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The Welsh Dadolwch and Princely Favour

By Kit Treadwell (ct578@cam.ac.uk) Dating from the middle of the twelfth century to the middle of the thirteenth, seven Welsh poems bear the title element dadolwch (appeasement, reconciliation).[1] These seven poems — unique enough to bear their own genre term — may well belie a larger but inextant tradition. Regardless, working with what we have reveals the pitfalls…
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Chris Campbell – Historian Highlight

In a post that seems strangely apropos for the Yuletide season, DHP’s master of ‘Historian Highlights’, Jake Bransgrove interviews his successor, Chris Campbell! A hearty welcome to Chris and the incoming team for DHP 2025! Chris Campbell, Interviewed by Jake Bransgrove, (@Jake_Bransgrove) * * * * * Chris, can you tell me what you’re currently…
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More Gravy than Grave

Christmas has always been fabled for its moreish cuisine. From Tudor feats of venison, boar, and beef, to today’s lean gobblers, the feast of St. Christ has been through quite a few meaty reincarnations. Once upon a midnight festive, the sight of arching swans or flamboyant peacocks would have been standard fare at Christmas. This…
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Queen Victoria’s Christmas Tree

By Fabia Buescher (fb586@cam.ac.uk) Today, one of the most prominent Christmas traditions in Britain is the Christmas tree. Real or artificial, it is decorated with Christmas baubles, tinsel and lights. But how did fir trees become such an integral part of Christmas? Since antiquity, many cultures, including Egypt, China and Rome, used evergreens for festive…
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Hannukah Bushes? The Twentieth Century Origins of the Festival of Light

For many Jewish families today, Hannukah, or the festival of light, is a holiday season highlight. It is full of fried potato pancakes known as latkes, spinning tops called dreidels, and the exchange of gifts over eight nights marked by the lighting of the Menorah. While the miraculous origins of Hannukah trace back to the…
