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  • 17th Century Adventures in Travel Writing

    Posted by Margaret Maclean in Library Special Collections on January 7, 2015 In 1627, at the age of only 21, Sir Thomas Herbert travelled to Persia and India as a low-ranking member of Charles I’s embassy to Shah Abbas I.

  • Self-certification

    Self-certification is a new element of the mitigating circumstances policy for the 2022/23 academic year (Section 4) (PDF, 636kb). This page summarises the scheme and more detailed information is available in the policy.

  • Resources

    Resources to use during LGBT+ History Month.

  • Events

    Find out about the upcoming events in the School of History.

  • Contact us

    Find out how to contact us, including details for emergencies, prospective students, current students, press and media, security and for other enquiries.

  • Breast cancer treatment could benefit from Artificial Intelligence

    Artificial Intelligence could identify patients at increased risk of side effects from radiation treatment for breast cancer

  • How the science of placebos and nocebos can revolutionise healthcare

    In his latest book, the University of Leicester’s Professor Jeremy Howick brings together more than twenty years of research to explain how placebo science is now ready to transform healthcare and improve lives.

  • ‘Back to the Future’ study informs new Government report

    A University of Leicester professor has made a major contribution to a new Government report – The Foresight Future of Mobility – being launched today (Thursday 31 January).

  • The ‘Forbidden Planet’ has been found in the Neptunian Desert

    New research by an international group of researchers, including Dr Matt Burleigh and Dr Emma Longstaff of the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Leicester, has identified a rogue planet.

  • Leicester cosmic explosion expert among exceptional scientists elected as Royal Society Fellows

    University of Leicester’s Professor Nial Tanvir receives one of science’s highest honours, recognising a career spent studying the Universe’s brightest and most violent explosions

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