Magna Carta Comes to CanterburyBy Claudia Parker and George Knight The Canterbury Shakespeare Festival came to town with a new play, Magna Carta. Named after the...
The process of making Magna CartaBy Danai Paraskevopoulou and Timea Koppandi Ciarán Barata-Hynes is the writer and main actor of the play Magna Carta which has recently...
InQuire's History of Canterbury Episode VII: The Heartthrob, the Universities and the CanterburyBy Josh West Welcome to the last episode of InQuire’s History of Canterbury. After six episodes and two thousand years, there’s only one...
Ready...Set...Marlowe! - Escaping Marlowe's GhostBy Danai Paraskevopoulou, Gisela Harbers, Ogo Anokwuru and Timea Koppandi Marlowe’s Kit would be a great way to spend your Saturday...
InQuire's History of Canterbury Episode VI - Mayflowers, Puritans and Plum Pudding ProjectilesBy Josh West It’s the 1600s. After a chaotic Tudor century, the Scottish Stuart family are now in control. Canterbury was as...
InQuire's History of Canterbury Episode V: Reformation, Refugees and the Tudor RollercoasterIt’s the 1500s. After centuries of disease, invasion and several burnt cathedrals, Canterbury is back as a top-ranking English city;...
InQuire's History of Canterbury Episode IV: Punishments, the Plague and the PoetWelcome to episode four of InQuire’s History of Canterbury. Previously, we showed how the dramatic death of Archbishop Becket in 1170...
InQuire’s History of Canterbury Episode III: Murder in the CathedralEvening, 29 December 1170. Archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Becket, is about to conduct prayers in the cathedral. Meanwhile, four...