Your HA Virtual Branch

Keep learning with our online programme of talks

Your branch from home

Did you know? As well as accessing session recordings, members can attend talks held by HA local branches for free, plus exclusive members' webinars and short courses, and a variety of other benefits. The HA is an independent charity and relies on membership and donations to fund our work. Virtual Branch webinars are free to everyone, but if you'd like to support our work you can join as a member or donate to the HA. As well as bringing you fantastic history content and events each month, joining as a member helps our work in supporting quality history education at all levels. 

The HA Virtual Branch is a great way to keep your history up-to-date, whether you are working or relaxing, all from the comfort of your home. The Virtual Branch is free and open to everybody, and recordings of the talks are made available online after the event for HA members.

Upcoming talks

A Brief History of the Coast in 100 Objects
Sally Coulthard | Tuesday 26 May, 7.30–8.30pm
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The coast means something different to everyone. It’s a place of pleasure and reckless pursuits, of fishing, fearless endeavours and a crashing, rugged beauty. The coast is, and always has been, our first line of defence and our springboard to other cultures. Through the lens of 100 carefully selected objects, public historian Sally Coulthard delves into the myriad ways our coastlines have shaped, and been shaped by, our history, culture, and identity. From Roman lighthouses to rosary beads, knitted jumpers to Viking slave shackles, each object serves as a portal to a unique story. Coulthard explores far beyond the traditional seaside holiday to illuminate the coast’s role as a site of trade, and a catalyst for cultural exchange. Join us to discover how the coast has influenced our beliefs, economy, and even our domestic lives. Read more

The Maginot Line: a military, social and political defence project
Professor Kevin Passmore | Tuesday 23 June, 7.30–8.30pm
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Join Kevin Passmore, Professor of History at Cardiff University, to discuss research related to his new book The Maginot Line: A New History (2025). Read more

The Bonds of Freedom: Liberated Africans and the End of the Slave Trade
Jake Subryan Richards | Tuesday 22 September, 7.30–8.30pm
Book now

Jake Subryan Richards is Assistant Professor of International History at the London School of Economics and Political Science. His research lies at the intersection of legal history, the history of the African diaspora, and the history of empires. Join him this September where he will be discussing his first book, The Bonds of Freedom: Liberated Africans and the End of the Slave Trade, which was named a Book of the Year for 2025 by The Times Literary Supplement. Read more

Crusader Castles
Dr Nicholas Morton | Tuesday 14 July, 7.30–8.30pm

During the twelfth and thirteenth centuries the crusaders constructed tens of castles across the Middle East, some merely small watchtowers, others massive strongholds or fortress cities. This talk explores the development of this remarkable phenomenon asking key questions such as: how were they constructed? where did the money come from? why did the Crusaders attach so much importance to fortifications? and what techniques (whether from Eastern Christian or Muslim societies) influenced their design and creation? Read more

1776 / 2026: The American War of Independence – the First Great Media War  how newspapers destroyed British rule and then saved Washington and the American Cause
George Goodwin | Wednesday 7 October, 7.30–8.30pm

The political power of the press was one of the great new revolutionary forces of the 18th century. In his illustrated talk peppered with insightful examples based on detailed research and leavened with anecdote, George Goodwin, author of Propaganda Wars of the American Revolution, brings to the foreground the often shadowy but crucial role of the media in the Anglo-American dispute between 1763 and 1783 from inciting violent opposition to the Stamp Act, destroying the reputations of successive colonial Governors, winning the support of informed British opinion at the outbreak of War, to establishing and safeguarding General Washington’s authority at times of seemingly inevitable defeat. Read more

Past lecture recordings

If you've missed any of our previous Virtual Branch talks, HA members can access recordings below. Not already a member? Join today

Speaker

Title & link

Date recorded

Dr Eleanor Barraclough

Embers of the Hands: Hidden Histories of the Viking Age

March 2026

Jane Rogoyska

Hotel Exile: Paris in the Shadow of War

Feb 2026

Professor David Woodman

The First King of England: Æthelstan and the Birth of a Kingdom

Jan 2026

Steve Tibble

Assassins and Templars

Dec 2025

Sudhir Hazareesingh

Rebellion and Resistance of the Enslaved in the Atlantic World

Oct 2025

Tabitha Stanmore

Revisiting the witch trials 

Oct 2025

David Carpenter

Why is 2025 not 2015 the 800th anniversary of Magna Carta?

Sept 2025

Tim Franks

The Lines We Draw - an accidental history and an argument about identity

July 2025

Michael J. Warren

The Cuckoo’s Lea: Birds and British history

June 2025

Professor Andrew Jotischky

Feeding Body and Soul: Food and Drink in the Medieval Monastery 

May 2025

Professor Merry Wiesner-Hanks

Women and the Reformations Around the World

April 2025

Dr Hetta Howes

Poet, Mystic, Widow, Wife: Lives of medieval women

March 2025

Dr Dean Irwin, Natasha Jenman, Luka Liu, and Josh Outhwaite

Mapping the Jews of Medieval Lincoln

February 2025

View more previous talks

Local HA Branches

The HA has over 45 local branches around the country. Some of these have been able to return to their venues for their monthly talks. Others have decided to make their branch programmes online via Zoom – this provides a wonderful opportunity for you to see some of the great lectures that occur across the country as part of the HA. Check our branch calendar for full listings.

If you're a teacher don't forget that we also run our regular calendar of CPD events - view the secondary webinar calendar here and the primary calendar here.

Other events coming up

View out full Historian events calendar