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  • Publications

    This list provides information about books published by historians at Leicester. More information about publications can be found within individual staff pages. 2024 The Routledge Companion to British Womens' Suffrage  By: Krista Cowman (ed.

  • Academic staff

    Browse our academic staff in Archaeology and Ancient History at Leicester and see their research areas and contact details.

  • New observations reveal Jupiters Great Red Spot as mysterious energy source

    Researchers from the University of Leicester and Boston University’s (BU) Center for Space Physics report today in Nature that Jupiter’s Great Red Spot may provide the mysterious source of energy required to heat the planet’s upper atmosphere to the unusually high values...

  • Economic inequality is not “bad for everyone”, new research shows – wealthier people derive happiness benefits

    Increases in economic inequality raise the life satisfaction of wealthier people, while lowering the life satisfaction of people who earn less, newly published research shows.

  • People

    Meet the team involved in this exciting project to uncover the lives of ordinary men and women before the twentieth century.

  • Cr/ia (Creative Research / Instituting Art) Training Series: Arts-Based Methodologies in Research

    Free online event organised by School of Museum Studies, University of Leicester.

  • American Film and Visual Culture

    Module code: HA2224   This second year module focuses on American film but also examines American photography, television and video games, and the industries and the changing cultural contexts within which these have been produced and received.

  • Third year fieldwork

    Find out about the exciting fieldwork you'll undertake during your third year studying with us. You will undertake an independent field-based project, which is is an exercise in practical, deductive geology and forms an important part of your degree.

  • What the bones can't tell us

    We can tell the age, height and build of Richard III from the skeleton but the details of the injuries is based on knowledge of medieval weapons, armour and battles as well as on the bones themselves.

  • New research on the Caribbeans largest concentration of indigenous preColumbian rock art

    New research by academics from our university and the British Museum working with colleagues from the British Geological Survey and Cambridge University outlines the science behind the largest concentration of indigenous pre-Columbian rock art in the Caribbean.

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