Browse all Reviews
![](https://reviews.history.ac.uk/sites/reviews/files/styles/thumbnail/public/images/ferris.jpg?itok=3nVqAH86)
A number of scholars have recently examined the ways in which Italians participated in, supported and/or resisted the Fascist project of radically transforming politics, society, and the citizens’ private sphere, including the transformation of the boundaries between private life and the public arena.
![](https://reviews.history.ac.uk/sites/reviews/files/styles/thumbnail/public/images/duffet.jpg?itok=wzc8fluK)
Rachel Duffett has written a fine social history of British rank and file soldiers, or rankers, and their experiences of food during the Great War. She states, ‘The ranker’s relationship with food was a constant thread, woven throughout his army experience … every day, wherever he was, a man needed to eat’ (p. 229).
![](https://reviews.history.ac.uk/sites/reviews/files/styles/thumbnail/public/images/scales.jpg?itok=84CTTRG7)
In this monumental and densely-packed book on Germany identity in the later Middle Ages – the only monograph of on the subject in any language, the author informs us – Len Scales gives us a new view of Germany and the empire that is sure to be of great importance for medieval historians’ perceptions of the empire, of Germany, and of the forces behind the shaping of identity.
![](https://reviews.history.ac.uk/sites/reviews/files/styles/thumbnail/public/images/web_of_nature_front_page.jpg?itok=B0cdA2p7)
Network studies are fashionable today, both in the sciences and in the humanities, witness the ever-increasing research grants, books, articles, and calls for papers about knowledge exchange that circulate globally. Scientists working in artificial intelligence, engineering, statistics, and computational linguistics have been doing network analysis for a long time.
![](https://reviews.history.ac.uk/sites/reviews/files/styles/thumbnail/public/images/whaley1.jpg?itok=JuuLO9BO)
It is a brave man who would take on the job of writing a history of Germany and the Holy Roman Empire between 1493 and 1806. Many historians would maintain that neither Germany nor even German national consciousness (certainly not German nationalism) existed during this period; as for the Holy Roman Empire, there is a long-running dispute over what it actually amounted to.
![](https://reviews.history.ac.uk/sites/reviews/files/styles/thumbnail/public/images/9781845119317.jpg?itok=eI989BNN)
As L. P. Hartley famously remarked in The Go-Between (1953), ‘The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there’. This was more prescient than he knew, for most of the English-speaking world now seems to view the past not merely as foreign but as totally alien – diverting at times, perhaps, but utterly irrelevant to them and their lives.
![](https://reviews.history.ac.uk/sites/reviews/files/styles/thumbnail/public/images/boyntons.jpg?itok=rCX6jwFk)
In his early 20th-century anti-clerical novel La Catedral, Vicente Blasco Ibáñez follows his protagonist into Toledo Cathedral’s Mozarabic Chapel for the daily celebration of what Richard Ford, in the 19th century, called ‘this peculiar ritual’: ‘As Gabriel listened to the monotonous singing of the Mozarabic priests he remembered the quarrels during the time of Alfonso VI between the
![](https://reviews.history.ac.uk/sites/reviews/files/styles/thumbnail/public/images/allmandc.jpg?itok=jybGD3v5)
In an age of crisis a late Roman bureaucrat offered a plan for reforming military recruitment and training to an unnamed emperor, who requested the project’s continuation.
![](https://reviews.history.ac.uk/sites/reviews/files/styles/thumbnail/public/images/goldhill_0.gif?itok=QeDCg1s3)
Simon Goldhill throws down the gauntlet to the entire field of classical reception studies in his new book Victorian Culture and Classical Antiquity. This flourishing sub-discipline of Classics has, in the last two decades in particular, explored a variety of theoretical and methodological approaches.
![](https://reviews.history.ac.uk/sites/reviews/files/styles/thumbnail/public/images/ruprechtl.jpg?itok=eMZxrl_m)
It is not surprising that a professor of religious studies reading Carlo Pietrangeli’s wonderfully informative book, The Vatican Museums: Five Centuries of History (1), would become curious about how the Vatican Museums came to be separated from the Vatican Library, and in particular about how a Museo Profano could have been created within the thoroughly relig