Dubbed the 19th century’s “queen of Gothic novel” and the “Shakespeare of Romance Writers,” Ann Radcliffe (nee Ward), born in 1764, outsold almost every other 19th-century female writer. Her name is ...
The unit is located in Oliver’s Wharf, a converted warehouse that’s also been home to Sir Alec Guinness and Mark Knopfler of ...
London’s East End in the 1970s underwent incredible change in a short period, and a photography exhibition looks back at that lost world.
Nestled at the foot of the Alps, Lake Como is dotted with dreamy villages and historic lakefront villas, backed by lush ...
Memories have been shared of one of Bristol's inner city suburbs before its reinvention in the 1950s. Barton Hill is still ...
St Dunstan’s in Stepney is arguably London’s third most-famous church dedicated to that saint. Everyone knows the “secret” St ...
Faced with economic headwinds and changing visitor habits, London’s museums are reinventing themselves for new — and paying — audiences.
In September 1888, one of the most infamous serial killers in history stalked the narrow streets of the East End of London.
The most interesting East End tours, from the Krays to Jack the Ripper - As well as murky tours, take one that charts the ...
They were murders that horrified London’s Victorian society and spread terror among the women who lived in the streets of the ...
Wealthy doctors, engineers and working class people all lived in the "slums" of Victorian era Manchester, new research has ...
The ‘slums’ of Victorian Manchester actually housed doctors and engineers, a new study reveals, but daily life still kept ...