Latest issue of Historical Research
Historical Research is published four times a year, in February, May, August and November
Latest issue of the journal
November 2019, Volume 92, Issue 258
- Stephen J. Spencer, Feelings of betrayal and echoes of the First Crusade in Odo of Deuil’s De profectione Ludovici VII in Orientem
- Matt Raven, The earls of Edward III and the polity: the earls of Arundel and Northampton in the localities, 1330–60
- Stephen G. Ellis, Siegecraft on the Tudor frontier: the siege of Dublin, 1534, and the crisis of the Kildare rebellion
- William White, Parliament, print and the politics of disinformation, 1642–3 [read William's post on the IHR's blog, On History]
- Stewart Beale, ‘Unpittyed by any’? Royalist widows and the Crown, 1660–70
- Helen Esfandiary, ‘We could not answer to ourselves not doing it’: maternal obligations and knowledge of smallpox inoculation in eighteenth‐century elite society
- Liam Ryan, Nonconformity and socialism: the case of J. G. Greenhough, 1880–1914
- Samuel Tranter, The hope and faith of Armistice Day during the Second World War: remembering the lost generation
- Glen O'Hara, ‘The Russian Revolution has not yet taken place’: British views of the Soviet economy between the nineteen‐fifties and nineteen‐seventies
- Rob Waters, ‘Time come’: Britain’s black futures past [the 2019 Historical Research lecture; available free]
- Kennetta Hammond Perry, The temporal dimensions of Thinking Black: a comment [the 2019 Historical Research lecture; available free]