June 26th, 2010 - 12:04 am § in general

Historians told to be ‘evangelical’ in their duty to inform public

By Matthew Reisz

Historians should strive for public impact in ways unimagined by the narrow “impact agenda”, a conference has heard.

The debate on public history at the German Historical Institute London looked beyond the current push to measure the economic and social impact of British research.

Franziska Augstein, a German journalist and intellectual, said that in her country the past was fiercely disputed, with arguments about whether people who grew up in East Germany were even “allowed” to say they had happy childhoods. In this context, historians had played a vital role in resisting attempts to impose an official version of events, she told the conference this month.

The stakes are seldom as high for British academics taking on public-advocacy roles.

Kathleen Burk, professor of modern and contemporary history at University College London, said she was wary of participating in television documentaries after being told that “researchers ring you up at every hour of the day and night – and then ignore everything you tell them”.

Justin Champion, head of the department of history at Royal Holloway, University of London, worried that with print runs for many monographs at just 300 copies, historians could end up talking only to each other. “University historians are privileged. Our work costs money – public money – which imposes certain duties. I am stunned by the resistance to our responsibilities.”

He was unsympathetic to the argument recently set out in Times Higher Education by Richard Overy, professor of history at the University of Exeter, that cutting-edge historical research “has no less reason to be inaccessible than physics”.

Those studying for the MA in public history at Royal Holloway are taught how to turn a complex scholarly thesis into a podcast or a 500-word tabloid article, he said.

Peter Mandler, professor of modern cultural history at the University of Cambridge, told the conference that in justifying public investment in their work, historians had to be “loudly evangelical about the impact they can and do have”.


June 11th, 2010 - 7:36 pm § in general

The obituary of King Henry II of England

from the History of William of Newburgh (1136 – 1198) Book III, chapter 26: “Of a truth this king (as is well known) was endowed with many virtues that adorn the person of a king, and yet he was addicted to certain vices especially unbecoming a Christian prince. He was prone to concupiscence[...]


June 10th, 2010 - 2:46 am § in general

England-hopping! A brief comic book about my trip in South East England

England-Hopping – comics[...]


June 4th, 2010 - 10:25 pm § in general, sources

12th century English taxation in action

Roger De Hoveden The Annals vol.2., 1198 AD “In the same year, Richard, king of England, levied from each carucate or hide of land through­ out all England five shillings as an aid ; for the purpose of collect­ing which, the said king sent through each county of England one clerk and one kni[...]


June 4th, 2010 - 2:09 am § in general, sources

The coronation of Richard I of England

Roger De Hoveden (1174 – 1201), The Annals vol.2., From AD 1180 To AD 1201 (pp. 117 – 120) translated by Henry T. Riley, London, 1853 First came the bishops, abbots, and large numbers of the clergy, wearing silken hoods, preceded by the cross, taper-bearers, censers, and holy water, as [...]


June 4th, 2010 - 2:05 am § in general, sources

A 12th century overview of the island of Britain

Chapter 2 of Geoffrey of Monmouth’s (1100-1155) “History of the Kings of Britain” : “Britain, the best of islands, is situated in the Western Ocean, between France and Ireland, being eight hundred miles long, and two hundred broad. It produces every thing that is useful to ma[...]


May 1st, 2010 - 6:21 pm § in general

Anglo-Saxon manuscript treasure online

One of the most important collections of Anglo-Saxon manuscripts – for centuries kept at Corpus Christi College in Cambridge – has been entirely digitised, and is now available on the internet. The college’s Parker Library holds more than 550 documents – including the 6th Cen[...]