Historians and historically minded bloggers of all kinds in no particular order…
Women’s Work in Rural England, 1500-1700, by Mark Hailwood and Jane Whittle
William G Pooley on folklore and French history
Up the Oss Road: Simon Briercliffe on the Black Country and nineteenth-century history
Ruth Mather’s adventures in research, especially working-class homes
Joanne Bailey muses on history, especially eighteenth and nineteenth-century Britain
Conviction: Helen Rogers on stories from the nineteenth-century prison
Clio’s Intemperance: Kristen Burton on drinking and other early American activities
Mercurius Politicus: Nick Poyntz on seventeenth-century publishing, politics and news.
The Georgian Bawdyhouse: Emily Brand on the eighteenth-century underworld.
Investigations of a Dog: Gavin Robinson on the English Civil War, cavalry and digital history.
Early Modern Notes: Sharon Howard on crime, women and digital history.
Historywomble: Richard Blakemore on the early modern seafarers and social history.
Tympan and Frisket: Callan Davies on early modern print culture, pop culture, and ephemera.
Material Histories: Tara Hamling and Catherine Richardson on early modern material culture.
The Social Historian: Jonathan Healey on early modern social, economic and local history.
Early Modern Online Bibliography: Anna Battigelli and Eleanor Shevlin on online source collections for the humanities.
Post.Hoc: Dave Hitchcock on early modern history, politics and academia.
Early Modern John: John Gallagher on the history of travellers, comedy and much else.
LOL Manuscripts: Sarah Redmond’s ‘improved’ versions of early modern woodcuts, with cheeky commentary.
Historyonics: Tim Hitchcock on eighteenth-century London, digital history, etc.
Greifswald Glosses: Beat Kümin on medieval and early modern parishes, especially in the German states.
Early Modern Medicine: Jennifer Evans on medicine and gender.
Early Modern English Music: Katherine Butler on learned and popular music.
Finding Shakespeare: The Shakespeare’s Birthplace Trust on their amazing collections of texts and objects.
Early Modern England: Newton Key on a variety of aspects of the history of the period.
The 1640s Picturebook: Ian Dicker on seventeenth-century images of people and their wardrobes.
History and Today: Katrina Navickas on protest, geography and material culture, especially c. 1750-1850.
A Trumpet of Sedition: Keith Livesey on the English Civil War and the Revolution.
A Cuppe of Newes: News about early modern studies at Exeter, around the Southwest, and beyond.
The Early Modern Intelligencer: News and views from the Birkbeck Early Modern Society.
Renaissance Lit: Adam Smyth on early modern conferences, seminars, jobs and exhibitions in the UK and abroad.
Avoiding the Bears: Kristy Rolfe on dissertations and early modern literature, brilliantly illustrated.
A City Making History: Justine Winstanley-Brown on finds in the York City Archives.
Alan Withey on early modern medicine and disease, especially in Wales.
Easily Distracted: Timothy Burke on academia, African history, US pop culture, computer games, etc.
Ta-Nehisi Coates on the American Civil War, hip hop, US politics, West Baltimore, etc.
The Edge of the American West: David Silbey et al. on American history, academia and politics.
All of our bloggers are also tweeters…
@mark_hailwood: Mark Hailwood
@_drsang: Laura Sangha
@drjpwillis: Jonathan Willis
@Brodie_Waddell: Brodie Waddell