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National Geographic - Bloody Tales from the Tower [DVD]

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Archbishop of Canterbury to apologize for violence of Protestant Reformation: News Headlines". Catholic Culture. 13 May 2011. Archived from the original on 18 January 2017 . Retrieved 17 January 2017. BBC Four – Hidden Killers, Series 1, The Edwardian Home, Hidden Killers: The Edwardian Home – preview". bbc.co.uk. Archived from the original on 6 April 2014 . Retrieved 20 January 2014. She contributed to five episodes of The Secret Life Of: for the Yesterday TV channel. [37] The series was designed to give "tabloid treatment of historical icons", [38] and includes an episode where Lipscomb and co-host Lucy Worsley "revel in these raunchy titbits" about Henry VIII's love life. [39] Lipscomb also contributed to Time Team, Series 20, for Channel 4. [40]

Dr Suzannah Lipscomb | NCH". nchum.org. 2014. Archived from the original on 17 December 2014 . Retrieved 6 December 2014.In May 2016, Lipscomb was one of 300 prominent historians, including Simon Schama and Niall Ferguson, who were signatories to a letter to The Guardian, telling voters that if they chose to leave the European Union (EU) on 23 June, they would be condemning Britain to irrelevance. [95] [96]

History Weekend 2014 Malmesbury preview: 5 minutes with… Suzannah Lipscomb". History Extra. 8 September 2014. Archived from the original on 4 October 2014 . Retrieved 17 January 2017. In October 2015, Lipscomb wrote and presented Witch Hunt: A Century of Murder, a two-part documentary for Channel 5. [56] [57] On 27 October 2015, Lipscomb joined Matthew Sweet, Marina Warner, Larushka Ivan-zadeh, Claire Nally, and Catherine Spooner, to talk about witchcraft and witch-hunting, in history, film, and politics on the BBC Radio programme Free Thinking. [58] Suzannah Lipscomb, University of East Anglia". academia.edu. 2014. Archived from the original on 21 January 2015 . Retrieved 20 May 2014. In January 2016 and January 2017, she appeared in two episodes of the BBC Two comedy panel game show Insert Name Here. [59] Between November 2017 and January 2018, she again participated in a further four episodes of the same programme. [60] [61] She participated on the programme additional times in January 2018 and December 2019. [62] In April 2016, she co-wrote and co-presented, with Dan Jones, Henry VIII and His Six Wives, [63] which was shown on Channel 5. [64] [65] On 13 December 2016, she appeared as a contestant on Series 6 of Celebrity Antiques Road Trip, [66] partnered with David Harper, against Kate Williams and Catherine Southon. [67]St Mary's Calne" (PDF). Stmaryscalne.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016 . Retrieved 15 January 2022. Crowley grew up in Norwich, Norfolk, and gained a degree in history at Magdalene College, Cambridge University, and a post-graduate diploma in broadcast journalism from City University London. The Hidden Killers of the Tudor Home, BBC4 – TV review". The Independent. Archived from the original on 21 April 2015 . Retrieved 27 February 2015. The Voices of Nîmes: Women, Sex, and Marriage in Reformation Languedoc. Oxford University Press, Oxford, February 2019. ISBN 9780198797661 [107] In March 2018, Lipscomb began a series of podcasts for Historic England entitled Irreplaceable: A History of England in 100 Places. [81] The podcast, presented by Lipscomb and journalist Emma Barnett, was awarded silver (second) in the "Best Branded Content" category of the British Podcast Awards on 19 May 2018. [82] [83] Lipscomb presented The Tsar and Empress: Secret Letters on Australia's SBS TV Channel in April 2018, [84] and on the Yesterday channel in May 2018. [85]

Lipscomb co-presented I Never Knew That About Britain, for ITV (2014). The series was described by The Independent 's critic, Ellen E. Jones, as "too busy adorning the obvious with bunting to uncover anything truly fascinating". [44]

Synopsis

The second part of the trilogy is called Death to Traitors, and covered the tales of Father John Gerard, who survived secretly in Elizabeth I’s Protestant England. He escaped from the Tower and lived to his 70s on the Continent. He wrote his story, which is how we know so much about his escape. (One oddity I noticed during this story was the careful use of white gloves to examine an old copy of Gerard’s story, yet earlier I noticed there were no gloves at all for poking around in a beautifully illustrated copy of Walsingham! Isn’t there a rule on this sort of thing?) In 2012, Lipscomb was awarded the Nancy Lyman Roelker Prize [28] by the Sixteenth Century Society for her journal article "Crossing Boundaries: Women's Gossip, Insults, and Violence in Sixteenth-Century France", in French History (Vol 25, No. 4). [29]

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