For all too many people, history consists of no more than a set of familiar and well-worn stories such as the incompetence of First World War British generals, the heroic struggle of the suffragettes and the saintly devotion to duty of Florence Nightingale. We seldom stop to ask ourselves if Florence Nightingale actually saved any lives or whether the suffragettes hindered or helped women to gain the vote. In this channel, Simon Webb, author of many books of popular history, examines some of our favorite historical characters and incidents, looking at the truth behind the myths. We learn, for example, that Magna Carta has nothing to do with habeus corpus or the so-called 'British Values' and that slavers from Africa were raiding England at least half a century before the English began taking slaves from Africa. This channel is for anybody who has ever questioned the stories which they learned during history lessons at school.
5:43
The exhilarating fairground ride that is today's multicultural society
5:04
The National Health Service worry about the number of gay people and transsexuals they employ
9:00
Academic underachievement by black British pupils at a further education college near London
7:30
Black History Month, destroying the myths. No. 9 Celebrating black achievement.
7:01
Black History Month: destroying the myths. No. 7 British society is institutionally racist.
1:16
A fun game to play on Google; what names will come up when you search which type of offence?
7:18
How dangerous magical rituals and human sacrifice have returned to England
7:26
Race is a social construct; a great myth of the early twenty-first century
7:41
A snapshot of London today, as the principles of Critical Race Theory are put into practice
4:04
Boris Johnson and his promises about the ‘irreversible’ lifting of restrictions relating to Covid-19
8:02
What people seldom talk of when discussing the question of transsexualism
5:24
What do Rotherham, Sheffield, Oxford, Bristol, Telford and Newcastle have in common?
7:01
Strange and inaccurate predictions about the number of Covid-19 cases likely to be seen in Britain