Travel 2007

Web log beg: travel

Since my previous “web log beg” worked so well, here’s another. Because this is my first trip to Europe, and could well be my last for a long time, I’d like to do a bit of travel in September to have a look around (I get kicked out of the college on 3 September to […]

1930s, 1940s, Periodicals, Words

From blitzkrieg to blitz

[Cross-posted at Revise and Dissent.] The German bombing of London and other British cities between September 1940 and May 1941 is referred to as “the Blitz”, a contemporary term which, if not actually coined by the press, was certainly popularised by it. Blitz is short for blitzkrieg, German for “lightning war”, which was the label

Blogging, tweeting and podcasting

Historic battlefields

A promising new entrant into the military historioblogosphere: Alistair Hollington’s Historic battlefields, who covers 20th century British military history but is particularly interested in First World War unit and individual histories. Alistair’s doing an MA in First World War studies, which looks like a lot of fun. (Via Investigations of a Dog.)

1940s, Periodicals, Reprisals

Incompletely sceptical

During the Battle of Britain and the Blitz, British newspapers regularly published official German statements about the progress of the air war. Those relating to the war over Britain could be checked against both British communiques and, to an extent, personal experience. There were large discrepancies: for example, for 7 September 1940, the Luftwaffe claimed

1930s, Ephemera, Pictures

England awake!

This post is an exercise in — well, I’m not sure if there’s a name for it, but I found some medium-resolution images on eBay of a pamphlet printed by the Hands Off Britain Air Defence League in 1934. (The seller says 1933, but all other evidence I have on this group is from 1934;

1930s, Art, Pictures

Guernica — IV

[Cross-posted at Revise and Dissent.] Here’s a confession: I don’t really get Guernica — the painting, that is, not the event (which is why I haven’t mentioned it in this series until now). I understand that it’s a passionate reaction by a great artist to the tragedy unfolding in his own country. It’s physically imposing,

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