Diary: The Three Christs of Ypsilanti

Jenny Diski, 22 September 2011

Darwin observed and wrote about his children, as did Freud. And so did that particularly unpleasant behaviourist father in the movie Peeping Tom, made around the same time as Dr Milton Rokeach’s dinner...

Read more about Diary: The Three Christs of Ypsilanti

Into Dust: Nazis 1945

Richard J. Evans, 8 September 2011

Why did the Germans keep on fighting to the bitter end in 1945, long after it was clear to almost everybody that the war was lost? From the catastrophic defeat of the Sixth Army at Stalingrad...

Read more about Into Dust: Nazis 1945

Don’t marry a Christian: Wives or slaves?

Amanda Vickery, 8 September 2011

It was a hackneyed truth that while European Christian women in the 18th century were essentially free, ‘“Oriental” and Muslim women were incarcerated body and soul behind...

Read more about Don’t marry a Christian: Wives or slaves?

The Indecisive Terrorist: Ziad al-Jarrah

Mary Anne Weaver, 8 September 2011

In a video shot in 2000 at Tarnak Farms, then Osama bin Laden’s headquarters, 12 miles outside Kandahar, we see Ziad al-Jarrah pacing in the receiving room of a guesthouse. He is dressed in a flowing...

Read more about The Indecisive Terrorist: Ziad al-Jarrah

Poem: ‘Actaeon’

Lavinia Greenlaw, 25 August 2011

He walks his mind as a forest and sends of himself into dark places to which he cannot tell the way. The hunt comes on and he in his nerves streams ahead – hounds flung after a scent so...

Read more about Poem: ‘Actaeon’

Runagately Rogue: Puritans and Others

Tobias Gregory, 25 August 2011

There is plenty of evidence about the religious beliefs of the ‘plain man’ in early modern England, but it tells us more about the devout and the learned than it does about the...

Read more about Runagately Rogue: Puritans and Others

In June 2001, John Dower, a historian of Japan, wrote a comment piece in the New York Times about the blockbuster movie Pearl Harbor. The problem with it, he thought, was not its predictable...

Read more about Something Fine and Powerful: Pearl Harbor Redux

The First New War: Crimea

Geoffrey Wheatcroft, 25 August 2011

At its high tide under Suleiman the Magnificent and his immediate successors, the Ottoman Empire stretched from the Persian Gulf in the south to the Balkans in the north and reached the gates of...

Read more about The First New War: Crimea

Catherine of Aragon was Henry VIII’s first and longest-lasting queen, at the heart of his glittering court for almost two decades. In the early years of their marriage, the Spanish...

Read more about The Unlikeliest Loophole: Catherine of Aragon

In 1913 Osip Mandelstam published his first book of poems, Kamen (‘Stone’). His father was a successful Jewish glovemaker from Warsaw who had moved to St Petersburg and sent his son...

Read more about Thrown Overboard from the Steamer of Modernity: ‘Russia in 1913’

Diary: Ulster Revisited

Nick Laird, 28 July 2011

I took my daughter back to County Tyrone at the end of June to see my parents, and to spend some time with my sister and her children, who were also visiting. We did the usual: gorged on apple...

Read more about Diary: Ulster Revisited

Baffled at a Bookcase: My Libraries

Alan Bennett, 28 July 2011

A library, I used to feel, was like a cocktail party with everybody standing with their back to me; I could not find a way in.

Read more about Baffled at a Bookcase: My Libraries

It takes a village: Henry Maine

C.A. Bayly, 14 July 2011

If, around 1880, an educated person in Britain had been asked to list the most important intellectuals of the previous generation, he or she might well have mentioned, alongside Darwin and John...

Read more about It takes a village: Henry Maine

Giambattista Vico knew that history began with the giants: the primitive men and women who lived after the universal Flood, and invented myth and poetry. More important, he knew why they had...

Read more about Those Limbs We Admire: Himmler’s Tacitus

The Chief Inhabitant: Jerusalem

Diarmaid MacCulloch, 14 July 2011

Where might you seek Jerusalem? You could start in Bologna, which since at least the ninth century CE has boasted a Jerusalem theme park called Santo Stefano, a complex of churches and chapels...

Read more about The Chief Inhabitant: Jerusalem

All about the Beef: The Food War

Bernard Porter, 14 July 2011

It isn’t true that starvation is just like being hungry, only worse. ‘Victims of starvation die of nutritional dystrophy,’ Lizzie Collingham writes in The Taste of War, a...

Read more about All about the Beef: The Food War

In Myrtle Bowers: Cavaliers

Blair Worden, 30 June 2011

This is a remarkable and tantalising book, luminously evocative, acutely observed, joyously written, intellectually evasive, wilfully unfocused, suicidally diffuse. Who could say, after its 500...

Read more about In Myrtle Bowers: Cavaliers

Rodric Braithwaite, British ambassador to Moscow between 1988 and 1992, was in Russia when Soviet troops crossed the Oxus into Afghanistan in 1979. His fascinating account of the Soviet...

Read more about Andropov was right: The Russians in Afghanistan