https://www.theguardian.com/society/article/2024/sep/06/uk-history-survey-loss-of-pride-alan-lester?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
Alan Lester and Sunny Colclough Lancelot ‘Capability’ Brown (1716-1783) is the most famous ‘place-maker’ in British history. He has been called an ‘omnipotent magician’ who ‘swept away’ country houses’ walled gardens and geometrical planting between the 1750s and 1770s, replacing them with ‘open expanses of turf irregularly scattered with individual trees and clumps’, serpentine lakes, temples and other ornamental buildings.[1] ‘No gardener in history’ says one specialist, has ‘been the object of so much varied attention’ with ‘so many places throughout England involved’.[2] Brown’s stated aim was to supply ‘all the elegance and all the comforts which Mankind wants in […]
Supplementary document to Sunny Colclough’s JRA Project: Colonial Influences on the English Countryside: Capability Brown’s Commissions and their Imperial Connections. Spreadsheet of properties and links here Key to the Spreadsheet: Nature of Colonial connection Direct link to property owner This is given if the property owner: Direct political link to property owner This is given if the property owner: Direct military link to property owner This is given if the property owner: Indirect link to property owner This is given if the property owner: Direct family link This is given if the property owner: Indirect family link This is given […]
https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/history-extra-podcast/id256580326?i=1000663778299
On 15th September I’ll be in conversation with David Olusoga at the Royal Geographical Society, about the importance of insisting on the realities of the British Empire in the middle of a culture war, and the importance of historians amid the resurgence of nationalism. Do come along!
Alan Lester I’ve been spending a lot of time recently talking about slavery in British history to people who really don’t want to hear it. I don’t mean haranguing shoppers in Oxford Street, but talks to church, community and business groups comprised of small ‘c’ conservative White people who’ve been willing at least to hear me out. I’ve kept it factual and based it on two main databases: https://www.slavevoyages.org/ on British participation in the trans-Atlantic slave ‘trade’ and https://www.ucl.ac.uk/lbs/ on slave ownership. On every occasion, there have been the two main objections. In case it’s useful for others, here they […]
Alan Lester* In recent months the Daily Mail and right wing groups have mounted a clamour for a new memorial to be built in Portsmouth. In principle, the proposal seems reasonable, since it is to commemorate a British antislavery initiative. However, given its motivations, the way that it has been promoted and its proposed design, this particular memorial campaign has attracted considerable opposition. In this blog I examine the case for and against it, concluding that the project is an exercise in White virtue signalling, historical falsification and the denial of racism. Four months after Black Lives Matter protestors drowned […]
Response to Nigel Biggar, ‘History lessened: Who gets to decide how we see the past?’ Alan Lester Background The Spectator emailed me this week to ask if I would record a segment for their Edition podcast with Nigel Biggar the next day, about an article of his that they were about to publish. I spent the evening reading the article and preparing to discuss it, only to be told at 10 pm that night that the podcast had been cancelled. I replied saying that I presumed Nigel Biggar had got cold feet. The Spectator did not deny it, but promised […]
A review of the Institute of Economic Affairs’ Imperial Measurement: a cost-benefit analysis of Western colonialism https://bellacaledonia.org.uk/2024/06/05/cooking-the-books-understanding-the-character-of-the-british-empire/