explains to Rob Attar how the fall of the last tsar launched a chain of events leading to millions of deaths and one of history's most brutal dictatorships

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10+ mins  |
July 2022
Snuffers, scrapers and murder-holes
BBC History UK

Snuffers, scrapers and murder-holes

From medieval portcullises to the Regency craze for "Wellington" knockers, the evolution of the front door offers a unique entry point to British history. Rachel Hurdley looks at six ways in which doors reflect our desire to avert danger, and impress our neighbours

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9 mins  |
July 2022
NORMAN ADVENTURES IN AFRICA
BBC History UK

NORMAN ADVENTURES IN AFRICA

Less than a century after William the Conqueror's invasion of England, his compatriots embarked on another ambitious military assault - on the southern shores of the Mediterranean. Levi Roach tells the story of the Norman kingdom of north Africa

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8 mins  |
July 2022
THE MAKING OF AN AMERICAN SCANDAL
BBC History UK

THE MAKING OF AN AMERICAN SCANDAL

Fifty years ago, the US government was embroiled in a conspiracy that became a constitutional crisis - eventually toppling a president. Clifford Williamson charts the fallout from the 1972 Watergate affair

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10+ mins  |
July 2022
New light on the Dark Ages
BBC History UK

New light on the Dark Ages

The past 40 years have witnessed a revolution in our understanding of early English history, which has inspired Michael Wood to update his landmark book In Search of the Dark Ages. Here, Michael chronicles the great leaps forward that have lit up this thrilling era

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9 mins  |
July 2022
Accessorising the past
BBC History UK

Accessorising the past

We've added accoutrements to our outfits for centuries, from buckles to buttons - but they aren't just important for fashion's sake. Cordula van Wyhe and Susan Vincent reveal what six accessories can tell us about historical attitudes to gender, empire and more

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6 mins  |
July 2022
Into the wild
BBC History UK

Into the wild

From its earliest days, the BBC set out to chronicle the natural world - an ambition that, as DAVID HENDY explores, reached new heights from the late 1970s with David Attenborough's string of wildlife blockbusters

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7 mins  |
July 2022
A yearning process
BBC History UK

A yearning process

HELEN CARR applauds a timely examination of the great British obsession with venerating the past, and its impact on our understanding of the challenges we face in the present

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4 mins  |
July 2022
WAR WITHOUT END
BBC History Magazine

WAR WITHOUT END

The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 is widely viewed through the prism of the great Cold War confrontation between east and west. Yet, writes Elisabeth Leake, the occupation also ignited a tinderbox of local grievances that continue to torment the country to this day

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10+ mins  |
June 2022
When the Black Death arrived in Europe, it was like striking a match in tinder
BBC History Magazine

When the Black Death arrived in Europe, it was like striking a match in tinder

The medievalist and historian of medicine Monica H Green tells Ellie Cawthorne how scientific advances have changed our thinking on what caused the Black Death - and why it was so devastating

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10+ mins  |
June 2022
The survivor, the "incurable" and the scapegoat
BBC History Magazine

The survivor, the "incurable" and the scapegoat

History is too often presented as tales of "great men" - yet the experiences of ordinary women speak eloquently about the reality of lives past. Lucy Worsley introduces three outwardly unremarkable people caught up in pivotal events

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9 mins  |
June 2022
THE SIEGE
BBC History Magazine

THE SIEGE

When some 6,000 parliamentarians tried to prise a few hundred royalists out of Basing House in 1643, they began a brutal siege that would drag on for years - and see thousands slaughtered. Jessie Childs tells the story of a desperate struggle that became a defining episode of the Civil War

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10+ mins  |
June 2022
The strike has links to a far longer story of female south Asian protest
BBC History Magazine

The strike has links to a far longer story of female south Asian protest

KAVITA PURI explores lesser-known stories from our past

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3 mins  |
June 2022
All at sea
BBC History Magazine

All at sea

Maritime

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2 mins  |
June 2022
A journey into the Elizabethan mind
BBC History Magazine

A journey into the Elizabethan mind

The Elizabethans were desperate to untangle the mystery of their "inward selves". Helen Hackett reveals how they used ancient teachings, Christian doctrine and new scientific discoveries to make sense of the mind

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9 mins  |
June 2022
Grave insights
BBC History Magazine

Grave insights

BRENNA HASSETT recommends an account of life and individual deaths - in Britain during the first millennium AD

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4 mins  |
June 2022