by Helen Kain | Apr 5, 2026 | Castles & Stately Houses, England, Featured, Great Gardens of England
Wrest Park was something of a surprise. Glenn and I had based ourselves at the Gardener’s Cottage at nearby at Audley End, and knew very little about Wrest Park beyond a vague awareness that it was an English Heritage property with notable gardens. Well, the...
by Helen Kain | Apr 4, 2026 | Carousel Fascinating People, Early Middle Ages (410-1066), Fascinating People
There are moments in history when everything changes. Then there are moments when it seems that nothing has changed at all, but technically, everything has. Italy in the late 5th century was one of those moments. The Western Roman Empire had formally ended in 476. The...
by Helen Kain | Apr 4, 2026 | Carousel Fascinating People, Early Middle Ages (410-1066), Fascinating People
Some rulers inherit a system and try to preserve it. Others inherit fragments and attempt to rebuild what has been lost. In the 6th century, Justinian I chose the second path. An Empire That Had Not Disappeared By the time Justinian came to power in 527, Rome had not...
by Helen Kain | Mar 29, 2026 | Carousel Fascinating People, Fascinating People, Georgians (1714–1837)
If Edward Coke helped define English law, Thomas Coke redefined what it meant to be an English gentleman. Scholar, traveller, architect, patron, and ultimately peer, the 1st Earl of Leicester left his mark not in courtrooms, but in bricks, marble, and the grandeur of...
by Helen Kain | Mar 29, 2026 | Castles & Stately Houses, England, Featured, Treasure Houses
Tucked along the windswept north coast of Norfolk, Holkham Hall is a marvel of 18th-century Palladian architecture—majestic yet restrained, classical yet rooted in the rhythms of working land. It’s a house that wears its ideals proudly: harmony, balance, and...
by Helen Kain | Mar 29, 2026 | Carousel Fascinating People, Fascinating People, Georgians (1714–1837)
Born in 1754, Thomas William Coke, best remembered as “Coke of Norfolk”, was a quiet revolutionary. Not in courtrooms or on battlefields, but in the furrows of East Anglia’s fields. While his ancestors had shaped the English legal tradition and...