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Radical History Blog
Declaring a Better World: Eleanor Roosevelt and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
"All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights…” The 'United Nations' started life in the hellfire of World War 2.
Peace in the East: How Russian Radicals Brought an End to WW1
In the Western World, the Great War ended in 1918. But over the other side of Europe it ended a whole year earlier... Across the Western world, the Great War is remembered as having come to an end in November 1918.
The Radical Politics of Mark Twain
There is more to Mark Twain than Huckleberry Finn… "Who are the oppressors? The few. Who are the oppressed?
The Legacy of Zumbi dos Palmares
325 years ago, an African King was killed in the forests of northern Brazil. He remains one of the great symbols of black liberation in the Atlantic World. Portrait of Zumbi dos Palmares by Pedro Celso Cruz de Souza (Source: Wikimedia Commons).
Marching on Parliament: Black Friday and the Women's Suffrage Movement
Today in 1910, three hundred suffragettes marched on Parliament to demand the vote. With immense bravery, they faced down violent attack from the police and right-wing vigilantes in what is known to feminist history as 'Black Friday'.
London's Bloody Sunday: The Radical History of Trafalgar Square
Today in 1887, the working class from London's East End took a stand for justice in Trafalgar Square and were attacked for their trouble.
Common Decency: Albert Camus and Moral Choices
Born today in 1913, Albert Camus tried to place morality above all else. Albert Camus in 1957 (Picture: Wikimedia Commons) "The choices we have to make are always essentially moral choices." The legendary British socialist, , once said that.
Thomas Dorr's Fight for Democracy in the United States of America
On the day of Thomas Wilson Dorr’s birth, we remember a little-known chapter in history of American democracy and what it has to teach us about democratic empowerment today. Democracy is never 'won'.
A Ladder to the Stars: The Life and Legacy of Salvador Allende
Forty years ago, Salvador Allende (1908-1973) was made President of Chile. Over its short life, his government was nothing short of a renaissance for Latin America.
Jamaica Rises: The Story of the Morant Bay Rebellion
Today in 1865, black Jamaicans rose up against white supremacy.George William Gordon at Morant Bay (Wikimedia Commons)After decades of courageous activism by characters like Olaudah Equiano and William Wilberforce, the British slave trade was abolished by an act of parliament in 1807.Slavery itself was outlawed two decades later, in 1833.These were immense legislative victories for the cause of emancipation, but the exploitation of black lives was hardly ended by them.In Britain’s Caribbean colonies, nominally freed slaves were forced to continue working for their former masters for several years by a system of ‘apprenticeship’.