A lion's docile cubs 9th March 2020 In a poll of history readers, the Maharajah Ranjit Singh (1780-1839) was voted the greatest leader ever, defeating Churchill, Elizabeth 1 and others. Known in... Articles
How King George VI helped fool the Nazis before D-Day 2nd March 2020 When the Queen visited the headquarters of MI5 on 25 February, she was shown material about the part played by her father in misleading the Nazis over the D-Day... Articles
Wrangling over the Elgin Marbles 27th February 2020 How can the endless wrangling between Greece and Britain be brought to an end? Careful and sensitive discussion will be essential. That should involve informed... Articles
Pure thoughts on the Woolsack 21st February 2020 A cheeky piece in the diary column of The Times on 18 February suggested, not wholly plausibly, that the Commons has ‘its own version of the Mile-High Club’... Articles
Prime Ministers and Chancellors 14th February 2020 In a contribution to BBC Radio Four’s regular programme ‘Today in Parliament’, broadcast on 14 February, Alistair Lexden reflected on the relationship between... Articles
Top student's prize presented by Alistair Lexden 11th February 2020 On February 5, Alistair Lexden, President of the Independent Schools Association (ISA), welcomed Megan Wray and two of her teachers from Kingsley School, near... Articles
Airey Neave's murder 10th February 2020 The obituary of a former Serjeant at Arms of the House of Commons, published in The Times on February 6, made a misleading reference to Airey Neave’s murder... Articles
Queen Victoria and Florence Nightingale 10th February 2020 A report appeared in The Daily Telegraph on February 3 about an exhibition marking the 200th anniversary of Florence Nightingale’s birth. It will concentrate on... Articles
Are independent schools barriers to social mobility? 30th January 2020 It is a stock in trade of those on the political left that independent schools entrench the privileges of the few at the expense of everyone else. Alistair... Articles