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Historia Magazine

The magazine of the Historical Writers Association

  • Features
  • Interviews
  • Reviews
    • Books
    • TV, Film and Theatre
    • One From The Vaults
  • New books
  • Columns
    • Doctor Darwin’s Writing Tips
    • Watching History
    • Desert Island Books
  • Advertising
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Joan Vaux – child prodigy and lady-in-waiting to four queens

20 January 2022 By Joanna Hickson

Joanna Hickson writes about the unusual life of Joan Vaux, child prodigy, second-generation immigrant, champion of the Tower ravens and lady-in-waiting to four queens, who is the subject of her latest novel, The Queen’s Lady. When I was researching the history of Joan Vaux I very quickly realised that her character and life were too […]

Finding Joan Vaux, an unusual Tudor woman

9 January 2020 By Joanna Hickson

Joanna Hickson’s latest novel, The Lady of the Ravens, is the first in a trilogy based on the life of an unusual woman of the Tudor age, Joan Vaux. Joanna tells Historia what drew her to write about this little-known yet influential figure. There is never a set way to find credible fictional plots based […]

What’s in a Date?

7 June 2018 By Joanna Hickson

‘History is just a list of boring dates!’ Joanna Hickson considers the importance and meaning of certain dates in the life of Henry VII. We’ve recently had a royal wedding and millions cheered the happy couple – history in the making. But how many times do Historia readers hear people say, ‘I don’t like history, […]

What’s in a Name?

6 December 2016 By Joanna Hickson

Joanna Hickson looks at the naming of characters in historical fiction. Authors who write novels based around medieval royal England often have trouble identifying characters one from another, because the same names crop up time and time again in the family trees of the major dynasties. During the fifteenth century for instance the name Henry […]

The Hollow Crown: The Wars of the Roses

7 June 2016 By Joanna Hickson

William Shakespeare might have been the world’s greatest playwright but he was not the world’s greatest historian, so it would be a mistake to watch this adaptation of Henry VI Parts I, II & III and Richard III in order to discover exactly what went on in the Wars of the Roses. Shakespeare wrote to […]

Agincourt: Why the English Won

1 October 2015 By Joanna Hickson

My historical novel, The Agincourt Bride, focused on Catherine, youngest daughter of King Charles the Sixth of France and the princess so charmingly introduced by Shakespeare in the closing scenes of King Henry the Fifth. The trophy wife Henry wooed and won as the victor of the Battle of Agincourt, presenting himself as a plain-speaking, […]

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New books by HWA members

Résistance: The Corps Franc Pommiès by Paul StJohn Mackintosh

15 April 2026

Silk and the Sword: The Women of the Norman Conquest by Sharon Bennett Connolly

15 April 2026

A Miracle of Deliverance: A Dunkirk Short Story Anthology by Patrick Larsimont and others

15 April 2026

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Remembering Culloden

16 April 2021

A different kind of WWII resistance

4 January 2021

Painting by Vermeer of a woman writing

What counts as historical fiction?

29 September 2018

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Historia Magazine is published by the Historical Writers’ Association. We are authors, publishers and agents of historical writing, both fiction and non-fiction. For information about membership and profiles of our member authors, please visit our website.

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