The only certainty about the picture is that it shows Francis Williams. No one has ever been able to discover who painted it, when, where or why. And then, a few months ago, everything changed.

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Cultural Judo: Alberti and the Ancients

Anthony Grafton, 21 November 2024

Alberti the writer, first and last, was Alberti the reader, whose attitude towards ancient (and later) texts was anything but passive. He grew up in an age of textual discoveries – the hunting and gathering...

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The Unpoetic Calorie: Food Made Flesh

Erin Maglaque, 21 November 2024

What is it about the body that resists plain description? When we discuss our bodies, we evoke other things: the body as machine, possibly malfunctioning; the body as computer, infinitely programmable....

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At the Rijksmuseum: Panniers and Petticoats

Clare Bucknell, 21 November 2024

Underwear has useful, basic functions. It protects bodies from being chafed or scarred by rough outer clothing. It also protects clothing from the body. Because of its proximity to intimate areas, sites...

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Pop, Crackle and Bang: Fireworks!

Malcolm Gaskill, 7 November 2024

The main application of gunpowder was inevitably in warfare, which has its own volatile story, but the enterprise of refining gunpowder for entertainment ran in parallel, and its history traces a long...

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A Walnut in Sacrifice: How to Cast a Spell

Nick Richardson, 7 November 2024

Belief in a multitude of non-human entities, and in the ability of humankind to forge relationships with them via magical words and images, appears to be almost universal – and wherever these beliefs...

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Can that woman sleep? Bad Samaritan

Bee Wilson, 24 October 2024

For all of her self-interest and avarice, Madame Restell does seem to have had one great and almost unheard-of quality in a 19th-century abortionist: she did not make a habit of killing her clients. Restell...

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Nation-building: Capetian Kings

Rosamond McKitterick, 24 October 2024

The lands the Capetian kings controlled would eventually expand far beyond the family territory of the Île-de-France, to embrace the principalities and smaller counties that would eventually become France.

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‘This history is to be told like a fable,’ Warburg explained of the sequences disclosed in the Bilderatlas panels, calling them ‘ghost stories for all adults’. There was no escape from the psychic...

Read more about Prophetic Stomach: Aby Warburg’s Afterlives

Israel’s leaders claim this war is existential, a matter of Jewish survival, and there is a grain of truth in this claim, because the state is incapable of imagining Israeli Jewish existence except on...

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Can an eyeball have lovers? Emerson’s Scepticism

Michael Ledger-Lomas, 26 September 2024

‘He draws his rents from rage and pain,’ Emerson once wrote of ‘the writer’, but more narrowly of himself.

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On Reichenau Island

Irina Dumitrescu, 26 September 2024

In its first three centuries Reichenau Abbey was one of the leading educational centres in Europe. Its abbots produced fine manuscripts for their own use and on commission. They were involved in Carolingian...

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Sunday Best: Wilfred Owen’s Letters

Mark Ford, 26 September 2024

It becomes apparent from Owen’s graphic and appalled letters home that it was the urge to make his mother, in the first instance, see and feel what the Western Front was really like that drove him to...

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Prophet of the Past: Blame it on Malthus

Oliver Cussen, 26 September 2024

In the guise of natural theology, Malthusian political economy soon became the common sense of a middle class brought up to see the world as fallen and life as a trial: scarcity was ordained by providence,...

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Fanon’s world has a logic. His pages are full of identities, contradictions, Aufhebungen – master and slave, being and nothingness. Any biography, however, has to decide in the end which of the various...

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Strange Outlandish Word: Tudor to Stuart

Clare Jackson, 26 September 2024

Accounts of Elizabeth’s ‘nomination’ and James’s straightforward succession are ultimately misleading. Elizabeth’s refusal to make a will or leave directions for her funeral reinforces the impression...

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Euripides Unbound

Robert Cioffi, 26 September 2024

One of the papyri excavated by the archaeologist Heba Adly contains 97 lines of two plays by Euripides – Ino and Polyidus – that were known to us only through scattered quotations and summaries...

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Despite an explicit biblical prohibition on cross-dressing, reinforced by canon law, trans monks caught the imaginations of worshippers because they so fully embodied the ideal of ‘becoming male’,...

Read more about Cartwheels down the aisle: Byzantine Intersectionality