Search
Professor Hedgehog’s Archive
- November 2019 (1)
- October 2019 (5)
- September 2019 (6)
- August 2019 (2)
- July 2019 (4)
- June 2019 (3)
- May 2019 (5)
- April 2019 (3)
- March 2019 (5)
- February 2019 (3)
- January 2019 (4)
- December 2018 (3)
- November 2018 (6)
- October 2018 (3)
- September 2018 (5)
- August 2018 (4)
- July 2018 (3)
- June 2018 (3)
- May 2018 (5)
- April 2018 (6)
- March 2018 (5)
- February 2018 (4)
- January 2018 (4)
- December 2017 (2)
- November 2017 (2)
- October 2017 (3)
- September 2017 (5)
- August 2017 (2)
- July 2017 (5)
- June 2017 (4)
- May 2017 (4)
- April 2017 (6)
- March 2017 (4)
- February 2017 (4)
- January 2017 (5)
- December 2016 (3)
- November 2016 (4)
- October 2016 (4)
- September 2016 (6)
- August 2016 (5)
- July 2016 (6)
- June 2016 (5)
- May 2016 (6)
- April 2016 (8)
- March 2016 (5)
- February 2016 (7)
- January 2016 (7)
- December 2015 (7)
- November 2015 (9)
- October 2015 (9)
- September 2015 (9)
- August 2015 (9)
- July 2015 (13)
- June 2015 (12)
- May 2015 (7)
- April 2015 (6)
- March 2015 (5)
Tags
- abolition
- art
- botanic gardens
- botany
- Brazil
- British Museum
- Cambride University Botanic Garden
- Cambridge
- Cambridge University Botanic Garden
- Canaletto
- Carpaccio
- ceramics
- Charles Darwin
- Charles Dickens
- Charles Jones
- Chauncy Hare Townshend
- Chelsea Physic Garden
- Christmas
- churches
- Daniel Solander
- EdUKaid
- Estonia
- Exploration
- fans
- Fitzwilliam Museum
- Florence
- flower paintings
- folklore
- France
- gardening
- Garden Museum
- gardens
- George Herbert
- Glaisher bequest
- herbals
- Hieronymus Bosch
- holidays
- hybridisation
- Italy
- Jenny Uglow
- John Ruskin
- John Stevens Henslow
- Kew Gardens
- knitting
- Linnaeus
- Linnean Society
- London
- London churches
- Margaret duchess of Portland
- Mill Road Winter Fair
- mosaics
- Museum of Cambridge
- natural history
- painting
- Palermo
- plant of the month
- Portugal
- printing
- retirement
- Royal Society
- Rubens
- Sicily
- Sir J.E. Smith
- Sir Joseph Banks
- slavery
- Spitalfields
- spring
- taxonomy
- The Gentle Author
- Thomas Bewick
- Titian
- Torcello
- Venice
- Waterloo
- William Wilberforce
Categories
Tag Archives: Holy Roman Empire
Twelve Things I Didn’t Know About Regensburg
We have just spent a long weekend in Regensburg, about which I thought I knew one Big Thing: the Diet of Ratisbon, 1541 (how A-level history still lingers, 50 years on…). But with the aid of some determined mooching about … Continue reading
Posted in Archaeology, Art, History, Museums and Galleries
Tagged Danube, Holy Roman Empire, Regensburg
5 Comments