#twitterstorians For future content from #HisJournalHA please join us on Bluesky! Go to @hisjournalha.bsky.social
Our X feed will remain but all new content, messages etc will be on Bluesky.
We're hiring! Just advertised a new Research Fellow post - 3 years, £40,247/annum - funded via the AHRC-DFG project ‘University Students as Migrants: A New History of Educational Mobility in Western Europe, 1960s–1980s’. Deadline for application is 2 Jan. https://t.co/WcxABmnUvw
@twitterstorians CFP for one-day workshop on oaths and oath-taking in Britain/Ireland/British empire, 1700-present @NorthumbriaUni in March 2025. Kindly supported by @socialhistsoc & @PastPresentSoc. See event webpage for details https://t.co/Ks97nlP0VX
Our team @NorthumbriaHist is delighted to commence its editorship of @HisJournalHA
Big thank you to the past team @UEA_History, especially outgoing editor-in-chief @jaynegifford and long-serving editorial manager @dannielleshaw
Happy #HistoryWritersDay24!
Would you like to read about four women environmental activists who shaped twentieth-century Britain?
Would you like a 30% discount & free P&P?
You would? Really? Aw shucks.
You can order here with discount code HWD24:
https://t.co/u19KGWT5ko
#ICYMI, earlier this week Dr Martin Spychal wrote about his new book 'Mapping the State: English Boundaries and the 1832 Reform Act' and the changes to England's electoral map around the 1832 Reform Act.
Read the post here: https://t.co/szHFBMERDF
New approaches to Black British Histories in 'Transactions @RoyalHistSoc': what's the experience of early career historians? https://t.co/np8epYL7U6
'Emerging Scholars Researching Black British Histories (mid-18th to mid-19th cent.)' now available #openaccess#twitterstorians
Delighted* to say that video & audio recordings of my @RoyalHistSoc talk on early 17thC Tupi travellers to France from Brazil are are now available online for anyone who missed it: https://t.co/PIhHFo1B16 #twitterstorians
*Not actually delighted to see myself on film. Erk. 🙈
The call for abstracts for the RHS-supported inaugural synposium of Humanities Now! on 15 January in York is now open. Send in a 200-word abstract to [email protected] by 1 November if you would like to give a talk.
In the latest #HistParl blog, Dr Simon Payling explores how a disputed election in Shropshire in 1485, just two months after Henry VII's accession to the English throne, revealed important local divisions in early Tudor England. 👇 https://t.co/hcmLQ2vjFG
Wonderful to see our colleague, @DrJenniferAston, on the latest episode of BBC One's Who Do You Think You Are?, helping Dame Jess Ennis-Hill @J_Ennis explore her fascinating family history. You can watch the @WDYTYA_UK episode here: https://t.co/ENCSMSNDgq
You can read the full article: ‘A cultivated leader and sensible spokesman for black African views’1: Britain's Courting of KaNgwane Chief Minister Enos J. Mabuza here: https://t.co/Y9C9iawDVX