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  • S6 E1: The Crown

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    Queen Victoria’s death on January 22, 1901, marked a moment of immense ceremonial and symbolic importance, culminating in a military-style funeral she herself had carefully planned. Held at St George’s Chapel, Windsor, and followed by her interment at Frogmore Mausoleum, the procession emphasized discipline, tradition, and monarchy’s enduring authority, from the gun carriage bearing her…


  • S6 E3 Britain and India

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    Madan Lal Dhingra was a figure initially vilified for his violent actions but later remembered as a revolutionary driven by an intense desire for the freedom of his land and people, a cause for which he was willing to take drastic measures. In contrast, Sir Edward Henry emerged as a prominent authority in both the…


  • S6 E5 Politics of the Left

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    Together, the hunger strike medal awarded to suffragette Lillian Margaret Metge and the 1924 photograph of Ramsay MacDonald’s first Labour Cabinet illustrate two interconnected moments of political transformation in early twentieth-century Britain. Metge’s medal, engraved with “For Valour” and dated August 10, 1914, symbolizes the militant struggle of women who endured imprisonment and hunger strikes…