The Northampton branch of the Historical Association is run by the University of Northampton, and this year we are joining forces with the Leicester branch to provide a combined programme. The joint talks will be online but we are also keen to hear from local schools who would like to host an event. All talks are free to attend and everyone is welcome.
10th September 2024. Dr Lubaaba Al-Azami, University of Liverpool. ‘In Conversation: Writing Travellers in the Golden Realm’.
Elizabeth Tingle talks to Lubaaba Al-Azami about writing her new book on the first English travellers to India and how the early interactions with Mughal India connected England to the wider world. The book can be obtained here: https://www.hachette.co.uk/titles/lubaaba-al-azami/travellers-in-the-golden-realm/9781529371321/
Book a free place: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/lubaaba-al-azami-in-conversation-writing-travellers-in-the-golden-realm-tickets-938918980947?aff=oddtdtcreator
8th October 2024. Dr Tim Reinke-Williams. ‘Physical Attractiveness and the Female Life-Cycle in Seventeenth-Century England’.
This talk focuses on how women of the aristocracy, gentry and middling-sorts in seventeenth-century England conceptualised their own physical attractiveness and that of other women. Diaries, letters, autobiographies, and portraits will be used to show how women sought to present themselves, over successive stages of the lifecycle.
Book a free place: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/talk-physical-attractiveness-the-female-life-cycle-in-17th-century-tickets-948223410747?aff=oddtdtcreator
12th November 2024. Philip Hamlyn Williams. Vehicles to Vaccines – what happened to British manufacturing since 1951.
At the time of the Festival of Britain, British manufacturers made and exported more vehicles than any other country, yet our pharmaceutical industry made little more than simple remedies. A lifetime later, the majority of vehicles made in Britain are for foreign companies, but our pharmaceutical companies vie with the best in the world.
Book a free place: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/948247934097?aff=oddtdtcreator
10th December 2024. David Waller, University of Northampton. ‘The 2024 U.S. Presidential Election in Historical Perspective’.
This year’s American elections are taking place in a period of exceptional partisanship and geo-political risk, and the outcome is likely to be critical both for the future direction of democratic government in the USA and the resilience of the Western alliance. This talk will present an initial analysis of the results, seeking to explain who won and why, both in terms of the Presidency and the elections to the Congress.
Book a free place: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/talk-the-2024-us-presidential-election-in-historical-perspective-tickets-948256991187?aff=oddtdtcreator
11th February 2025. Mike Curtis (Northamptonshire Archaeological Society), ‘The Maritime Archaeology of the Roman Empire’.
The maritime archaeology of the Roman Empire encompasses the study of underwater cultural heritage related to ancient Roman maritime activities, including shipwrecks, port structures, and submerged settlements. This presentation looks at key sites such as the harbours of Ostia and Portus, the shipwrecks of the Mediterranean, and other provincial harbours and coastal settlements that help in providing insight into the economic, technological, and cultural exchanges that shaped the Roman Empire.
Book a free place: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/talk-the-maritime-archaeology-of-the-roman-empire-tickets-948265025217?aff=oddtdtcreator
11th March 2025. Nathan Amin, ‘The Early Tudors’.
Best-selling author Nathen Amin will give a talk on the early Tudors. Nathen has written numerous books on Henry VII and the context of his reign. He shares some of that research with us.
See here for details on Nathen Amin’s works. https://nathenamin.com/
Book a free place: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-early-tudors-tickets-948272176607?aff=oddtdtcreator .
13th May 2025. Professor Elizabeth Lambourn (De Montfort University), ‘Medieval Middle East and India’, title TBC.
Professor Elizabeth Lambourn will talk about maritime travel and travellers between the Middle East and India in the Middle Ages.
Book your free place here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/talk-voyaging-in-the-indian-ocean-in-the-middle-ages-tbc-tickets-948276459417?aff=oddtdtcreator
Northampton Guildhall (source: Wikimedia Commons)
For further information about the programme or the branch, please contact the Chair Dr David Waller on [email protected] or the Secretary Prof Matthew McCormack on [email protected].
August 8, 2024
Northampton Historical Association programme 2024-25 – HISTORY AT NORTHAMPTON
maximios History
The Northampton branch of the Historical Association is run by the University of Northampton, and this year we are joining forces with the Leicester branch to provide a combined programme. The joint talks will be online but we are also keen to hear from local schools who would like to host an event. All talks are free to attend and everyone is welcome.
10th September 2024. Dr Lubaaba Al-Azami, University of Liverpool. ‘In Conversation: Writing Travellers in the Golden Realm’.
Elizabeth Tingle talks to Lubaaba Al-Azami about writing her new book on the first English travellers to India and how the early interactions with Mughal India connected England to the wider world. The book can be obtained here: https://www.hachette.co.uk/titles/lubaaba-al-azami/travellers-in-the-golden-realm/9781529371321/
Book a free place: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/lubaaba-al-azami-in-conversation-writing-travellers-in-the-golden-realm-tickets-938918980947?aff=oddtdtcreator
8th October 2024. Dr Tim Reinke-Williams. ‘Physical Attractiveness and the Female Life-Cycle in Seventeenth-Century England’.
This talk focuses on how women of the aristocracy, gentry and middling-sorts in seventeenth-century England conceptualised their own physical attractiveness and that of other women. Diaries, letters, autobiographies, and portraits will be used to show how women sought to present themselves, over successive stages of the lifecycle.
Book a free place: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/talk-physical-attractiveness-the-female-life-cycle-in-17th-century-tickets-948223410747?aff=oddtdtcreator
12th November 2024. Philip Hamlyn Williams. Vehicles to Vaccines – what happened to British manufacturing since 1951.
At the time of the Festival of Britain, British manufacturers made and exported more vehicles than any other country, yet our pharmaceutical industry made little more than simple remedies. A lifetime later, the majority of vehicles made in Britain are for foreign companies, but our pharmaceutical companies vie with the best in the world.
Book a free place: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/948247934097?aff=oddtdtcreator
10th December 2024. David Waller, University of Northampton. ‘The 2024 U.S. Presidential Election in Historical Perspective’.
This year’s American elections are taking place in a period of exceptional partisanship and geo-political risk, and the outcome is likely to be critical both for the future direction of democratic government in the USA and the resilience of the Western alliance. This talk will present an initial analysis of the results, seeking to explain who won and why, both in terms of the Presidency and the elections to the Congress.
Book a free place: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/talk-the-2024-us-presidential-election-in-historical-perspective-tickets-948256991187?aff=oddtdtcreator
11th February 2025. Mike Curtis (Northamptonshire Archaeological Society), ‘The Maritime Archaeology of the Roman Empire’.
The maritime archaeology of the Roman Empire encompasses the study of underwater cultural heritage related to ancient Roman maritime activities, including shipwrecks, port structures, and submerged settlements. This presentation looks at key sites such as the harbours of Ostia and Portus, the shipwrecks of the Mediterranean, and other provincial harbours and coastal settlements that help in providing insight into the economic, technological, and cultural exchanges that shaped the Roman Empire.
Book a free place: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/talk-the-maritime-archaeology-of-the-roman-empire-tickets-948265025217?aff=oddtdtcreator
11th March 2025. Nathan Amin, ‘The Early Tudors’.
Best-selling author Nathen Amin will give a talk on the early Tudors. Nathen has written numerous books on Henry VII and the context of his reign. He shares some of that research with us.
See here for details on Nathen Amin’s works. https://nathenamin.com/
Book a free place: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-early-tudors-tickets-948272176607?aff=oddtdtcreator .
13th May 2025. Professor Elizabeth Lambourn (De Montfort University), ‘Medieval Middle East and India’, title TBC.
Professor Elizabeth Lambourn will talk about maritime travel and travellers between the Middle East and India in the Middle Ages.
Book your free place here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/talk-voyaging-in-the-indian-ocean-in-the-middle-ages-tbc-tickets-948276459417?aff=oddtdtcreator
Northampton Guildhall (source: Wikimedia Commons)
For further information about the programme or the branch, please contact the Chair Dr David Waller on [email protected] or the Secretary Prof Matthew McCormack on [email protected].