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BBC History Magazine
May 2023
IN DE WINKEL BEKIJKEN

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BBC History
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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.
Editorial
WELCOME MAY 2023
“When Queen Elizabeth II was crowned in June
THIS ISSUE’S CONTRIBUTORS
Blessin Adams OUR COVER IMAGES SHOW: ST EDWARD’S
EVERY MONTH
ANNIVERSARIES
HELEN CARR highlights events that took place in May in history
Two schoolgirls blow up a Soviet war monument
8 MAY 1946
Joan of Arc is burned at the stake
30 MAY 1431
Spencer Perceval is assassinated in the House of Commons
11 MAY 1812
The Antikythera mechanism is identified as an ancient computer
17 MAY 1902
The Conversation
“Many, if not most, Nazi analogies are historically inaccurate, to put it mildly”
In March, leading sports presenter Gary Lineker was suspended by the BBC for a tweet likening UK government rhetoric to that of 1930s Germany. RICHARD J EVANS argues that such comparisons risk eroding the full horror of history and the experiences of those involved
HISTORY NEWS IN BRIEF
Roman “shrine” found near Leicester Cathedral The broken
“The symbolism of the royal promise still means something today”
MICHAEL WOOD ON… THE CORONATION OF CHARLES III
“Patriarchal systems have existed in Europe for thousands of years – but in other parts of the world they are very new”
GENDER HISTORY
“Contradictory emotions about partition pass down generations”
KAVITA PURI explores lesser-known stories from our past
A man for all seasons
LETTER OF THE MONTH
What is the world’s oldest continuous democracy?
A selection of historical conundrums answered by experts
Did a Great Dane really receive a medal in the Second World War for putting out an incendiary bomb?
Juliana the Great Dane in 1941. She received
How did people stay dry before raincoats were invented?
ILLUSTRATION BY @GLENMCILLUSTRATION Perhaps the oldest example of
DID YOU KNOW…?
Stay of execution In November 1740, 17-year-old William
FEATURES
Masters of ceremonies
Henry III believed that spectacle elevated him into the sphere of the sacred. Elizabeth I used it to emphasise her Protestant credentials. And Queen Victoria turned it into a celebration of her imperial might. As King Charles III prepares for his coronation, ALICE HUNT reveals how generations of British monarchs have used pomp and pageantry to project power
How to and how not stage a coronation
What separates a crowning success from a right royal fiasco? Drawing on a thousand years of Britain’s coronations, Tracy Borman offers her dos and don’ts for pulling off the ceremony without a hitch
KALEIDOSCOPIC NATION
Amid the darkness of economic hardship and state-sponsored fear, East Germany could also be a society of opportunity and hope. Katja Hoyer profiles some of the people whose stories bring this full, complex picture to life
AN APPETITE FOR POWER
Wine, song and the finest food money could buy made medieval feasts a highlight of the courtly calendar. Yet more often than not, writes Charlotte Palmer, a thirst for influence and prestige lay behind the carousing
TUDOR LONDON : A GLOBAL CITY
During the 16th century, London opened its doors to a diverse cast of newcomers, from Moroccan ambassadors to Native American chiefs. Jerry Brotton reveals how foreign visitors shaped the Tudor capital
SINISTER PLOTS. SHADOWY CABALS. TRAITORS AT THE HEART OF GOVERNMENT.
Why have conspiracy theories predicting military coups and puppetmaster financiers gripped the political imagination for more than a century? Phil Tinline investigates…
In 1658, a Norfolk gentleman named Ralph Suckey thought he’d got away with murder… …until he was attacked by a flock of crows
People in Tudor and Stuart England believed that, while God could not prevent humanity’s greatest crimes, he could reveal their perpetrators via miraculous signs. Blessin Adams explains how bird attacks, ghostly apparitions and bleeding corpses led to convictions for murder
Books
BOOKS
EUROPEAN “Events here ‘pulse more vigorously or have
“The 1848 uprisings were a dissonant orchestra of ambitions and intentions”
CHRISTOPHER CLARK
Quest for a queen
ANCIENT BRITAIN
The pain in Spain
James Hynes on Sparrow, his novel following the travails of an enslaved boy in an ancient Roman city on the Iberian peninsula
Red dawn
RICHARD OVERY is impressed by a comprehensive history of the changing relationship between two states that became the great superpowers of Eurasia
Central intelligence
JONATHAN KWAN is swept along by a colourful and authoritative exploration of Europe’s geographic heartland
THE CLASSIC BOOK
Joanne Paul on a masterful study of a controversial Tudor statesman and saint
Steppe changes
PETER HOMMEL is critical of some of the conclusions presented in a new study of the nomadic warriors of the central Eurasian steppe
Encounters
Georgian glamour
VISIT
Dazzling decadence
VISIT
A fragile peace
WATCH
Royal romance
WATCH
Historical lessons
LISTEN
“The die store covers 150 years of work – from military badges to FA Cup medals to bus conductors’ buttons”
HISTORY ON THE BOX
Coronation chicken
TASTE
A new life down under
WATCH
Preserving the past
WATCH
Fateful choice
WATCH
Sirens and she-devils
Our podcast editor ELLIE CAWTHORNE discusses a recent episode that introduces a sinister cast of female monsters – and explores how they reflected old fears
THREE HISTORY EXTRA PODCASTS EXPLORING MYTHS AND MONSTERS
Misogyny in myths The Greek myths have been
A mighty northern port
Eurovision might be turning the international spotlight on Liverpool in 2023, but this waterfront city has for centuries had a global outlook. YORK MEMBERY explores its maritime history and musical heritage
Berlin in five places
The German capital is a city of constant reinvention, but its past is never far away. RORY MACLEAN highlights places to visit for key insights into Berlin’s tangled story
PRIZE CROSSWORD
Across 1 Joseph ____, US senator notorious for
NEXT MONTH
June issue on sale 11 May 2023
Michael Collins
Astronaut Chris Hadfield chooses
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