Unreason reigned supreme in Zurich on 5 February 1916 as Dada made its debut at the Cabaret Voltaire. B y February 1916 Lenin was staying in a shabby quarter of Zurich. He lived next to a butcher’s on ...
In Elves and Fairies: A Short History of the Otherworld, Matthias Egeler follows the huldufólk from the wild places of ...
Willis prescribed a vomit and ordered his patient to keep to a ‘strict diet’, forgoing her strange cravings. The definition ...
The annexation of Cyprus was more than another milestone in Roman expansion – it was a showcase of political theatre. In the ...
At the end of the Cold War, Russia and the West seemed set on a path towards cooperation. Why did it veer into renewed ...
I n the 1820s London was the largest city in the world. With more than a million inhabitants, it lay at the heart of an ...
Following its conquest by the English in 1284, medieval Wales needed a new origin story that established its place in Britain ...
The concept of the Reformation as a discrete event, with a beginning and an end, is a relatively belated development. For ...
Hard Streets: Working-Class Lives in Charlie Chaplin’s London by Jacqueline Riding goes where few historians dare: south of ...
British servicemen overseas bought sex, sometimes in brothels run by the British army. In the 1970s they began to talk about it.
Demosthenes: Democracy’s Defender by James Romm looks for hope amid the sound and fury surrounding the great orator of ancient Athens.
On 6 December 343, Saint Nicholas died but his miracles continued. Eventually, the man was replaced by the myth of Santa Claus – if he even existed at all. Saint Nicholas was dead, to begin with. On 6 ...
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