Category: Meetings
Black History Month – The Apprenticeship System in the Caribbean: The World of the Apprentices
An event part of the UCL Institute of the Americas Caribbean Seminar Series
On-line, free to attend, but you will need to register:- https://ucl.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJAlcOuqrzsiEtNa1L7hmOWb84K2QB5bwLdO
Unfree labour did not come to an end in the Anglophone Caribbean in 1834. Although the enslaved were declared legally free on August 1, they were obliged to serve a period of Apprenticeship to their former masters. Read on ...
Iraq’s cultural heritage: Theft of Artefacts following the US/UK Intervention
A talk by Kryss Katsiavriades
Iraq has managed to sustain one of the most ancient civilisations throughout all of history, in great comparison with Egypt, who also happens to uphold one of the most ancient and culturally rich civilisations. Within the ancient Mesopotamian culture, multiple different genres and forms of arts were created, from Assyrian art pieces to Babylonian, all representing a certain aspect of the traditions and rituals that were sustained throughout the particular time frame of their creation. Read on ...
Horatio Bottomley and the Far Right Before Fascism
Socialist History Society meeting
Horatio Bottomley grew up in a prominent secularist family, knew Bradlaugh and Holyoake from a young age, before making his own career as a newspaper proprietor. He became an anti-socialist Liberal, a war-time champion of anti-German riots, and finally a leading figure in the post-1918 far right. Read on ...
The Anarchist Mecca? The French Anarchists in London, 1880-1914
Speaker – Constance Bantman
Five hundred or so French anarchists were exiled in London between 1880 and 1914. As the anarchist movement went through a terrorist phase which was especially bloody in France, the drastic repression that followed forced hundreds of ‘companions’ (the nickname of anarchists) out of the country. As most European countries closed their borders to political refugees – and above all the highly-stigmatised anarchists – at the end of the nineteenth century, Britain remained the one country offering shelter to such dissident and potentially dangerous groups, and therefore became the rallying point for international radical exiles, an unrivalled militant hub. Read on ...