Forgotten women writers of the Renaissance

Forgotten women writers of the Renaissance

Up next

Life on the mean streets of 19th-century London

What can Charlie Chaplin's life tell us about the experiences of poor working-class people in 19th- and early 20th-century London? Quite a lot, it turns out. Speaking to Charlotte Vosper, author and historian Jacqueline Riding reveals the world of poverty, tragedy and joy that pl ...  Show more

Trailblazers and troublemakers: women who made French history

Have women been relegated to the footnotes of French history? Katherine Pangonis – whose latest book is A History of France in 21 Women – tells Charlotte Vosper about why their stories have been pushed to the sidelines, and highlights some of the pioneering personalities who dese ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

From Eve to Austen: Women in Literature
Betwixt The Sheets: The History of Sex, Scandal & Society

Why might a woman have willingly confined herself to a cell for the rest of her life? Why have so many female authors in history published under aliases or initials? And what was Jane Austen’s dirtiest joke?


In this episode of Betwixt the Sheets, Kate is joined by An ...

  Show more

A Renaissance Woman Trailer
A Renaissance Woman

Todays episode is a brief introduction to my new podcast called A Renaissance Woman. A Renaissance Woman is a show focused on untangling the complicated and often constricted lives of women during the Medieval and Renaissance periods. There will be discussions about important, ye ...  Show more

Katherine of Aragon: England's First Renaissance Queen
Not Just the Tudors

In preparation for International Women's Day this Wednesday, Professor Suzannah Lipscomb takes a look at a Queen whose reputation has largely been shaped by her husband's midlife crisis. History does not see much further than Katherine of Aragon's so-called failure to provide ...

  Show more

Kink in the Renaissance
Betwixt The Sheets: The History of Sex, Scandal & Society

Come with us back to Renaissance England, when writers were playing with ideas of sexuality in interesting ways.


How much of a filth bag was Shakespeare? How did he play with the ideas of power dynamics for pleasure in his plays? And what were other writers doing to ...

  Show more