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  • av Amanda Harvey Purse
    336,-

    Anne Boleyn, the second wife of Henry VIII, was executed on 19 May 1536. Her sister Mary, rumoured mistress to the monarch, lived on and survived the king's wrath. But this is not the end of the tale of the Boleyns and the British Royal family - their stories have remained entwined for almost 500 years, through countless wars, crises and triumphs. In this book, Amanda Harvey Purse delves into the archives to tell the remarkable story of a number of individuals who form part of the Boleyn bloodline, spanning the worlds of the military, art and politics. Among those featured are Robert Devereux, executed for treason after leading an army against the government in the early seventeenth century; Lettice Knollys, banished from the court of Elizabeth I after marrying the wrong man; and Cecilia Nina BowesLyon, the grandmother of and godmother to Elizabeth II, who married Claude Bowes-Lyon and played a significant role in the convalescence of soldiers during the First World War.

  • av Malcolm Batten
    226

    Marking 90 years of London Transport, this selection of images celebrates its buses, trams and trolleybuses in preservation.

  • av Ashley Mantle
    336,-

    The fascinating hidden history of the British royal family's nearly men - those who had been destined for the throne, but never made it. Mantle explores the story behind these would-be-kings, showing how the question of succession has not always been a straightforward one.

  • av Ben Norman
    322

    Get to know this distinguished group on an intimate level by discovering what they ate and drank, how their houses were furnished, what possessions were most important to them, the pastimes they enjoyed, the people they loved, the friends they hated, and the lives they led.

  • av Mike Rhodes
    226

    A unique celebration of Lothian Buses and the city of Edinburgh, featuring previously unpublished images of buses sharing the scene with Edinburgh's spectacular buildings.

  • av Tim Bryan
    322

    Isambard Kingdom Brunel: Victorian icon, engineer, artist, architect, designer and visionary, entrepreneur and celebrity. His astounding feats changed the British landscape, and this new book tells the story of his awe-inspiring achievements and innovations as a railway engineer.

  • av John Bentley
    291,-

    Explore a stunning collection of photographs revealing the life of hill farmers in the north of England.

  • av Dave Burnham
    226

  • av John Oliphant
    322

    The First British Empire is an authoritative, highly readable and substantial account of the origins, growth and transformation of the British Empire from its European beginnings until the aftermath of the American Revolution.

  • av Les Jones
    226

    A fascinating collection of merged historic and modern images that reflect the changes in Wallasey through the decades.

  • av Alex Vincent
    226

    A fascinating exploration of prehistoric Sussex from the Palaeolithic era to the Iron Age and the Roman invasion.

  • av Ian Davies
    226

    A fascinating photographs of an eclectic selection of emergency service vehicles in northern Europe.

  • av Steve Johnson
    226

    Packed with insider insights, this is the fascinating story of how the company fundamentally changed the industry. An essential read for anybody interested in the UK bus scene.

  • av Mike Street
    226

    Superb rare and unseen photographs of these oft-ignored workhorses. Looking at some of the vehicles in use by local authorities, from Devon to Scotland, since the 1970s.

  • av Dave Tomlinson
    226

    The story of Leeds United from 1980 to 2000 when the club crashed and burned and then rose from the ashes to become the last First Division champions, before approaching the Millennium full of expectations for their dynamic young team.

  • av David Beddall
    226

    A wonderful collection of 180 photographs, some previously unpublished, celebrating the London's Low-floor Buses in Exile.

  • av Eddy Greenfield
    226

    The beautiful county of Wiltshire is one of the most popular of English counties. Here is a collection of strange tales and local legends from the county.

  • av Anthony Adolph
    346

    The epic story of Aeneas takes place at the time of the fall of Troy and the rise of Rome, but was Aeneas in fact a real person? In Search of Aeneas opens a fresh window onto the ancient world for all students of general history.

  • av George Woods
    226

    Rare and previously unpublished images celebrating Britain's diesel express trains, including the famous InterCity 125.

  • av Tim Machin
    226

    An interesting array of fascinating images illustrate how coach styles have developed over the years.

  • av Colin J. Howat
    226

    With a wealthy of previously unpublished images comes a photographic celebration of class 08 locomotives on Scotland's railways.

  • av Paul James
    248

    A celebration of Gloucester's rich heritage and identity - its special events, achievements, people, industry and landmarks.

  • av David Paul
    226

  • av Marie Gardiner
    226

    A celebration of Sunderland's rich heritage and identity - its people, significant events and achievements across the centuries.

  • av Anne Fletcher
    176

    As Captain Scott lay freezing and starving to death on his return journey from the South Pole, he wrote with a stub of pencil his final words: 'For God's sake look after our people.' Uppermost in his mind were the three women who would now be widows: Kathleen, his own bohemian artist wife; Oriana, the devout wife of the expedition's chief scientist, Ted Wilson; and Lois, the Welsh working-class wife of Petty Officer Edgar Evans. When the news came that the men were dead, they became heroes, their story filling column inches in newspapers across the world. Their widows were thrust into the limelight, forced to grieve in public view, keeping a stiff upper lip while the world praised their husbands' sacrifice. These three women had little in common except that their husbands had died together, but this shared experience was to shape the rest of their lives. Each experienced their loss differently, their treatment by the press and the public influenced by their class and contemporary notions of both manliness and womanly behaviour. Each had to rebuild their life, fiercely and loyally defending their husbands' legacies and protecting their fatherless children in the face of financial hardship, public criticism and intense press scrutiny. Widows of the Ice is not the story of famous women but of forgotten wives, whose love and support helped to shape one of the most iconic moments in British history. They have drifted to the outer edges of the Antarctic narrative, and bringing them back gives a new perspective to a story we thought we already knew. It is a story of imperialistic dreams, misogyny and classism, but also of enormous courage, high ideals, duty - and, above all, love.

  • - The Story of London's Gallows
    av Robert Bard
    291,-

    During its 600 year history 50,000 sould were executed on the gallows at Tyburn somewhere near where Oxford Street meets the Edgware Road. Many thousands of victims remain buried nearby in anonymous graves. Many of the condemned made their final journey from Newgate Prison three miles distant. The condemned travelled in a cart seated on his or her coffin, stopping frequently for refreshments. Sometimes the condemned survived hanging. What was it like to be hanged? This book examines contemporary accounts. Most of those executed at Tyburn were from London's underclass. An exception was Earl Ferrers on 5 May 1760 who wore the same white suit with silver trimmings that he had worn at his wedding. He travelled from the Tower to Tyburn in his own carriage but the crowds were so thick that the journey took nearly three hours. In addition to Tyburn, this book identifies a number of london's lesser known places of execution such as Shepherds Bush Green, Cricklewood, Hampstead Heath and the City of London.

  • - The Origins of Paper and the Rise of Western Civilization
    av John Gaudet
    196

    How the invention of paper, a material prized by both scholars and kings, allowed information and ideas to shape humanity for 4000 years, from the Nile to the West. 'A wonderful, enlightening book.' (Alexander McCall Smith).

  • av Richard Gibbs
    248

    Secret Wokingham explores the lesser-known history of the town of Wokingham in Berkshire through a fascinating selection of stories, unusual facts and attractive photographs.

  • av John Jackson
    248

    Superb photographs documenting Bedfordshire's railway scene. Taking a more detailed look at these services that speed through the county.

  • av John S. Croucher
    336,-

    A celebration of the women who furthered computer technology, from the nineteenth century to the present day.

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