There is a tendency to treat Mary, Queen of Scots as either a romantic victim or a...
Jayne Ellis
Jayne Ellis is a History graduate from the University of York with a deep fascination for ancient societies and the human experience that shaped them. Her writing reflects a keen eye for cultural nuance and a traveller’s instinct for perspective, often weaving lived experience with historical insight. Serious in her research yet unafraid to voice an opinion, Jayne approaches the past with curiosity, rigour, and the occasional sharp edge, because history, after all, was never neutral.
Alfred the Great inherited a kingdom on the brink of collapse and left behind something sturdier, more...
The Battle of Marathon is one of those battles that seems almost too neat to be true....
The Reconquista is often presented as a single, sweeping crusade to reclaim Iberia. It was nothing of...
A gleaming arm of Napoleon’s heavy cavalry, stubbornly brave and occasionally too visible for their own good...
There are castles that impress, and then there is Cité de Carcassonne. Dominating the landscape with a...
Frederick II does not sit comfortably alongside other medieval rulers. He feels slightly out of place, as...
It is one thing to talk about what a sword represents. It is another to look closely...
The Battle of Legnica, fought on 9 April 1241, sits in that uneasy corner of history where...
The Battle of Teutoburg Forest sits among Rome’s most uncomfortable memories, the sort of event that lingers...
