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Welcome to The History Faculty blog. Here we hope to keep you up-to-date with all that's going on at The History Faculty, including new resources, new and upcoming podcasts, items in the news etc. If you have anything that you think should be included, then please e-mail it to jonathan@thehistoryfaculty.com.
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Showing posts with label Britain. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Britain. Show all posts

Friday, 5 November 2010

The Gunpowder Plot

Recommended by THF.

A podcast from the National Archives

The gunpowder plot: key documents and hidden voices

The National Archives holds a wide range of documents which tell the story of the Gunpowder Plot and its investigation - but their meaning is hotly contested. James Travers selects some of the key documents and shows that beneath the noise of the ideological debate, we can hear the principal characters speaking in their own words - and a very different view of the plot emerges.

Author: James Travers
Duration: 39:06

Listen to the podcast, and see further information, including primary documents.

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FREE history presentations and resources produced by THF.

You can download podcasts to your mp4 player and/or mobile phone for free by visiting the THF Podcast Homepage or by subscribing to one of the RSS feeds below:

video audio Bookmark and Share

Monday, 14 June 2010

Democratisation: historical lessons from the British case by John Garrard (History & Policy)

Democratisation: historical lessons from the British case
by John Garrard

from History & Policy: connecting the study of history to today.

John Garrard. Democratisation in Britain: Elites, Civil Society and Reform since 1800.(Book Review): An article from: Albion

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FREE history presentations and resources produced by THF.

You can download podcasts to your mp4 player and/or mobile phone for free by visiting the THF Podcast Homepage or by subscribing to one of the RSS feeds below:

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Thursday, 13 May 2010

Britain and Europe: CCBH Witness Seminar

Britain and Europe

from The Witness Seminars by the Centre for Contemporary British History.

Requires free registration

"What is a witness seminar?

Since its founding in 1986, the Institute of Contemporary British History (ICBH), now known as the Centre for Contemporary British History, has been uniquely associated with the production of 'witness seminars' on events or developments which have taken place within the bounds of living memory.

These exercises in oral history involve asking key participants to meet around the seminar table to discuss and debate the issues surrounding the chosen topic as they remember them. Witness seminars thus operate as group interviews, chaired by a senior academic, which are taped and transcribed primarily for the use of researchers.

The CCBH witness seminars are widely regarded by contemporary historians and social scientists as among the most useful and innovative forms of oral history. They often prove to be of more value than one-on-one interviews because of the interaction between witnesses stimulated during these discussions. They have been adopted by other institutions, both in Britain and abroad, and the CCBH has regularly collaborated with scholars from other institutions in planning and hosting witness seminars of particular relevance to their work."
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FREE history presentations and resources produced by THF.

You can download podcasts to your mp4 player and/or mobile phone for free by visiting the THF Podcast Homepage or by subscribing to one of the RSS feeds below:

video audio
Bookmark and Share

Tuesday, 27 April 2010

Stereotypes and the state: Britain's travellers past and present by Becky Taylor, History & Policy

Stereotypes and the state: Britain's travellers past and present

by Becky Taylor

from History & Policy: connecting the study of history to today.

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FREE history presentations and resources produced by THF.

You can download podcasts to your mp4 player and/or mobile phone for free by visiting the THF Podcast Homepage or by subscribing to one of the RSS feeds below:

video audio
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Thursday, 8 April 2010

From Herbert Morrison to command and control: the decline of local democracy - Jerry White (History and Policy)

From Herbert Morrison to command and control: the decline of local democracy

by Jerry White

from History & Policy:

"History & Policy:

Demonstrates the relevance of history to contemporary policymaking
Puts historians in touch with those discussing and deciding public policy today
Increases the influence of historical research over current policy
Advises historians wanting to engage more effectively with policymakers and media

On this website you can:


Read History & Policy papers about current policy issues:
Written by expert historians
Over 90 currently available
All free to view
New papers published regularly"
---

FREE history presentations and resources produced by THF.

You can download podcasts to your mp4 player and/or mobile phone for free by visiting the THF Podcast Homepage or by subscribing to one of the RSS feeds below:

video audio
Bookmark and Share

Tuesday, 6 April 2010

Patients' rights: from Alder Hey to the Nuremberg Code by Elizabeth T. Hurren

Patients' rights: from Alder Hey to the Nuremberg Code by Elizabeth T. Hurren

from History & Policy, a group that aims to demonstrate the relevance of history to contemporary policymaking.

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FREE history presentations and resources produced by THF.

You can download podcasts to your mp4 player and/or mobile phone for free by visiting the THF Podcast Homepage or by subscribing to one of the RSS feeds below:

video audio
Bookmark and Share

Saturday, 3 April 2010

Unequal Britain: equalities in Britain since 1945, by Pat Thane

Unequal Britain: equalities in Britain since 1945, by Pat Thane

from History & Policy: connecting the study of history to today. 

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FREE history presentations and resources produced by THF.

You can download podcasts to your mp4 player and/or mobile phone for free by visiting the THF Podcast Homepage or by subscribing to one of the RSS feeds below:

video audio
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Friday, 2 April 2010

'In deadly hate?' Richard III and the War of the Roses | The National Archives

Recommended by THF.

The National Archives:

In deadly hate?' Richard III and the War of the Roses

The conflict for the crown in the 15th century has created many of English history's most vivid characters and thanks to Shakespeare, we have one of our greatest villains in the shape of Richard III. This talk looks at the key sources for this period of civil war, and investigates whether Richard III really did resemble Shakespeare's destructive monster.

Author: James Ross and Sean Cunningham
Duration: 59:16

Link to podcast.


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FREE history presentations and resources produced by THF.

You can download podcasts to your mp4 player and/or mobile phone for free by visiting the THF Podcast Homepage or by subscribing to one of the RSS feeds below:

video audio Bookmark and Share




Conference: the Association of British American Historians

BrANCH Conference: 2010

"2010 BrANCH Conference at Jury's Inn, Liverpool, 8-10 October

CALL FOR PAPERS

The 17th BrANCH annual conference will take place from 8-10 October 2010 at Jury’s Inn, Liverpool.

The BrANCH committee will meet in mid-April to put the programme into preliminary shape. Please let me have paper proposals—with synopsis (on a single page) and the briefest C.V.—by Friday 2nd April at the latest.

Individual papers and panel proposals are welcome on any aspect of the period 1789-1917. Postgraduate contributions will be warmly received, and we hope to be able to offer generous subsidies to British-based graduate students.

Send all proposals to me by e-mail at m.s.crawford@ams.keele.ac.uk
I greatly look forward to hearing from you.
Martin Crawford
Chair, BrANCH"
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FREE history presentations and resources produced by THF.

You can download podcasts to your mp4 player and/or mobile phone for free by visiting the THF Podcast Homepage or by subscribing to one of the RSS feeds below:

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Tuesday, 30 March 2010

The British Postal Museum & Archive Podcast

The British Postal Museum & Archive Podcast

Dr Scott Anthony - Stephen Tallents and the GPO

Night Mail and the Valentines Day telegram were two innovations that bore the stamp of Sir Stephen Tallents' influence. Dr Scott Anthony, Director of the MA in Modern British History at Manchester University and author of the BFI Classics book on Night Mail, explains how and why the GPO became the patron of a brilliant generation of artists, filmmakers and poets, and in the process invented the new profession of public relations.

Christine Earle - The Post Office Went to War
To mark the 7th Anniversary of the start of the Second World War, Christine Earle, Fellow of the Royal Philatelic Society London, explores the effect of the conflict on the General Post Office. Christine has been a thematic stamp collector for over twenty years, using stamps and philatelic material to tell a story. Her Post Office Went to War collection comprises a wealth of supporting material including GPO notices, ration books and saving stamps.

Peter Sutton - The Post Office During the First World War
 
Peter Sutton, Researcher, BPMA, discusses the complexities of the role of the Post Office during the First World War. At the start of 1914 the General Post Office was one of the largest employers in the world, but the Great War had a significant impact on the service. Post Office servants fought and died on the western front, designed and installed communication networks between the armies and England, paid separation allowances to the wives of servicemen away in the trenches and helped run the largest postal censorship operation in history.
Dr Katherine Rake - Human Letters
On 23 February 1909, two suffragettes, Miss Solomon and Miss McLellan, posted themselves by express messenger to 10 Downing Street, in an attempt to deliver a message personally to Prime Minister Herbert Asquith. Dr Katherine Rake, Director of the Fawcett Society, marks the centenary of this event with an exploration of the progress made by the equality movement since then.
Mark Crowley - The Post Office during the Second World War
Mark Crowley traces the role of the Post Office during the Second World War. The organisation became an integral part of British life, and an essential component of the war effort both on the home and military front. The war brought issues of employment, especially the employment of women, and technological development to the forefront of the Post Office's priorities.
Tony Benn - Girobank: The 40th Anniversary of The People's Bank
Prime Minister Harold Wilson opened the National Girobank in Liverpool in 1968. This landmark initiative extended banking services to people on low incomes and revolutionised the transfer of money in Britain. National Giro was set up to be computerised from the outset, and embraced technology such as optical character reading and telephone banking.

The project was initiated by Tony Benn, during his period of office as Postmaster General. The BPMA was delighted to welcome him to talk about the development and the history of The People's Bank.

Link to podcasts (outside THF network)
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FREE history presentations and resources produced by THF.

You can download podcasts to your mp4 player and/or mobile phone for free by visiting the THF Podcast Homepage or by subscribing to one of the RSS feeds below:

video audio
Bookmark and Share


Sunday, 28 March 2010

Policing the Windrush Generation - James Whitfield (History and Policy)

Policing the Windrush Generation

by James Whitfield

from History & Policy:

"History & Policy:

Demonstrates the relevance of history to contemporary policymaking
Puts historians in touch with those discussing and deciding public policy today
Increases the influence of historical research over current policy
Advises historians wanting to engage more effectively with policymakers and media

On this website you can:


Read History & Policy papers about current policy issues:
Written by expert historians
Over 90 currently available
All free to view
New papers published regularly"
---

FREE history presentations and resources produced by THF.

You can download podcasts to your mp4 player and/or mobile phone for free by visiting the THF Podcast Homepage or by subscribing to one of the RSS feeds below:

video audio
Bookmark and Share

Saturday, 27 March 2010

Section 28 and the Revivial of Gay, Lesbian and Queer Politics in Britain: CCBH Witness Seminar

Programme on Section 28:

"Section 28 and the revival of Gay, Lesbian and Queer Politics in Britain"

from The Witness Seminars by the Centre for Contemporary British History.

Requires free registration

"What is a witness seminar?

Since its founding in 1986, the Institute of Contemporary British History (ICBH), now known as the Centre for Contemporary British History, has been uniquely associated with the production of 'witness seminars' on events or developments which have taken place within the bounds of living memory.

These exercises in oral history involve asking key participants to meet around the seminar table to discuss and debate the issues surrounding the chosen topic as they remember them. Witness seminars thus operate as group interviews, chaired by a senior academic, which are taped and transcribed primarily for the use of researchers.

The CCBH witness seminars are widely regarded by contemporary historians and social scientists as among the most useful and innovative forms of oral history. They often prove to be of more value than one-on-one interviews because of the interaction between witnesses stimulated during these discussions. They have been adopted by other institutions, both in Britain and abroad, and the CCBH has regularly collaborated with scholars from other institutions in planning and hosting witness seminars of particular relevance to their work." 

Link to seminar (outside THF Network).

---

FREE history presentations and resources produced by THF.

You can download podcasts to your mp4 player and/or mobile phone for free by visiting the THF Podcast Homepage or by subscribing to one of the RSS feeds below:

video audio
Bookmark and Share

Friday, 26 March 2010

Intelligence analysis needs to look backwards before looking forward: Christopher Andrew

Intelligence analysis needs to look backwards before looking forward by Christopher Andrew

from History & Policy, a group that aims to demonstrate the relevance of history to contemporary policymaking

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FREE history presentations and resources produced by THF.

You can download podcasts to your mp4 player and/or mobile phone for free by visiting the THF Podcast Homepage or by subscribing to one of the RSS feeds below:

video audio
Bookmark and Share

Tuesday, 23 March 2010

Tudor and Elizabethan portraits: National Portrait Gallery

National Portrait Gallery - Tudor and Elizabethan portraits:

"Tudor and Elizabethan portraits

A selection of portraits from 1485 to 1603, many of which are on display at the Gallery or at Montacute House in Somerset."

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FREE history presentations and resources produced by THF.

You can download podcasts to your mp4 player and/or mobile phone for free by visiting the THF Podcast Homepage or by subscribing to one of the RSS feeds below:

video audio
Bookmark and Share

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