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  • Outreach

    History at the University of Leicester has links with community groups in Leicester and Leicestershire, the East Midlands, and further afield. We are committed to sharing our research expertise with non-academic groups whenever possible.

  • Hate Crime

    Module code: CR3010 Hate crimes are acts of violence and intimidation which are motivated by hostility or prejudice towards a person’s identity.

  • Successful BME women to celebrate diversity and breaking down barriers

    Successful local women will be leading a discussion on celebrating the achievements of women from Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) backgrounds and breaking down barriers during a free public event on Thursday 11 February.

  • Salters Festival of Chemistry teaches students from local schools about science

    64 students from 16 schools in the local area enjoyed an exciting day of chemistry at the Salters' Festival of Chemistry on campus on Tuesday 12 April. Each school was represented by a team of four 11-13 year olds.

  • Dissertations

    Undated FAIRMAN, T. The effects of the Civil War on the Framland Hundred, 1637-1646 : a military, religious and socio-economic study. 2022 COTTON, E.

  • MA dissertations 1956-2020

    MA dissertations undertaken by our alumni between 1965 and 2020 2020 Brookes, J. Shaping Worfield: lordly avarice, neighbourhood watch or wider forces: social change in rural Shropshire, 1440-1660. Coyne, A.

  • Crusading in the Fifteenth Century

    Professor Norman Housley has recently been awarded two grants by the Leverhulme Trust for research into the Crusades and their impact on Europe in the pre-Reformation period. The grants complement one another.

  • ‘Bizarre and unintelligible’ or ‘unique and splendid’?

    Posted by Margaret Maclean in Library Special Collections on January 11, 2016 ‘The Palace, Brighton’ from: SCM 08510, J.D.

  • Shorts, Sounds and Writes

    Take a listen, watch or read to find out more about our research. Subscribe to our YouTube channel Shorts Watch talking heads and interviews with our researchers – our shorts provide an eye-opening view of world-changing research. Watch anytime, anywhere.

  • Blood suckers fluid dynamics explain how quickly a vampire could drain your blood

    Throughout human history there have been tales of vampires – bloodsucking creatures of folklore that prey on their victims by draining their life essence, usually via the blood.

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