Arnold Toynbee’s Study of History, Part I: The Theory Outlined
E.E.Y. Hales outlines the theories of and challenges to the British socialist historian and philosopher.
E.E.Y. Hales outlines the theories of and challenges to the British socialist historian and philosopher.
Wars have left their impact in Sheffield, and the Crimean War perhaps more than any. W.H.G. Armytage marks the metamorphosis of a large-scale industrial city
Robert Rhodes James profiles the man rivalled only by Gladstone as the most able politician and Parliamentarian of his time.
Robert E. Zegger describes the alarming dip in Anglo-French relations, half way through the reign of Napoleon III.
Having been moved to London from Nazi Germany, the esteemed library of Renaissance culture played a key role in restoring links between international scholars after the Second World War.
‘Valour and virtue have not perished in the British race’, said Winston Churchill, describing the long record of the national life-boat service.
During the eighteenth century female authors became increasingly numerous and industrious; while as readers, writes Robert Halsband, thanks to the spread of the new circulating libraries, women began to form ‘a significant sector’ of the literary public.
In November 1917 a former Foreign Secretary, Lord Lansdowne, startled the British public by suggesting negotiable peace terms in the midst of war. By Harold Kurtz.
The month before Trafalgar, the Duke and the Admiral had a singular encounter.
For the 18th-century tourist, there was a strange beauty in rugged industrial landscapes, which moved them to quote poetry and dash off pages of vivid descriptive prose.