On 10 December 1948, after months of negotiation led by Eleanor Roosevelt, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was ...
The remarkable fall of absinthe: from 19th-century ‘Green Fairy’ to scourge of society.
William Strickland died on 8 December 1598. He was said to have introduced the turkey to England, but the truth followed him ...
The mystery of what happened to the Marie Celeste gripped me as a child. It’s nice to have some mysteries in life though. Lucy Noakes is Rab Butler Chair in Modern History at the University of Essex ...
Caught between the antagonistic states of India and Pakistan, Kashmir is stuck in geopolitical limbo. Its location – and its ...
Prague, under the Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II, became the centre of the Renaissance world, where cultures mixed and learning ...
Chevaliere d’Eon or Chevalier d’Eon? An 18th-century legal dispute between two French spies unravelled into a public battle ...
A new book for the new year is an old British custom, but an old book can be even better.
For much of the 20th century, young working-class women in England found out about procreation the ‘hard way’ or the ‘dirty way’.
As convicts celebrated Queen Victoria’s birthday on remote Norfolk Island, debates raged over the purpose of punishment and ...
So when Raúl Castro called for an end to the embargo based on economic and humanitarian grounds in late December, he was ...
Lower than the Angels: A History of Sex and Christianity by Diarmaid MacCulloch reminds us that when it comes to sexuality and gender, scripture is often contradictory.