CA
  
You are currently viewing the Canada version of the site.
Would you like to switch to your local site?
LESS THAN 1 MIN READ TIME

Stroke

Unlock this article and much more with
You can enjoy:
Enjoy this edition in full
Instant access to 600+ titles
Thousands of back issues
No contract or commitment
Try for $1.39
SUBSCRIBE NOW
30 day trial, then just $13.99 / month. Cancel anytime. New subscribers only.


Learn more
Pocketmags Plus
Pocketmags Plus

This article is from...


View Issues
BBC History Magazine
June 2023
VIEW IN STORE

Other Articles in this Issue


BBC History
THIS ISSUE’S CONTRIBUTORS
Jonathan Kennedy “Pandemics have killed millions of people
Editorial
WELCOME
JUNE 2023 “Elizabeth I did not have the
EVERY MONTH
ANNIVERSARIES
HELEN CARR highlights events that took place in June in history
Should historians interpret the past through the prism of the present?
A recent debate about whether the study of history should address contemporary concerns exposed faultlines in academic approaches. DAVID MOTADEL explores the controversy
MICHAEL WOOD ON…
400 YEARS OF THE FIRST FOLIO
“History is currently being used for political purposes that have very little to do with the past”
Is the study of history being skewed by a present-day ‘culture war’? That’s the view of History Reclaimed, an online project that aims to tackle what it sees as distortions of the past – and which has been met with both praise and criticism. Matt Elton spoke to ZAREER MASANI, one of the organisation’s founding members
HIDDEN HISTORIES
KAVITA PURI explores lesser-known stories from our past
LETTERS
A miniature of Turkic-Mongol conqueror Timur, whose intellectual
Q&A
A selection of historical conundrums answered by experts
BOOKS
20TH CENTURY “ is is the journey of
“Henry was not a great king but he was respected as a most Christian one”
DAVID CARPENTER talks to David Musgrove about the second part of his biography of King Henry III, and the extraordinary revolution that removed him from power in 1258
Visions of England
MICHAEL WOOD enjoys a thought-provoking exploration of English identity from the postwar period to the present day and the myths that have been told about England
THE CLASSIC BOOK
Nigel Jones on a landmark and bestselling account of the outbreak of the First World War
Hitler’s forgotten victims
CHRISTINE SCHMIDT welcomes an important new book detailing the fraught search for justice by the Roma in the aftermath of their genocidal persecution by the Nazis
Siren song
Attack Warning Red! How Britain Prepared for Nuclear
Monstrous tales
Woman’s Lore by Sarah Clegg Head of Zeus,
How to be a woman
The Once and Future Sex: Going Medieval on
Living forever
Elixir: A Story of Perfume, Science and the
A European success story
PETER ANDERSON is impressed by a sweeping history of modern Spain, covering a century in which the country experienced both wartime tragedy and economic triumph
ENCOUNTERS
DIARY By Jonathan Wright, Paul Bloomfield and Samantha
“Wedgwood was a businessman, an engineer, a designer, a political activist – a phenomenal figure”
TRISTRAM HUNT (left), director of the V&A Museum, discusses his new documentary about ceramics entrepreneur Josiah Wedgwood and the rise and decline of his Wedgwood company
HISTORY COOKBOOK
A dash of rum, a sprinkle of sugar,
Tailor-made for Tudors
From decorated codpieces to ‘sheep colour’ fabrics, our podcast editor ELLIE CAWTHORNE discusses a recent episode on how to stay fashionable in Tudor England
TRY 3 ISSUES FOR JUST £5
when you subscribe to HISTORY SAVE 70% off
The Tudors’ origin story
EXPLORE… PEMBROKE, PEMBROKESHIRE
Madrid in five places
A Moorish citadel that became an imperial capital, Madrid today is a cosmopolitan city. JULES STEWART picks five unmissable sites that illuminate its history
PRIZE CROSSWORD
Across 7 African port, the focal point of
NEXT MONTH
July issue on sale 8 June 2023
Lord Kitchener
1922–2000
FEATURES
Elizabeth I: mother’s girl
The Virgin Queen lionised her father, Henry VIII, in public. Yet, writes Tracy Borman, examine what Elizabeth did – as opposed to what she said – and it’s evident that her sympathies lay with Anne Boleyn
THE RACE TO THE TOP OF THE WORLD
On the 70th anniversary of the first ascent of Everest, Robin Ashcroft charts the trials, tragedies and triumphs that led to that pioneering climb – and its implications for Britain’s place on the world stage
Black masses, lethal potions and the plot to kill a king
In the 1670s, Louis XIV of France was the target of a series of assassination attempts involving poisons and necromancy. But who was the perpetrator? Josephine Wilkinson untangles a conspiracy that scandalised a nation
WHEN GERMS MADE HISTORY
Infectious diseases don’t just make individuals sick – they can cause seismic shifts in societies. Jonathan Kennedy charts six moments when pathogens such as plague, smallpox and malaria played key roles in major cultural, political and economic transformations
How Britain stirred the cauldron of conflict in Palestine
Having ousted the Ottomans from Palestine in 1917, Britain administered a territory that was already a tinderbox of tensions between Arabs and Jews. Matthew Hughes explores the bloody end of the Palestine Mandate and the emergence of the State of Israel
The queen who wouldn’t go quietly
Margaret of Anjou was a foreigner – and a woman. Those facts alone should have sunk her bid to regain the English throne for her husband, Henry VI. Yet, writes Joanna Arman, when it came to fighting her family’s corner, Margaret simply didn’t know when she was beaten
Save when you subscribe to the digital edition
BBC History Magazine is Britain’s bestselling history magazine. We feature leading historians writing lively and thought-provoking new takes on the great events of the past.
ADVERTISEMENT
NATIONAL ARMY MUSEUM
nam.ac.uk
Woodland Trust
woodlandtrust.org.uk/join
VM KNOX
www.vmknoxauthor.com
HISTORY EXTRA
historyextra.com/the-historyextra-app/
FUNDRAISING REGULATOR
ancestry