I'm teaching Louis XIV and Versailles soon, and I will make very clear to students how relevant early modern European court culture is.
@florianwieser95
history PhD grad and Honorary Fellow University of Edinburgh, c16&17 colonial, queer, global history - opinionated, gay, and nerdy --- πͺπΊπ³οΈβππ https://edinburgh.academia.edu/FlorianWieser https://empirespastdotblog.wordpress.com/
I'm teaching Louis XIV and Versailles soon, and I will make very clear to students how relevant early modern European court culture is.
Is there a hybrid option? Would love to hear this.
Are you a mid-career historian researching 17th & 18th-century British Protestant dissenting traditions? ποΈ Apply for the Dr Williams's Trust Library Bursaries at the IHR! Three awards of Β£3,500 are available to support your research in London libraries and archives www.history.ac.uk/fellowships-...
"BARBARIC SAVAGES" (Hegseth).
We've been served up this line before. It's got a history. Dehumanisation in the service of destruction.
We need to understand that history (1/3)
Just a reminder that Muslims have been on this continent since the first arrival of non-Indigenous people. They were among the first generation of Americans, and have been here ever since.
This is heartbreaking.
Join our "Ships & Seafaring 1500β1800" series Monday 9 March, 1pm CET, for a book presentation by @csschmitt.bsky.social (Cornell): "The Predatory Sea: Human Trafficking and Captivity in the Seventeenth-Century Caribbean". Register here: www.eventbrite.com/e/ships-seaf...
#earlymodern #History
I'm trying to write a little something about that right now. I'll let you know when it's ready. π
This is a topic I donβt tend to speak on, but we all know that itβs problematic/colonising/racist to insist that individuals and groups can only be Indigenous if theyβre βofficiallyβ recognised by the settler-colonial state, right?
"Voices in Slaveryβs Archive: New project to map enslaved peopleβs testimony across Guyana."
I could not be more grateful for the opportunity to do this project w/ colleagues I deeply respect in Guyana and the UK.
www.stabroeknews.com/2026/03/03/f...
In the current world political and economic situation, what the UK desperately needs is DEFINITELY fewer people with European and Chinese language skills π Solidarity with staff and students at @heriotwattuni.bsky.social affected by this.
Do you like Caribbean pirates? Everyone does (myself included), but most people don't really know why. Why have we come to love characterizations of individuals who were so violent and brutal?
ππ»ππ»ππ»ππ»ππ»ππ»ππ»
#earlymodern
Embroidered binding for 'The Book of Common Prayer' and bookmark, possibly by Broderers Company, embroidered in London, ca. 1634
(Victoria & Albert Museum, London)
You misspelled January there, Daniel π
Solidarity with my friends and former colleagues at @edinburgh-uni.bsky.social @ucuedinburgh.bsky.social
Read about the artist on the #ArtHerstory blog
Reflections on the Audacious Art Activist and Trailblazer #AugustaSavage
by Sandy Rattley, Audacious Women Productions
artherstory.net/reflections-...
The world could be such a nice place if we allowed it. It's all so goddamn unnecessary. There's no need for any of it. It's so beautiful here. It should be so cool to be alive
Inspiring win by Indigenous land defenders, who stopped plans to privatize the Amazonian TapajΓ³s river and expand it into a megacanal to facilitate the export of soy products by Cargill
www.theguardian.com/environment/...
If you want to stand up against fascism, then you have to defend trans rights. Itβs nonnegotiable. We all lose otherwise.
Incredible shot of Rep. Al Green holding up a "BLACK PEOPLE AREN'T APES!" sign with Trump in the foreground from photographer Kenny Holston (Getty)
A point also made in my recent blog post, how much of the immigration debate is about rhetoric and framing rather than facts, now supported by new statistical data. Looking back across the centuries, there have been many positive framings of immigration, too
tinyurl.com/3axfjnnh
One of the worst things about AI, for me, is that it takes away from people the sheer joy of writing. Schools donβt often make this point, but writing should be fun. Putting words together, finding ways to express yourself, the pure pleasure of a well-crafted sentence. 1/5
The previous norms:
Just finished the first draft for a new journal article.
This is one of the most heart-breaking & important articles I have ever read - from someone whose voices are so rarely heard, a teenaged girl.
If you want to understand online misogyny in all its devastating impact, please read this shattering piece.
www.theguardian.com/commentisfre...
A horizontal rectangle with a purplish-pink background containing the text of a call for submissions, with the organization's logo in the bottom left corner. Taking up the top to bottom of the right edge of the rectangle is a drawing of the bust of a Black woman, standing sideways facing the left edge of the rectangle. She gazes straight ahead, chin resting on her left hand. She holds up her right forearm, parallel with the bottom of the rectangle; in her right hand is a quill pen.
The New Historia invites submissions centering historical Black women - including Phillis Wheatley & Coretta Scott King - whose intellectual, cultural, & political contributions continue to shape our world.
thenewhistoria.org
Inquiries & proposals: lena@thenewhistoria.org
All pregnant unaccompanied minors apprehended by ICE are being sent to a shelter in Texas where Texasβs total abortion ban has led to denials and delays in care, with deadly consequences. They are as young as 13 and more than half are pregnant due to rape.
www.tpr.org/news/2026-02...
HernΓ‘n CortΓ©s left Cuba for Mexico #OnThisDay in 1519.
If we are to better understand the actions of the #conquistadors we must place them in the context of a #medieval worldview that predated the nation-state.
π This archive article is free for 7 days
www.historytoday.com/archive/feat...
Image combining the cover of the new book, 'Teaching Slavery New approaches to Britainβs colonial past', co-authored by Katie Donington, Abdul Mohamud, Robin Whitburn, and Nicholas Draper.Plus logo of the 'Teaching Slavery in Scotland' web resource. Full abstract: "In this post we hear from historians involved in the creation of two new resources, launched in late 2025, to support the teaching of slavery in schools. In the opening section, Katie Donington, Abdul Mohamud and Robin Whitburn introduce their new co-authored book, βTeaching Slavery. New Approaches to Britainβs Colonial Pastβ, which brings together the latest academic research on Britainβs involvement in transatlantic slavery, with innovative thinking on the teaching of such challenging histories in the classroom. In part two, JesΓΊs Sanjurjo-Ramos and Joseph Smith highlight βTeaching Slavery in Scotlandβ, a new online resource, in which teachers, academics, writers and creative professionals explore new ways to learn about the trade in enslaved African people. Central to both projects is close, long-term collaborative working between academic historians and history teachers in schools."
Today on the blog: making connections between new research on histories of slavery and teaching this subject in UK schools bit.ly/4rnVNXu.
Introducing the new web resource, 'Teaching Slavery in Scotland', and the co-authored OA book, 'Teaching Slavery. New Approaches to Britainβs Colonial Past'.