Tag: History
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Trapping a Witch in Your Boot: Three Curious Counter-Witchcraft Methods in Early Modern England

Elida Lyons outlines some of the superstitious practices early modern society engaged in to prevent witchcraft, from dried cats to concealed shoes.
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Taking the Bull by the Horns: The Partnership Between Cows and Humans

After previously exploring the connection between dogs and humans, Ailsa Fraser considers the historical, and present, relationship between humans and cows.
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“It is not good for Francis to be alone […] and in this way Clare was created”: Hagiographical Phenomenon and Saintly Adolescence
![“It is not good for Francis to be alone […] and in this way Clare was created”: Hagiographical Phenomenon and Saintly Adolescence](https://retrospectjournal.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/nuremberg_chronicles_-_alpaidis_holy_woman_and_seer_from_cudota_ccvv.jpg?w=1024)
Harry Fry examines socio-cultural differences among adolescent saints, revealing a broader understanding beyond elite-centric narratives in medieval hagiography.
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Playing God: The “Other Coup” of the Greek Military Junta (1967-1974)

Alexander Stroem traces how, between 1967 and 1974, the Greek Military Junta leveraged religious authority to legitimize and maintain its dictatorial regime.
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Women’s Leisure in Nineteenth-Century Britain
Lauren Hood explores the leisure activities of women in nineteenth-century Britain expanded, and how these were influenced by class, gender expectations, and social responsibilities.
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From Factory Occupations to Forgotten: The Masculinisation of Scottish Deindustrialisation and the Women This Leaves Behind
Scottish women’s industrial contributions and resistance during deindustrialisation remain largely overshadowed by male-centric narratives. Lauren Hood offers an insight into the participation of women in the process.
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Surviving a Breakup: The Maoist Perspective

In 1949, Mao’s victory transformed China, adopting Soviet-style governance. Emilio Luppino explores China’s ‘breakup’ with Soviet rule and the autonomous path charted by Mao.
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Undermined

Ailsa Fraser recreates the tense religious climate of sixteenth-century Scotland in this fictional imagining of Protestant martyrdom in St Andrews.
