From the February 2011 Issue Bringing The House Down Lost Victorian Britain: How the Twentieth Century Destroyed the Nineteenth Century’s Architectural Masterpieces By Gavin Stamp LR
From the August 2008 Issue Of Arms and Architecture Sir John Vanbrugh: Storyteller in Stonev By Vaughan Hart LR
From the August 2007 Issue By Religious Design God’s Architect: Pugin and the Building of Romantic Britain By Rosemary Hill LR
From the March 2007 Issue Enchanted Ground Medievalism: The Middle Ages in Modern England By Michael Alexander St Pancras Station By Simon Bradley LR
From the September 2006 Issue Sir Vavasour Firebrace The Baronets’ Champion: Sir Richard Broun’s Campaigns for the Privileges of the Baronetage By Ian Anstruther LR
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In just thirteen years, George Villiers rose from plain squire to become the only duke in England and the most powerful politician in the land. Does a new biography finally unravel the secrets of his success?
John Adamson investigates.
John Adamson - Love Island with Ruffs
John Adamson: Love Island with Ruffs - The Scapegoat: The Brilliant Brief Life of the Duke of Buckingham by Lucy Hughes-Hallett
literaryreview.co.uk
During the 1930s, Winston Churchill retired to Chartwell, his Tudor-style country house in Kent, where he plotted a return to power.
Richard Vinen asks whether it’s time to rename the decade long regarded as Churchill’s ‘wilderness years’.
Richard Vinen - Croquet & Conspiracy
Richard Vinen: Croquet & Conspiracy - Churchill’s Citadel: Chartwell and the Gatherings Before the Storm by Katherine Carter
literaryreview.co.uk