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PARANORMAL COLD CASE
INVESTIGATING HISTORY'S MOST SPINE-CHILLING ENCOUNTERS
The Great Tea Race comes to a thrilling end
THIS MONTH... 1866
Manager at the Roman Baths and Pump Room
MY LIFE IN HISTORY
WHAT IF... ARCHDUKE FRANZ FERDINAND HADN'T BEEN ASSASSINATED?
Professor Paul Miller-Melamed and Nige Tassell question the mythologised importance of the Sarajevo assassination over the last century, and whether it really made World War I inevitable
EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT THE EDWARDIANS
Dr John Jacob Woolf answers key questions about a brief but momentous 'gilded age' for Britain
Professor Michael Goodman on the Legacy of the Cold War
"While the Cold War might be over, it is as relevant today as it always has been"
International head of silver at Christie's
MY LIFE IN HISTORY MEET THE PEOPLE BRINGING THE PAST TO LIFE
TEA, TOURS AND TOP HATS
When it came to getting away from it all, our forebears weren't all that different from us...
WHAT GREAT PAINTINGS SAY
A mythological love-at-first-sight meeting becomes a Renaissance masterpiece
THE HONEYMOON OF JAMES VI AND ANNA OF DENMARK
Amy Licence charts the lavish celebrations that followed the wedding between one of Scotland's most famous monarchs and his Scandinavian bride
CHAOS IN CUBA
When one of the US's closest neighbours agreed to host Soviet nuclear missiles, it triggered the most dangerous crisis in world history
MONEY AND POWER
In 1947, the US pledged billions of dollars to help rebuild war-torn Europe - but the Soviets sensed an ulterior motive
CONTAINING THE THREAT
President Truman was willing to go to great lengths to halt the spread of communism – and in Greece and Turkey, he succeeded
FROM FRIENDS TO ENEMIES
After uniting to defeat the Nazis, east and west were soon divided once more
EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT THE COLD WAR
Professor Michael Goodman answers key questions about the decades-long rivalry between the US and the Soviet Union
Elizabeth Gaskell: a voice of the Victorians
While not the most famous novelist of her generation, 'Mrs Gaskell' helped bring the unpleasant implications of industrialisation to the public consciousness. But what motivated her to speak out?
The Acts of Union 1707
"Since 1603, England and Scotland had a shared monarch, but were separate: two crowns, on one head"
CATCHING THE RED FOX
On the surface, Klaus Fuchs was a diligent young scientist, enthusiastically helping Britain and the US develop powerful new weapons during World War II. But, as Roger Hermiston reveals, his true loyalties lay elsewhere
WHAT IF... THE BLACK DEATH HAD NEVER HAPPENED?
Professor Mark Bailey tells Nige Tassell why the world would have become a very different place had the plague outbreaks of the 14th century not triggered fundamental changes in society
KEEPING THE PEACE
With no formal police force, maintaining law and order in medieval and Tudor England was very much a community affair
WHAT GREAT PAINTINGS SAY
A striking work of art borne of the horrors of World War I
EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT CRIME AND PUNISHMENT
Crime historian Dr Nell Darby answers key questions about the evolution of law and order in the British Isles
TO HELL AND BACK AGAIN A POLAR EXPLORER'S TALE OF TRAGEDY AND SURVIVAL
Douglas Mawson is not the most famous hero of Antarctic exploration, but, as Nige Tassell reveals, the Australian overcame the odds in one of the age's most disastrous expeditions...
THE GREAT BRITISH 'BOBBY'
We explore a selection of surprising facts about the history of British policing - from Robert Peel to the present day
GODLY BUTCHERY
In medieval England, the crime of treason was so heinous that it required a punishment that would horrify as much as it would deter. Dr Rebecca Simon discusses a method of execution reserved only for the worst of the worst
BANISHED TO A LAND DOWN UNDER
Rather than fill the prisons or issue the death penalty, judges chose to ship tens of thousands of convicts to Australia
A BLOODY NEW CHAPTER
After decades of discord, the lawmakers of early modern England took drastic new measures to make sure that citizens stayed in line
LIFE AS A PHARAOH
They ruled over ancient Egypt and were immortalised by their tombs and statues, but what was life really like at the top?
EGYPT'S MOST POWERFUL WOMEN
Men weren't the only people to help shape one of the most remarkable civilisations of the ancient world
EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT EGYPTIAN PHARAOHS
Professor Joyce Tyldesley answers key questions about Egypt's ancient rulers and the power they wielded