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We Should Keep Rewriting History: Our ‘Island Story' Is Not Set In Stone

BBC History Magazine

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October 2020

I had made up my mind not to talk about the ‘Life in the UK’ British history test. Earlier this summer, 181 historians and authors had their say about its factual inaccuracies; about the lack of social history; the omission of black history; the downplaying of Britain’s role in the slave trade. But this, in a real sense, represents the ‘official’ narrative of our history. When the prime minister said, in response to the fall of Edward Colston’s statue in Bristol, “we cannot pretend to have a different history”, we have to assume that this is what he means.

We Should Keep Rewriting History: Our ‘Island Story' Is Not Set In Stone

It all jogged a memory. In 2011, I did a talk at a history conference about one of our TV series, in which we took a single village, Kibworth in Leicestershire, through British history. This was history seen through a single community: bottom up, not top down; the people, not the rulers. At the time, the new Conservative-led coalition government was revising the history curriculum: they’d done the same after the 1979 election, then rejecting the ‘Marxist’ approach of EP Thompson, Eric Hobsbawm and Rodney Hilton, which had been so important in my student days.

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The Book of Kells is a masterwork of medieval calligraphy and painting

THE BOOK OF KELLS, ONE OF THE GREATEST pieces of medieval art, is today displayed in the library of Trinity College Dublin.

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Passing interest

In his new book, Roger Luckhurst sets about the monumental task of chronicling the evolution of burial practices. In doing so, he does a wonderful job of exploring millennia of deathly debate, including the cultural meanings behind particular approaches.

time to read

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BBC History UK

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Is the advance of AI good or bad for history?

As artificial intelligence penetrates almost every aspect of our lives, six historians debate whether the opportunities it offers to the discipline outweigh the threats

time to read

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BBC History UK

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Beyond the mirage

All serious scholarship on ancient Sparta has to be conducted within the penumbra of the 'mirage Spartiate', a French term coined in 1933 to describe the problem posed by idealised accounts of Sparta.

time to read

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He came, he saw... he crucified pirates

Ancient accounts of Julius Caesar's early life depict an all-action hero who outwitted tyrants and terrorised bandits. But can they be trusted? David S Potter investigates

time to read

10 mins

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