
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In the first episode of a new four-part series looking at the way history was transformed in the Romantic period, Rosemary Hill is joined by Tom Stammers to consider how an argument over the ‘improvement’ of Salisbury Cathedral in 1789 launched a new attitude to the past and its artefacts. Those sentiments were echoed in revolutionary France, where antiquarians risked the guillotine to preserve the monuments of the Ancien Régime.
Buy Rosemary Hill's book, Time's Witness, from the London Review Bookshop here: https://lrb.me/hill
Subscribe to the LRB and get 79% off the cover price plus a free tote bag: https://lrb.me/history
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By The London Review of Books4.5
251251 ratings
In the first episode of a new four-part series looking at the way history was transformed in the Romantic period, Rosemary Hill is joined by Tom Stammers to consider how an argument over the ‘improvement’ of Salisbury Cathedral in 1789 launched a new attitude to the past and its artefacts. Those sentiments were echoed in revolutionary France, where antiquarians risked the guillotine to preserve the monuments of the Ancien Régime.
Buy Rosemary Hill's book, Time's Witness, from the London Review Bookshop here: https://lrb.me/hill
Subscribe to the LRB and get 79% off the cover price plus a free tote bag: https://lrb.me/history
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

5,432 Listeners

293 Listeners

1,449 Listeners

589 Listeners

125 Listeners

94 Listeners

150 Listeners

171 Listeners

10 Listeners

185 Listeners

179 Listeners

347 Listeners

69 Listeners

321 Listeners

27 Listeners

68 Listeners

3 Listeners

2 Listeners

5 Listeners

2 Listeners

4 Listeners

6 Listeners

4 Listeners

3 Listeners

0 Listeners

0 Listeners

0 Listeners