"Goings-on" in medieval nunneries by Carolyn Hughes
I have just finished writing the next book in my Meonbridge Chronicles series, set in medieval England. This story centres, not on Meonbridge, as the other novels do for the most part, but on a priory,...
View ArticleCornelia Africana - What a woman! by Elisabeth Storrs
My previous posts about Roman women have centered on victims (Lucretia and Virginia) and villains (Tarpeia and Tullia Minor) whose virtues and vices served as exemplars both good and bad. Today I write...
View ArticleMore Venetian than the Venetians - Michelle Lovric
There is a little corner of Venice that is forever Slav. I’m devoting this blog to that corner, which is best known for its jewel-box of paintings by Vittore Carpaccio, the artist commissioned by the...
View ArticleFoundling Stories - Stacey Halls and Rose Tremain by Judith Allnatt
In 1747, in a fine room at the splendid buildings of London’s Foundling Hospital, Bess Bright holds her one-day-old baby girl. Alongside other mothers, Bess draws a ball from a bag in a lottery held to...
View ArticleTHE FAMILY DOLL
In the earlier days of THE HISTORY GIRLS, we used to have a 'Cabinet of Curiosities.' I think this family heirloom I am briefly going to talk about would make an interesting addition to the said...
View ArticleThe London Under London by Miranda Miller
This is a photo of the Great Hall of the Guildhall which has been the City of London’s civic and ceremonial centre since the 12th century. In the Middle Ages the Lord Mayor of London was almost as...
View ArticleEntertaining the Troops in World War II, by Carol Drinkwater
A very proud me on Remembrance Sunday, 9th November 2024, in London.Below, I am in the company of: (left) Alan Wolven in the chair. Alan is a pianist. Now in his nineties, he is...
View ArticleThe Armada at Anstruther by V.E.H. Masters
Early one morning in November of 1588 the villagers of Anstruther on the East coast of Scotland awoke to find a ship in their harbour with over 250 starving Spanish Armada sailors and soldiers on...
View ArticleMattia Preti: Italian Baroque Artist by Kathryn Gauci
Mattia Preti: Italian Baroque Artist by Kathryn GauciDetail: Mattia Preti’s Self Image - a painting by the southern Italian artist acquired by Heritage Malta. Photo:Times of Malta. Having recently...
View ArticleJanuary Floods by Maggie Brookes
On Boxing Day it was 20 years since the terrible tsunami in the Indian ocean. Remembering our shock on hearing about that disaster, which killed 230,000 people, started me thinking about floods which...
View ArticleRethinking history with the help of K-drama
I started watching K-drama because I realised that, when I watched US, UK, or Australian television or read most books, I sympathised with the hero. This was not because I had anything in common with...
View ArticleThe Lesser Key of Solomon ... by Susan Stokes-Chapman
During the 18th century, Europe witnessed a growing fascination with the occult, fuelled by a mix of Renaissance magic, medieval mysticism, and Enlightenment-era curiosity. Among the most infamous...
View ArticleTom Lehrer is Still Alive - Joan Lennon
Tom Lehrer in 1960 (wiki commons)We live in insane times. And the Cold War was an insane time. And so I guess it's not surprising I've been thinking a lot about what it was like growing up during that...
View ArticleA Broch Blog by Susan Price
The broch of Mousa: by kind permission of David Simpson.Mousa is a small island off the coast of mainland Shetland with a Norse name. The 'a' at the end, as in many British place-names, means...
View ArticleAll Women's History Matters by Janet Few
Here on the History Girls’ website you will read posts about women’s history, posts about the history of women and sometimes, accounts of the lives of individual women. If you are a woman reading...
View Article'A Happy Accident of War' by Karen Maitland
Daffodils in the hedgerow in Tamar ValleyPhoto:Tony Atkin‘Daffy-down-dilly is new come to town, with a yellow petticoat, and a green gown.’A traditional nursery rhyme recorded in Songs for the Nursery,...
View ArticleMedieval Women (and a few men) by Mary Hoffman
The Middle Ages are having a bit of a moment, at least in the UK. This is a boon for me, as I am writing a "Plantagenet novel" covering the rough half century from 1352 to 1403. In January, I went to...
View ArticleA taste of Homer, Virgil and Ovid by Caroline K. Mackenzie
Five years ago, almost to the day, in March 2020, the pandemic had taken hold and daily life as we knew it was turned upside down. Everyone scrambled to find ways of keeping in touch, since meeting up...
View ArticleSpitfire Women by Rebecca Alexander
At the start of the second world war, the government realised that the Royal Air Force (RAF) would play a pivotal role in defending Britain. The German air force, the Luftwaffe, had been devastatingly...
View ArticleThe Fake Gestapo Cell in London in WW2
by Deborah SwiftDuring WW2 the government did its best to suppress the British Union of Fascists (BUF), but MI5’s effort to prevent fascist activities was hampered by the government’s advisory...
View ArticleJapan’s Jazz Age: Flappers and Feminists ~ by Lesley Downer
‘In the beginning, woman was the sun.’ Hiratsuka RaichōMoga, pictured in Mainichi shimbun ‘Modern gals’If you had visited Tokyo in the 1910s and 1920s, you would have met Japanese women stepping out...
View ArticleThe Golden Hour by Kate Lord Brown
Reviewed by Stephanie WilliamsI must have been about thirteen when my imagination was first captured by Akhenaten, the legendary pharaoh who brought the revolutionary idea of one god to Egypt in the...
View ArticleHannah More, by Sue Purkiss
Twelve or so years ago, I started a creative writing class in Cheddar, where I live. I tried out several venues, one of which was a house owned by the Parish Council, named Hannah More Cottage. It's a...
View ArticleThe Tower Suffragette by Penny Dolan
Inside Harrogate Library, at the start of March,a new display was put up, decorated with small flags and badges, and arranged by the Local Studies group. As I studied the labels, printed images and...
View ArticleThe 'Auld Alliance' by Margaret Skea
Some years ago the BBC ran an advert for the 6 Nations Rugby tournament which was pulled following some complaints, and then proceeded to go viral! The punchline was - ‘It’s not who you want to win,...
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