Vous consultez actuellement le France version du site.
Voulez-vous passer à votre site local ?
7 TEMPS DE LECTURE MIN

ANNIVERSARIES

HELEN CARR highlights events that took place in November in history
Lisbon crumbles and burns during the 1755 quake, as shown in an engraving

1 NOVEMBER 1755

An earthquake devastates Lisbon , with three violent tremors followed by a huge tsunami that rolls up the Tagus river. Some 9,000 buildings are destroyed and perhaps 30,000 people lose their lives.

1 NOVEMBER 1755

6 NOVEMBER 1860

Débloquez cet article et bien plus encore avec
Vous pouvez en profiter :
Découvrez l'intégralité de cette édition
Accès instantané à plus de 600 titres
Des milliers d'anciens numéros
Pas de contrat ni d'engagement
Essayer pour €1.09
S'ABONNER
30 jours d'accès, puis seulement €11,99 / mois. Résiliation à tout moment. Nouveaux abonnés uniquement.


En savoir plus
Pocketmags Plus
Pocketmags Plus

Cet article est tiré de...


View Issues
BBC History Magazine
November 2023
VOIR EN MAGASIN

Autres articles dans ce numéro


BBC History
THIS ISSUE’S CONTRIBUTORS
Mary Beard “People sometimes think that the Roman
EDITORIAL
WELCOME
NOVEMBER 2023
EVERY MONTH
THE CONVERSATION
BIG QUESTIONS Are black histories still being overlooked?
MICHAEL WOOD ON… THE ACCELERATING PACE OF CHANGE
“In sun-beaten Greece, I learned that the past
HIDDEN HISTORIES
KAVITA PURI explores lesser-known stories from our past
LETTERS
LETTER OF THE MONTH
Q&A
A selection of historical conundrums answered by experts
BOOKS
SOCIETY “The author is miningng an era filled
“The Roman empire cannot have been governed by a series of psychopaths. It would not have survived”
MARY BEARD tells Matt Elton what life would have been like for Rome’s emperors – from the path to the top to the almost inevitable sticky end
A passport to survival
DANIEL LEE explores the story of a group of exiled Poles who, by providing forged documents, enabled thousands of Jews to escape the Nazis
Spooks, spirits and psychiatry
ANNA MARIA BARRY recommends a new exploration of the interplay between science, faith and superstition in 19th-century attitudes to mental health
Forgotten heroes
PATRICIA FARA reviews a history of black TB nurses in the United States during the first half of the 20th century
Britain gets swinging
ALWYN TURNER investigates the latest volume in David Kynaston’s epic history of modern Britain, as the author turns his attention to the heady days of the early 1960s
A fool’s errand
Fool: In Search of Henry VIII’s Closest Man
Island life
The Britannias: An Island Quest Alice Albinia Allen
ENCOUNTERS
WATCH Flawed genius Pablo Picasso with his second wife
HISTORY ON THE AIRWAVES
“You can trace the rise of neoliberalism to the oil embargo imposed during the war”
HISTORY COOKBOOK
TASTE
A mind like no other
Margaret Cavendish was one of the most original thinkers of the 17th century. Our podcast editor ELLIE CAWTHORNE discusses a recent episode on the unconventional writer
Athens in five places
HISTORIC CITIES
PRIZE CROSSWORD
Across 1 Anthony ____, who painted the famous
NEXT MONTH
December issue on sale 26 October 2023
MY HISTORY HERO
Broadcaster Dermot O’Leary chooses
FEATURES
Anne Boleyn’s fatal French connection
John Guy and Julia Fox reveal how international diplomacy supercharged the rise of Henry’s VIII’s second wife – and hastened her fall
HELL IN ITALY
The Allied invasion of Italy in 1943 was envisaged as a swift push on Rome. Yet, as James Holland explains, by the end of the year, the campaign was stymied by German defences far from the capital
An Anglo-Saxon detective story
Why do the bones of luminaries such as King Cnut, Emma of Normandy and William II lie mixed up in six chests in Winchester Cathedral? And what do these remains tell us about the evolution of early England?
EMPIRE ON THE BRINK
In September 1923, the British empire reached its maximum territorial extent. A staggering 460 million people lived within its borders. Yet just as the imperial project reached its apex, writes Matthew Parker, cracks were widening…
A WORLD OF TROUBLE
The challenges facing eight British colonies in 1923
The medieval Stalingrad
Edward III’s siege of Calais was a pivotal moment in the Hundred Years’ War. Here Dan Jones argues that it bears comparison with one of the most brutal clashes of the modern era
Broadcast views: Radio Times at 100
Since its launch in 1923 as the BBC’s official listings guide, the magazine has charted enormous shifts in media and society alike. David Hendy explores how its pages reflected changes across Britain
ADVERTISEMENT
THE ROYAL MINT
royalmint.com
Advertisement
collins.co.uk/nationaltrust soldierscharity.org/legacies
PODCAST
historyextra.com/great-reputations
Advertisement
martinrandall.com
BBC HiSTORY MAGAZINE
ancestry
Stroke Association
stroke.org.uk/legacy
PETER SOMMER TRAVELS
petersommer.com
Now’s the time to tackle your smartphone
Gx Pillows
www.gxpillows.co.uk
HISTORY EXTRA
i.historyextra.com/napoleon
HURTIGRUTEN
hurtigruten.co.uk
British Heart Foundation
Chat
X
Support Pocketmags