Dr Kat and Aphra BehnReading the Past2019-08-02 | Much of Aphra Behn's early life is a mystery, but this video looks at the myths and facts that we do have access to.
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Aphra Behn, “On a Juniper-tree Cut down to Make Busks”: bartleby.com/334/693.htmlFREE HISTORY RESOURCESReading the Past2024-10-18 | Let’s take a look at the open access history resources that I have found to be super useful…
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
#OpenAccess #History #Education📣SNEAKY PEEK OF THE NEW VIDEO📣 #shortsReading the Past2024-10-18 | Let’s take a look at the open access history resources that I have found to be super useful…
#OpenAccess #History #EducationWhat Ive been up to... LIVE STREAMReading the Past2024-09-27 | Dropping in for a quick live to say hello, thank you and to have a chat about what I've been up to ....
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
#History #Pregnancy #Confinement📣SNEAKY PEEK OF THE NEW VIDEO📣 #shortsReading the Past2024-09-13 | I had the privilege to catch up with the fabulous Lauren Johnson to talk about the history of confinement...
#History #Pregnancy #ConfinementPregnancy in the Past: The Birth of MankindReading the Past2024-09-06 | Let’s take a look at the first book on pregnancy, birth and child rearing to be published in English – The Birth of Mankind…
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Screenshots from: The Byrth of Mankynde, Newly Translated Out of Laten into Englysshe. in the which is Entreated of all Suche Thynges the which Chaunce to Women in Theyr Labor, and all Suche Infyrmitees Whiche Happen Vnto the Infantes After they be Delyuered. and also at the Latter Ende Or in the Thyrde Or Last Boke is Entreated of the Conception of Mankynde, and Howe Manye Wayes it may be Letted Or Furtheryd, with Diuers Other Fruytefull Thynges, as Doth Appere in the Table before the Booke. London:, 1540. From ProQuest. 5 Sep. 2024 .
Screenshots from: Raynalde, Thomas, The Byrth of Mankynde, Otherwyse Named the Womans Booke Newly Set Furth, Corrected and Augmented. Whose Co[n]Tentes Ye Maye Rede in the Table of the Booke, and most Playnly in the Prologue. by Thomas Raynold Phisition. London:, 1545. From ProQuest. 5 Sep. 2024 .
Screenshots from: Raynalde, Thomas, The Byrth of Mankynde, Otherwyse Named the Womans Booke Newly Set Foorth, Corrected, and Augmented: Whose Contentes Ye may Reade in the Table of the Booke, and most Playnely in the Prologue. by Thomas Raynalde Phisition. London:, 1560. From ProQuest. 5 Sep. 2024
Title page form De partu hominis, & quae circa ipsum accidunt, libellus D. Eucharii Rhodionis, medici. - Parisis : apud Ioannem Foucher in via Iacobea, 1538. Held by the Biblioteca Europea di Informazione e Cultura.
Eucharius Rösslin presents Der Rosengarten to Catherine of Pomerania-Wolgast. From: Eucharius Rößlin, Der Swangern frawen vnd hebamme(n) roszgarte(n). Hagenau: Gran, um 1515. Source: http://www.bassenge.com
Other relevant entries from The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online.
#History #Pregnancy #BirthOfMankind📣SNEAKY PEEK OF THE NEW VIDEO📣 #shortsReading the Past2024-09-06 | Let’s take a look at the first book on pregnancy, birth and child rearing to be published in English – The Birth of Mankind…
#History #Pregnancy #BirthOfMankindLeonora Cohen: Tower SuffragetteReading the Past2024-08-30 | Today, I want to take a look at the “Tower Suffragette” – Leonora Cohen…
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Rokeby Venus or The Toilet of Venus , Venus at her Mirror, Venus and Cupid by Diego Velázquez (1644). Held by the Natioonal Gallery, London. Superimposed is the damage done by Mary Richardson using a detail from a photo published in 1914 (before the repairs) in The Times (front page), March 11, 1914; The Daily Scetch, March 11, 1914 (front page--under the headline "How the Rokeby 'Venus', Bought by the Nation for ₤45,000, was Slashed with a Chopper by a Suffragette in the National Gallery".) For more info on the newspapers using the picture, see: Nead, Lynda. The female nude: art, obscenity, and sexuality. Routledge, 1992. ISBN 0415026784.
Photograph of H.H. Asquith, former Prime Minister of the UK, Bain News Service (c.1910s). Held by the George Grantham Bain collection at the Library of Congress. According to the library, there are no known copyright restrictions on the use of this work.
Photograph of Tower of London, Bloody Tower and Wakefield Tower taken by Dirk Ingo Franke (2013).
F. Watkins, Walmsley, “The Jewel Room at the Tower” 1873 (1887 copy). Held by the British Library, HMNTS 010349.l.1.
Myra Sadd Brown’s Hunger Strike Medal. Used under Copyright Museums Victoria / CC BY (Licensed as Attribution 4.0 International) from Victoria Museums in Australia.
Photograph of Leonora Cohen OBE after her release from Holloway prison (2 January 1909). Photographer unknown.
Screenshot of "Mrs Leonora Cohen." Times, 7 Sept. 1978, p. 18. The Times Digital Archive.
Quoted texts:
Leonora Cohen quoted in “Suffragettes: How Britain’s Women Fought & Died for the Right to Vote” by Frank Meeres (2013).
Diane Drummond, ODNB entry on Leonora Cohen.
Leonora Cohen’s message wrapped around the iron bar.
The Times (London, England), Thursday, May 15, 1913; pg. 3; Issue 40212.
"Mrs Leonora Cohen." Times, 7 Sept. 1978, p. 18. The Times Digital Archive.
Also consulted, were:
Other relevant entries from The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online.
#History #Suffragette #TowerOfLondon📣SNEAKY PEEK OF THE NEW VIDEO📣 #shortsReading the Past2024-08-30 | Let's take a look at the “Tower Suffragette” – Leonora Cohen…
#History #Suffragette #TowerOfLondonHistory News from August 2024 pt.2Reading the Past2024-08-26 | Welcome to this live looking at the history news updates from August 2024...
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant Clubhouse: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Massive thanks go to Kat, Yvonne, Jessie, Kathy, Alicia, Beth, Becky, Jenna, Elverta, Sherry, Kate, Rumplestiltskin Snudpuckle, Carolyn, Jennifer, Natalie, Lori and Shane for sharing many of today's articles with me!
#History #News #ReadingThePastDomesday Book: William Is Great SurveyReading the Past2024-08-23 | Today we are going to focus on the most well-known product of the Norman regime’s administrate prowess. We’re going to take a look at the Domesday Book…
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Reconstructed View of the Tower of London, Norman Castle with Roman Walls, c.1100 by Ivan Lapper (2002-2003). Held by the Tower of London (reproduced at www.artuk.org)
Map of the English counties surveyed in Domesday Book. Showing Little and Great Domesday and circuits, derived from: Map of England 1086.png by XrysD (2018).
#History #Medieval #NormanKing James VI in Mortal Danger: The Gowrie ConspiracyReading the Past2024-08-16 | Go to http://www.squarespace.com/readingthepast to get a free trial and 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain.
Let’s take a look at the Gowrie Conspiracy…
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
The Gowrie House in Perth c.1650 from The Book of Days by Robert Chambers (c.1870).
The Gowrie Conspiracy; engraving by Jan Luyken – King James is on the right. From F Maclean, “Highlanders, A History of the Highland Clans”, London (1995).
"The English Thanksgiving Service for King James' Delivery from the Gowrie Conspiracy" by F. C. Eeles in The Scottish Historical Review , Jul., 1911, Vol. 8, No. 32 (Jul., 1911), pp. 366376.
"The Gowrie Conspiricy August 5th, 1600.(assassination attempt on James VI, King of Scotland)" by Richard Cavendish in History today, 2000-08, Vol.50 (8), p.52-52.
Other relevant entries from The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online.
#History #Stuart #Renaissance📣SNEAKY PEEK OF THE NEW VIDEO📣 #shortsReading the Past2024-08-16 | Let’s take a look at the Gowrie Conspiracy…
#History #Stuart #RenaissanceHistory News from August 2024 pt.1Reading the Past2024-08-12 | Welcome to this live looking at the history news updates from August 2024...
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant Clubhouse: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Massive thanks go to Kat, Jenna, Jessie, Yvonne, Kathy, Beth, Alicia, Shane, Kelly, Joseph, Sarah, Jane Doe Snudpuckle, Mara and Jayne for sharing many of today's articles with me!
#History #News #ReadingThePastEnemies of the King?: Matilda de Braose and her FamilyReading the Past2024-08-09 | Let’s take a look at Matilda de Braose and her family …
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Richard I being anointed during his coronation in Westminster Abbey in 1189, from the chronicle of Matthew Paris (13th century). Chetham MS Ms 6712 (A.6.89), fol.141r.
Depiction of Hay Castle by John George Wood (1816). Held by the National Library of Wales.
King John hunting a stag with hounds in the Statutes of England (14th century). Held by the British Library - Cotton Claudius D. II, f.116.
Arthur of Brittany as portrayed in a genealogical roll in the British Library (13th century).
Detail from "The Pope Innocent III" - fresco mid 13th century - Monastery of Sacro Speco of Saint Benedict - Subiaco (Rome). Photographed by Carlo Raso (2016).
Depiction of the Bristol castle in James Millerd's 1728 map of Bristol (demolished 1656). Image is the same as in the 1673 version of the map. Detail from the 1728 updated edition of James Millerd's map An Exact Delineation of the Famous Citty of Bristoll and Suburbs, first published in 1673. Digitisation undertaken by the Bristol Record Society of an engraving owned by the Society of Merchant Venturers, Bristol.
Ruins of Corfe Castle photographed by me (3rd September 2023).
Quoted texts:
Ralph V. Turner, ODNB entry on William de Braose.
Annals of Margam, 13th century.
Magna Carta (1215).
Also consulted, were:
Ladies of Magna Carta: Women of Influence in Thirteenth Century England by Sharon Bennet Connolly (2020).
Magna Carta by David Carpenter (2015).
"Triumph and disaster: King John’s victory at Mirebeau, 1 August 1202" by David Balfour in Medieval Warfare, Vol. 1, No. 1, IN THIS ISSUE: The War of Bouvines: Rise of France (2011), pp. 10-15 (6 pages).
Magna Carta: A Very Short Introduction by Nicholas Vincent (2012).
Other relevant entries from The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online.
#Medieval #History #BadKingJohn📣SNEAKY PEEK OF THE NEW VIDEO📣 #shortsReading the Past2024-08-09 | Let’s take a look at Matilda de Braose and her family …
#Medieval #History #BadKingJohnPregnancy in the Past: Pregnancy, Pilgrimage and PrayerReading the Past2024-08-02 | Today we’re going to explore pregnancy, pilgrimage and prayer in early modern England...
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Detail showing Henry VIII tilting in front of Katherine of Aragon from the Westminster tournament roll (1511). Held by the College of Arms.
Mary Tudor and Charles Brandon, Duke of Suffolk attributed to Jan Gossaert (c.1515). Held by Woburn Abbey. Image scanned from Hayward, Maria: Dress at the Court of King Henry VIII, Maney Publishing, 2007, ISBN 1905981414.
The statue of Our Lady of Walsingham, the Slipper Chapel, Walsingham, Norfolk, England, photographed by Thorvaldsson (2008).
"Catherine of Aragon: Infanta of Spain, Queen of England" by Theresa Earenfight (2021)
"The Shrine of Our Lady of Walsingham" by J. C. Dickinson (2011)
Other relevant entries from The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online.
#History #Pregnancy #Reformation📣SNEAKY PEEK OF THE NEW VIDEO📣 #shortsReading the Past2024-08-02 | Today we’re going to explore pregnancy, pilgrimage and prayer in early modern England...
#History #Pregnancy #ReformationHistory News from July 2024 pt 2Reading the Past2024-07-29 | Welcome to this live looking at the history news updates from July 2024...
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media:
Instagram: katrina.marchant
Twitter: @kat_marchant
Clubhouse: @kat_marchant
TikTok: @katrina_marchant
Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Massive thanks go to Kat, Karolyn, Yvonne, Jessie, Elverta, Alicia, Shane, Zoe, Kathy, Scarlet OhHaHa, Mr Dr Kat, Jackie, Beth, Zoe, Jenna, Steve, Joseph, Jennifer, Sarah and Jane Doe Snudpuckle for sharing many of today's articles with me!
#History #News #ReadingThePastLlywelyn ap Gruffudd: The Last Prince of WalesReading the Past2024-07-26 | Go to http://www.squarespace.com/readingthepast to get a free trial and 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain.
Let’s take a look at Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, the last recognised native Prince of Wales…
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Gruffydd ap Llywelyn falling from the Tower of London and breaking his neck in Matthew Paris’ Chronicle (13th century). Held by the British Library, Royal 14 C. VII.
“King Alexander III of Scotland on the left with Llywelyn, Prince of Wales on the right as guests to King Edward I of England at the sitting of an English parliament”. Scanned from A. L. Rowse, The Story Of Britain, London 1979.
Second Barons War in England, the Royals (Henry III) on the left vs. the Barons (Montfort) on the right. (British Library, Royal 16 G VI f. 427v).
Simon de Montfort, in a drawing of a stained glass window found at Chartres Cathedral (c.1250). Held by the Bibliothèque nationale de France.
Illustration of Edward I, King of England (c.1320) as it appears on folio 9r of Oxford Bodleian Library Rawlinson C 292.
The South East View of Hawarden Castle, in the County of Flint, published by Newbery & Carnan (c.1770). Held by the National Library of Wales.
Memorial to Princess Gwenllian at Sempringham, England, photographed by Lyndafis (2008).
Edward I creating his son, Edward of Caernarvon (the later King Edward II), prince of Wales, 1301. Text reads "Eduuardus factus est princeps Wallie" (Edward is made prince of Wales). (British Library, MS Cotton Nero.D.II. fol. 191v).
Also consulted, were:
Relevant entries from The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online.
#History #Cymru #PrinceOfWales📣SNEAKY PEEK OF THE NEW VIDEO📣 #shortsReading the Past2024-07-26 | Let’s take a look at Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, the last recognised native Prince of Wales. Starting with how he lost his father …
#History #Cymru #PrinceOfWalesShakespeare in Prison: The Robben Island BibleReading the Past2024-07-19 | Let's take a look at the Complete Works of Shakespeare that comforted and connected freedom fighters... it's time to explore the Robben Island Bible...
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Dora Thornton quoted in “The Robben Island Shakespeare” by Matthew Hahn (2017)
#Shakespeare #Protest #NelsonMandela📣SNEAKY PEEK OF THE NEW VIDEO📣 #shortsReading the Past2024-07-19 | Let's take a look at the Complete Works of Shakespeare that comforted and connected freedom fighters... it's time to explore the Robben Island Bible...
Let’s take a look at John Balliol, King of Scots….
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
From the Seton Armorial, John Balliol and his wife (1591). Scanned from Four Gothic Kings, Elizabeth Hallam, ed.
Great Cause family tree 1291 created by Czar Brodie (2009).
Lerwick Town Hall stained glass window depicting "Margaret, Queen of Scotland and daughter of Norway". Colin Smith / The Maid of Norway / CC BY-SA 2.0.
John Balliol unkinged from the Forman Armorial, produced for Mary, Queen of Scots (1562). Held by the National Library of Scotland, Adv.MS.31.4.2, fol.4r.
A replica of the Stone of Scone at Scone Palace photographed by sarniebill1 (27 April 2009).
Coronation Chair with Stone of Scone, Westminster Abbey. Coronation chair date: 1307 Photograph date: ca. 1875-ca. 1885. From the collection of A. D. White Architectural Photographs, Cornell University Library Accession Number: 15/5/3090.00976.
#History #Medieval #JohnBalliolHistory News from July 2024 pt.1Reading the Past2024-07-08 | Welcome to this live looking at the history news updates from July 2024...
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Massive thanks go to Kathy, Kat, Yvonne, Beth, ScarletOhHaHa, Shane, Penny, Daniella, Alicia, Elverta, Steve, Jenna, Jessie, Joseph and Jane Doe Snudpuckle for sharing many of today's articles with me!
#History #News #ReadingThePastPregnancy in the Past: A History of ConceptionReading the Past2024-07-05 | Let’s discuss the understanding that our early modern counterparts had about how and – indeed – when to get pregnant…
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Instructions regarding Katherine of Aragon’s religious devotions, reproduced by Giles Tremlett in “Katherine of Aragon: Henry’s Spanish Queen” (2010).
Pechey, John, 1655-1716. A General Treatise of the Diseases of Maids, Bigbellied Women, Child-Bed-Women, and Widows Together with the Best Methods of Preventing Or Curing the Same / by J. Pechey .. , London, 1696.
Rüff, Jakob, 1500-1558. The Expert Midwife, Or an Excellent and most Necessary Treatise of the Generation and Birth of Man Wherein is Contained Many very Notable and Necessary Particulars Requisite to be Knovvne and Practised: With Diuers Apt and Usefull Figures Appropriated to this Worke. also the Causes, Signes, and various Cures, of the most Principall Maladies and Infirmities Incident to Women. Six Bookes Compiled in Latine by the Industry of Iames Rueff, a Learned and Expert Chirurgion: And Now Translated into English for the Generall Good and Benefit of this Nation. , London, 1637.
Roeslin, Eucharius,d.1526. The Byrth of Mankynde, Newly Translated Out of Laten into Englysshe. in the which is Entreated of all Suche Thynges the which Chaunce to Women in Theyr Labor, and all Suche Infyrmitees Whiche Happen Vnto the Infantes After they be Delyuered. and also at the Latter Ende Or in the Thyrde Or Last Boke is Entreated of the Conception of Mankynde, and Howe Manye Wayes it may be Letted Or Furtheryd, with Diuers Other Fruytefull Thynges, as Doth Appere in the Table before the Booke. , London, 1540.
#History #Medicine #Tudor📣SNEAKY PEEK OF THE NEW VIDEO📣 #shortsReading the Past2024-07-05 | Let’s discuss the understanding that our early modern counterparts had about how and – indeed – when to get pregnant…
It’s time to dive into the film and TV that was inspired by Shakespeare…
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
#History #Shakespeare #Media📣SNEAKY PEEK OF THE NEW VIDEO📣 #shortsReading the Past2024-06-28 | It’s time to dive into the film and TV that was inspired by Shakespeare…
#History #Shakespeare #MediaHistory News from June 2024 pt.2Reading the Past2024-06-25 | Welcome to this live looking at the history news updates from June 2024...
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant Clubhouse: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Massive thanks go to Yvonne, Kathy, Amy, Kat, Beth, Alicia, Beccy, MJ, Jessie, Mardee, Kenny, Jenna, Elverta, Beckie, Shane, Daniella, Marquise, Paige, Jane Doe Snudpuckle, Joseph and Lana for sharing many of today's articles with me!
#History #News #ReadingThePastThe Empress Matilda: A Queen Betrayed?Reading the Past2024-06-21 | The life of the Empress Matilda is the focus for today’s video, let’s hop in…
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Manuscript illumination thought to depict Henry (Henirch) V form Gospel Book from St. Emmeram (111th century). Held in Regensburg, Krakow, Library of the Cathedral Chapter, Cod. 208, fol. 1r.
Empress Matilda from the Gospels of Henry the Lion (c.1188). From München, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Clm 30055, Evangeliar Heinrichs d. Löwen (Cod. Guelf. 105 Noviss. 2°) — Signaturdokument, folio 171v.
"The Wedding Feast of Henry V and Matilda" (12th century). From http://www.mondes-normands.fr/france/histoires/7/images/7-6-mat.jpg; original at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, MS 373 3895B.
Matilda of Scotland from a genealogical roll of the kings of England (1300-1308). Held by the British Library, BL Royal MS 14 B VI.
Enamel effigy of Geoffrey Plantagenet, Count of Anjou on his tomb (c.1151), formerly at Le Mans Cathedral, now in the Museum of Archeology and History in Le Mans.
Miniature from illuminated Chronicle of Matthew Paris (13th century), from BL MS Cotton Claudius D. vi, f.9, showing Henry I of England enthroned. Held and digitised by the British Library.
Miniature from illuminated Chronicle of Matthew Paris (13th century), showing Stephen of England enthroned. Held and digitised by the British Library.
Detail from the charter of Malcolm IV, King of Scotland to Kelso Abbey showing an illustration of David I, King of Scotland (1159).
Arundel Castle from A series of picturesque views of seats of the noblemen and gentlemen of Great Britain and Ireland by F. O. Morris (1840). Digitised by Brigham Young University.
Henry Fitzempress from the Gospels of Henry the Lion (c.1188). From München, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, Clm 30055, Evangeliar Heinrichs d. Löwen (Cod. Guelf. 105 Noviss. 2°) — Signaturdokument.
12th-century depiction of Henry and Eleanor of Aquitaine holding court (14th century. Held by the Bibliothèque nationale de France.
St. Thomas Becket faces King Henry II in a dispute; Henry II and Thomas Becket. This is taken from 'Peter of Langtoft, Chronicle of England' which was probably written and pictures added during the reign of Edward II (1307-1327). From http://www.traditioninaction.org/SOD/SODimages3/108_BecketHenryII.jpg; original held in British Library, Royal 20 A II folio.
Quoted texts:
Gesta Regis Stephani (12th century).
Marjorie Chibnall, ODNB entry on the Empress Matilda.
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (9th-12th century).
Also consulted, were:
Other relevant entries from The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online.
#History #Medieval #EmpressMatilda📣SNEAKY PEEK OF THE NEW VIDEO📣 #shortsReading the Past2024-06-21 | The life of the Empress Matilda is the focus for today’s video, let’s hop in…
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Portrait of James II of England with Garter Collar by an unknown artist from the school of Peter Lely (c.1650-1675). Held by the Bolton Museum and Art Gallery, Lancashire, UK.
Ceiling of the Painted Hall, showing the detail of King William III and Queen Mary II by Sir James Thornhill (18th century). At the Royal Naval College. Photographed by James Brittain.
Portrait of Louis XIV by Hyacinthe Rigaud (1700-1701). Held by the Louvre Museum.
Watercolour portrait of Richard Talbot by John Bulfinch after painting by Kneller (1728). In an unknown collection.
Jan van Huchtenburgh: Battle of the Boyne between James II and William III, 1st June 1690 (O.S.) (1690-1733). Held by the Rijksmuseum.
“A Lost Cause: Flight of King James II after the Battle of the Boyne” by Andrew Carrick Gow (1888). Held by the Tate.
Portrait of Queen Anne by Michael Dahl (c.1702). Held by the National Portrait Gallery.
Portrait of Queen Mary of Modena with Prince James Stuart by Benedetto Gennari II (1690s). In an unknown collection.
Portrait of Queen Anne and William, Duke of Gloucester by the studio of Sir Godfrey Kneller (c.1694). Held by the National Portrait Gallery.
Portrait of King William III by Godfried Schalcken (1692-1679). Held by the Rijksmuseum.
Portrait of James Francis Edward Stuart, Prince of Wales attributed to Alexis Simon Belle (c.1700-1705). Held by the Royal Collection Trust.
Portrait of Prince James Francis Edward Stuart by the studio of Alexis Simon Belle (c.1712). Held by the National Portrait Gallery.
Portrait of King George I by the studio of Sir Godfrey Kneller (1714-1725, based on a work of 1714). Held by the National Portrait Gallery.
Portrait of John Erskine, 6th Earl of Mar by Hyacinthe Rigaud (1715-1732). Held by The Earl of Mar and Kellie, on loan to National Trust for Scotland, Alloa Tower.
Portrait of James Butler, 2nd Duke of Ormonde by the studio of Michael Dahl (c.1713). Held by the National Portrait Gallery.
The Battle of Glenshiel 1719 by Peter Tillemans (1719). Held by the Scottish National Gallery.
Portrait of Maria Clementina Sobieska by an unknown artist (1727-1728). Held by the Scottish National Gallery.
Portrait of Prince Charles Edward Stuart by William Mossman (1737-1750). Held by the Scottish National Gallery.
Portrait of Henry Benedict Maria Clement Stuart, Cardinal York by the studio of Antonio David (c.1732, based on a work of 1732). Held by the National Portrait Gallery.
Portrait of Prince Charles Edward Stuart by Allan Ramsay (1745). Held by the Scottish National Gallery.
Holyroodhouse Palace and Abbey from Francis Grose, Antiquities of Scotland. 1789.
Portrait of William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland by Arthur Pond (mid 18th century). In an unknown collection.
“An Incident in the Rebellion of 1745” by David Morier depicting the 1746 Battle of Culloden (1746-1765). Held by the Royal Collection Trust.
Portrait of Charles Edward Stuart in his later years by Hugh Douglas Hamilton (c.1785). Held by the Scottish National Gallery.
Portrait of Henry Benedict Maria Clement Stuart, Cardinal York from the circle of Anton Raphael Mengs (c.1750). Held by the National Portrait Gallery.
Quoted texts:
Murray G.H. Pittock, ODNB entry on Charles Edward Stuart.
W. A. Speck, ODNB entry on Prince William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland.
Also consulted, were:
Other relevant entries from The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online.
#History #Jacobite #Stuart📣SNEAKY PEEK OF THE NEW VIDEO📣 #shortsReading the Past2024-06-14 | It’s time to take a look at the Jacobites …
#History #Jacobite #StuartHistory News from June 2024 pt.1Reading the Past2024-06-10 | Welcome to this live looking at the history news updates from June 2024...
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media:
Instagram: katrina.marchant
Twitter: @kat_marchant
Clubhouse: @kat_marchant
TikTok: @katrina_marchant
Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Massive thanks go to Jessie, Alicia, Yvonne, Shane, Elverta, Amy, Beth, Kat, Jenna, Marquise, Kelly, Kathy, Jane Doe Snudpuckle, Lana, Stuart and Joseph for sharing many of today's articles with me!
#History #News #ReadingThePastPeriods in the Past: A History of MenstruationReading the Past2024-06-07 | Let’s take a look at the history of menstruation…
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Screenshots from Early English Books Online: Paré, Ambroise, 1510?-1590. The Workes of that Famous Chirurgion Ambrose Parey Translated Out of Latin and Compared with the French. by Tho: Johnson. Whereunto are Added Three Tractates our of Adrianus Spigelius of the Veines, Arteries, & Nerves, with Large Figures. also a Table of the Bookes and Chapters, 1665.
#History #Periods #MenstruationWilliam I: Conquerer or Criminal? (The Harrying of the North)Reading the Past2024-05-31 | It's time for us to take a look at the period between the end of 1069 and the start of 1070 and the event that history remembers as “The Harrying of the North”…
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Matilda of Flanders, queen consort of England and wife of William the Conqueror, by Carle Elshoecht (1850). Luxembourg Garden, Paris. Photographed by Jastrow (2008).
England and Wales at the time of the Treaty of Chippenham (AD 878). From the Atlas of European History, Earle W Dowe (d. 1946), G Bell and Sons, London, 1910. Created by Hel-hama (2012).
Quoted texts:
Simeon of Durham’s History of the Kings from The Church Historians of England .... (1855). United Kingdom: G. Seeley.
Orderic Vitalis, The ecclesiastical history of England and Normandy (from the 1854 edition)
David Bates, ODNB entry on William I [the Conqueror] (2011)
Also consulted, were:
Other relevant entries from The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online.
#History #Medieval #Norman📣SNEAKY PEEK OF THE NEW VIDEO📣 #shortsReading the Past2024-05-31 | It's time for us to take a look at the period between the end of 1069 and the start of 1070 and the event that history remembers as “The Harrying of the North”…
#History #Medieval #NormanHistory News from May 2024 pt.2Reading the Past2024-05-27 | Welcome to this live looking at the history news updates from May 2024...
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant Clubhouse: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Massive thanks go to Cave Felem, Yvonne, Jessie, Kathy, Kelly, Daniella, Scarlet OhHaha, Natalie, Kat, Alicia, Katherine, Elverta, Kate, Shane, Beth, Kathryn, Elaine, Jenna, Zoe, Pandora Snudpuckle and Joseph for sharing many of today's articles with me!
#History #News #ReadingThePastBUSTING HISTORY MYTHSReading the Past2024-05-24 | It’s history myth busting time…
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Woman's stays c. 1730–1740. Silk plain weave with supplementary weft-float patterning, stiffened with whalebone. Los Angeles County Museum of Art, M.63.24.5.
Ewer and basin (pot à la Romaine uni et jatte ovale), Vincennes Manufactory (MET museum, 50.211.177, .178)
Iron Maiden. Torture museum in Lubuska Land Museum in Zielona Góra. Photographed by Lestat (Jan Mehlich), 2007.
Various neo-medieval torture instruments. An iron maiden stands at the right. Photographed by epbechthold (2005)
Quoted texts:
Jeffery Barton Russel, “Inventing the Flat Earth: Columbus and Modern Historians” (1991)
Also consulted, were:
Hallam, H. E. “Age at First Marriage and Age at Death in the Lincolnshire Fenland, 1252- 1478.” Population Studies 39, no. 1 (1985): 55–69. http://www.jstor.org/stable/2174029.
Other relevant entries from The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online.📣SNEAKY PEEK OF THE NEW VIDEO📣 #shortsReading the Past2024-05-24 | It’s history myth busting time…
Let’s explore the exotic beasts that filled the Tower of London’s royal menagerie….
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Photograph of the polar bear sculpture in the Tower of London. Taken by Jonathan Cardy (2012).
Photograph of the elephant sculpture in the Tower of London. Taken by Stiller Beobachter (2018).
Henry III's Elephant, gift by Louis IX of France by Matthew Paris (1255). From Ms.Cotton Nero D.I (Book Of Additions / Liber additamentorum), folio 169 v. Held by the British Library.
Scale model of the Tower of London in the Tower of London, derivative work by Hchc2009. This file was derived from: Scale Model Of The Tower Of London In The Tower Of London.jpg:, CC BY 2.5, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=19034638
Photograph of a skull of a Barbary lion that was kept at Tower of London, held by the Natural History Museum, London. Taken by Thomas Quine (2017).
Lion sculptures in the ruins of the Lion Tower by Patrick Davies Contemporary Art (Sculptor, Kendra Haste; Photographer, Patrick Davies) - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=56269224
Photograph of a baboon sculpture in the Tower of London. Taken by Brian Jeffery Beggerly (2018).
Photograph of the “Resisting Slavery” panel on Edward Francis outside the Tower of London. Taken by me (2024).
"The South View of the Tower of London" engraving, published in 1737 by Nathaniel and Samuel Buck. Courtesy of the British Museum.
Painting by P. Mathews in or just after August 1838 of the Trial of Bill Burns, the first prosecution under the 1822 Martin's Act for cruelty to animals, after Burns was found beating his donkey. The prosecution was brought by Richard Martin, MP for Galway, also known as Humanity Dick, and the case became memorable because he brought the donkey into court.
Ravens in the Tower of London, from London Town illustrated by Thomas Crane and Ellen Houghton, 1883; London/New York: Marcus Ward & Co. (p. 9); (also at the Library of Congress).
Quoted texts:
William of Malmsbury, Chronicle of the Kings of England (12th century)
#History #TowerOfLondon #Animal📣SNEAKY PEEK OF THE NEW VIDEO📣 #shortsReading the Past2024-05-17 | Let’s explore the exotic beasts that filled the Tower of London’s royal menagerie….
#History #TowerOfLondon #AnimalA Harlots Progress: Hogarths First Modern Moral SubjectReading the Past2024-05-10 | Let’s take a look at the cautionary tale of Moll Hackabout as William Hogarth depicts it through his six prints…
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
William Hogarth's A Harlot's Progress, plates 1-6 (1732). Held by the British Museum.
Quoted texts:
David Bindman, ODNB entry on William Hogarth
Paul J Nicholson, William Hogarth, A Harlot’s Progress Plate IV, 1732, Occupational Medicine, Volume 71, Issue 4-5, June-July 2021, Pages 177–179, doi.org/10.1093/occmed/kqz136
Sean Shesgreen, Engravings by Hogarth (1973).
Also consulted, were:
Other relevant entries from The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online.
#History #Hogarth #ArtHistoryHistory News from May 2024 pt.1Reading the Past2024-05-06 | Welcome to this live looking at the history news updates from May 2024...
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
Massive thanks go to Jenna, Jessie, Natalie, Yvonne, Dani, Shane, Kat, Daniella, Elverta, Kathy, Alicia, Elaine, Melanie, Amy, Beth, Janet, Kate, Sarah, Joseph, Mara, Mr Dr Kat and Pandora Snudpuckle for sharing many of today's articles with me!
It’s time to take a look at the so-called “Glorious Revolution” and how we got there…
Please check out my website and sign up to the mailing list to receive updates from me: katrinamarchant.com
I hope you enjoy this video and find it interesting!
Please subscribe and click the bell icon to be updated about new videos.
Also, if you want to get in touch, please comment down below or find me on social media: Instagram and Threads: katrina.marchant Twitter: @kat_marchant TikTok: @katrina_marchant Email: readingthepastwithdrkat@gmail.com
The Three Eldest Children of Charles I by Anthony van Dyck (1635-1636). Held by the Royal Collection Trust.
The execution of King Charles I, etching after an unknown artist (c.1649). Held by the National Portrait Gallery.
The Eve of the Battle of Edge Hill, 1642 by Charles Landseer (1845). Held by the Walker Art Gallery.
Mary, Princess Royal, and William II, Prince of Orange by Gerard van Honthorst (1647). Held by the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam.
Portrait of Henrietta Maria of France by Peter Lely (c.1660). Held by the Condé Museum.
Portrait of Oliver Cromwell after Samuel Cooper (based on a work of 1656). Held by the National Portrait Gallery.
Portrait of Charles II of England in Coronation robes by John Michael Wright (1671-1676). Held by the Royal Collection Trust.
The Family of James, Duke of York started by Peter Lely, completed by Benedetto Gennari (c.1668-1685). Held by the Royal Collection Trust.
Double portrait of King Charles II and Catherine of Braganza by an unknown artist of the English school (17th century). In a private collection.
Portrait of Mary of Modena by Godfrey Kneller and workshop (c.1687). Held by the National Trust.
Portrait of William, Prince of Orange by an unknown artist (1680-1710). Held by the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam.
Portrait of Mary Stuart by Peter Lely (c.1677-1680). Held in the collection of James Stunt.
Coronation of James II, King of England, and Queen Mary of Modena at Westminster, England by Francis Sandford. Published London, England: Printed by T. Newcomb, 1687.
James Scott, 1st Duke of Monmouth and Buccleuch by an unknown artist (c.1682). Held by the National Trust.
Portrait of Archibald Campbell, 9th Earl of Argyll (17th century) in Argyll's Lodging, Stirling.
Portrait of Queen Mary of Modena with Prince James Stuart by Benedetto Gennari II (1690s). Held in an unidentified collection.
Photograph of a warming pan, taken by Algont (2008).
William and Mary depicted on the ceiling of the Painted Hall, Greenwich, by James Thornhill (18th century).
Texts consulted, include:
The relevant entries from The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Online.
#History #Stuart #GloriousRevolution📣SNEAKY PEEK OF THE NEW VIDEO📣 #shortsReading the Past2024-05-03 | It’s time to take a look at the so-called “Glorious Revolution” and how we got there…