Cotton Nero A.x is a small miracle: a quarto volume, about the size of a paperback, consisting of just 92 leaves. It contains four untitled English poems – 20th-century editors named them Pearl, Cleanness,...

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Perpetual Sunshine: Radioactive Toothpaste

Malcolm Gaskill, 11 September 2025

Starting out on his quest into his family history, Joe Dunthorne doesn’t know what to ask his grandmother about the experience of Jewish families such as theirs in Hitler’s Germany. She tells him to...

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Alien to the Community: Eugenics in Germany

Richard J. Evans, 11 September 2025

After the war the Nazis’ eugenic policies continued to be implicitly or even explicitly condoned in West Germany. Courts accepted the excuse given by doctors accused of murdering the disabled that they...

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Born on the Beach: Ancient Coastlines

Josephine Quinn, 14 August 2025

Seas are repetitive creatures, working in cycles of tides, migration and climate change, which is normally to say the waxing and waning of the Ice Age. It is the coast that creates the past. The ancients...

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Where the Power Is: Planet Phosphorus

James Vincent, 14 August 2025

The rarity of phosphorus makes it the single most limiting factor for the growth of biomass on Earth. It is, as Isaac Asimov puts it, ‘life’s bottleneck’ – the toll which must be paid by all matter...

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No Cheese Please: The First Bibliophiles

Anthony Grafton, 24 July 2025

The library made possible a new kind of intellectual life. Machiavelli, when he’d been exiled from Florence, described a later version of this life in a splendidly ironic letter to Francesco Vettori:...

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Blood and Confusion: England’s Republic

Jonathan Healey, 10 July 2025

The English republic isn’t recalled with much fondness by anyone. It is known as a fun-sapping entity that cancelled Christmas and banned the theatre. To royalists and conservatives it will for ever...

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Who is a Jew? Converso Identities

Alexander Bevilacqua, 10 July 2025

While they may have converted out of fear for their lives, many New Christians were eager to integrate into mainstream Christian society. They joined religious orders, sponsored family chapels in churches...

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An Efficient Man: A Nazi in Chile

Andy Beckett, 10 July 2025

Now that the war is so long ago, the subject of Nazi exiles in South America can seem a stale, even dubious preoccupation. The fact that fiercely anti-communist South American dictatorships allowed Germans...

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Gulbadan Begum was the daughter of the founder of the Mughal Empire. She is the only Mughal woman known to have written an imperial history. Conditions in the Age of Emperor Humayun was composed when she...

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Fox-Tosser: Augustus the Strong

Martyn Rady, 26 June 2025

It would be tempting to repeat the salacious stories told about Augustus the Strong, but Tim Blanning has instead produced an authoritative account of his reign and a measured reckoning of what Augustus...

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Ownership Struggle: Refusenik DPs

Susan Pedersen, 5 June 2025

In 1943, the Allies founded the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration to care for civilians and the displaced and to help military authorities get them back ‘home’. Very quickly...

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How can we account for France’s historical wavering on race, between an extraordinary openness to assimilation and outbursts of unashamed racism? French revolutionaries held such extreme views, William...

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Cannae made Hannibal more than just another name in the endless list of Rome’s enemies, but the elephants helped too. Twenty of them marched from Spain to Italy with Hannibal and his enormous army in...

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New Deal at Dunkirk: Wartime Tories

Geoffrey Wheatcroft, 22 May 2025

Even if they had been appeasers, most Conservatives accepted the patriotic necessity of the war, but had many different ideas about what its outcome should be, some as optimistic as any socialist dreams...

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It’s​ puzzling, unsettling even, to see ‘free speech’ rearing its head in public debate again, rousing passions which seemed long defunct. Wasn’t the doctrine definitively trumpeted by Milton...

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Music Hall Lady Detectives

Ysenda Maxtone Graham, 22 May 2025

Crippen may be the name forever associated with the ‘North London cellar murder’, but in Hallie Rubenhold’s book he is treated as one character in ‘an ensemble cast brought together to tell a more...

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The West Saxons may have promoted their version of the national story more successfully than the Mercians, but it is salutary to remember that if things had gone differently, the capital of England might...

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