BBC History - UK (2022-01)

(EriveltonMoraes) #1

  1. A monk stopped the show
    I was fascinated to learn that a monk’s brave
    attempt to interrupt a gladiatorial games
    led to the banning of these Roman
    blood sports – although he met a
    grisly end (page 14).

  2. Dentistry’s royal
    practitioner
    I’d happily pay never to go
    to the dentist again, but the
    Scottish king James IV was
    apparently so fascinated
    by dentistry that he paid
    his subjects to be allowed
    to remove their teeth (p37).

  3. Political pioneer
    Though I was familiar with
    the names of Constance
    Markievicz and Nancy
    Astor, I was interested to read
    about Margaret Wintringham,
    YJQDGECOGKPVJGTUV
    British-born female MP to sit in the
    House of Commons (p43).


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WELCOME


Welcome to our first edition of 2022. Each new year brings with
it a whole array of anniversaries to commemorate, many of
which we’ll be exploring over the coming months. One that would be
remiss of us to overlook is t he centenary of the BBC itself, which first
took to the airwaves in November 1922. Over the course of this year,
we’re going to be examining the corporation’s history through a
regular feature by media historian David Hendy, in which he’ll high-
light key themes from the past hundred years. We begin this month
w it h t he BBC’s first forays on to t he air waves, in dust y, airless rooms
and with intimidating microphones. You’ll find his piece on page 46.
What kind of nation was the BBC broadcasting to in 1922? Was this
the age of the roaring twenties, or did the First World War still cast a
pall over Britain? In her feature on page 38, Sarah Hellawell takes a
look at the country in the early 1920s to reveal a society trying to
escape its past, while driving towards an exciting but uncertain future.
Finally, if I asked you to name a master of espionage, dressed in
black, with expensive tastes, I don’t expect you’d go for Queen Victoria.
But if you had done you wouldn’t be mistaken, because Britain’s
second-longest reigning monarch turns out to have been the
head of an unlikely spying network. In our eye-opening
cover feature this month, Rory Cormac and Richard
J Aldrich explain why Victoria was the real queen of
spies. That’s on page 22.
I hope you enjoy the issue.

Rob Attar
Editor

JANUARY 2022


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THIS ISSUE’S CONTRIBUTORS

THREE THINGS I’VE
LEARNED THIS MONTH

Monica Whitlock
“If you’re a teenager stuck
at home through the
Covid-19 pandemic, spare
a thought for Kim Gordon,
the schoolboy who spent
two years imprisoned in a
Chinese hotel room, an
inside witness to the
drama of the Cultural
Revolution.”
Monica views the chaos of the
Cultural Revolution through
the eyes of one schoolboy
on page 62

Thomas Harding
“I’m embarrassed to say
I knew almost nothing
about Britain’s role in the
slave plantations of the
Caribbean – and the
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endured by enslaved
people all the way into
the 1830s – until I started
this research.”
Thomas remembers the
Demerara uprising and its
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on page 74

Matthew Gabriele
“King Louis IX of France
built soaring chapels and
burnt books, was re-
nowned for his charity
and persecuted minority
communities. That very
human complexity
animates our new book,
The Bright Ages.”
Matthew considers the
complicated legacy of the
medieval monarch on page 30

David Hendy
“2022 marks the BBC’s
centenary – and
throughout the year,
I will be highlighting
key episodes in the
corporation’s history to
show its profound impact
on our lives.”
David reveals the roots of the
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his new series on page 46
Free download pdf