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English Historical Review First published in 1886, The English Historical Review is the oldest journal of historical scholarship in the English-speaking world. It deals not only with British history, but with almost all aspects of European and world history since the classical era. It covers the history of the Americas, including the foreign policy of the USA and her role in the wider world (but excluding the domestic history of the USA since Independence).With contributions from around the world, the EHR includes major articles, notes and documentations, and debates on medieval and modern themes, and an unrivalled range and quantity of reviews of books published worldwide, along with a summary of international literature, published in the September issue each year. The English Historical Review appears in February, April, June, September, and November each year, and with 288 pages in each issue, subscribers receive well over 1400 pages a year of the best in modern historical scholarship, of which some 800 pages or more are devoted to books. For more information, please see this website. We have added several articles that are out of copyright. Newer articles that are in this section come from the FindArticles.com website. Tout, T.F., The Tactics of the Battles of Boroughbridge and Morlaix - from English Historical Review v.19 (1904) (PDF file) Tout, T.F., Some Neglected Fights between Crecy and Poitiers - from English Historical Review v.20 (1905) (PDF file) Conybeare, Frederick C., Antiochus Strategos' Account of the Sack of Jerusalem in AD 614 - from English Historical Review v.25 (1910) (PDF file) Cannon, Henry Lewis, The Battle of Sandwich and Eustace the Monk - from English Historical Review v.27 (1912) (PDF file) |