A Museum of Movement
Martin Evans explains the aims and origins of France’s national museum of immigration.
Martin Evans explains the aims and origins of France’s national museum of immigration.
Martin Evans offers a frank reassessment of his article on 30 years of Algerian independence, published in History Today in 1992.
The Jews of Algeria had lived side by side with Muslims for centuries, but the struggle for Algerian independence presented them with stark choices, as Martin Evans explains.
Martin Evans introduces a short series looking at changing attitudes to history in the former Communist states.
Football became a potent expression of Algeria’s struggle for independence, never more so than during the dramatic events that preceded the 1958 World Cup, as Martin Evans explains.
The decision by Sussex University to drop research-led teaching and implement a post-1900 curriculum will produce scholars lacking in historical perspective, says Martin Evans.
As Algeria prepares this month to host the second Pan-African Cultural Festival, with 48 countries participating, Martin Evans describes the original festival held 40 years ago in Algiers and the spirit of creativity and anti-colonialism that defined it.
Spurred into action by the false presumptions of Thomas Carlyle, the antiquarian Edward FitzGerald sought to piece together the momentous events of June 14th, 1645, reports Martin Marix Evans.
Martin Evans talks to Helen Dunmore, whose historical novels range from the worst horrors of twentieth-century warfare to the luxurious world of late Republican Rome.
Martin Evans recalls the ‘third way’ of Cold War international politics, now all but forgotten.