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Tuesday 3.00-3.30 p.m |
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Vanessa Collingridge and the team answer listener’s historical queries and celebrate the way in which we all ‘make’ history. |
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Programme 5 |
28 October 2008 |
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Vanessa Collingridge and the team explore themes from Britain’s past thanks to queries raised by listener’s own historical research.
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Mildenhall Treasure
A listener is intrigued by a bowl which is part of the Mildenhall Treasure held by the British Museum. Vanessa met the Curator of Roman Britain, Richard Hobbs to find out more about the find and to discuss its provenance.
Useful links
at the Bitish Museum
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King Zog in Buckinghamshire
Listener Neil Rees is researching a period during the Second World War when King Zog of Albania lived in exile in Buckinghamshire. Several stories surround Zog’s stay in Britain and Neil is keen to hear from anyone who might recall seeing Zog.
and we will pass on the information.
Background:
Albania achieved a degree of statehood after World War I, in part because of the diplomatic help of the United States. The country suffered from a lack of economic and social development, however, and its first years of independence were fraught with political instability. Unable to survive without a foreign protector, Albania became the object of tensions between Italy and the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes (the later Yugoslavia), which both sought to dominate the country.
With Yugoslav military assistance, Ahmed Bey Zogu, the son of a clan Chieftain, emerged victorious from an internal political power struggle in late 1924. Zogu, however, quickly turned his back on Belgrade and looked instead to Benito Mussolini's Italy for patronage.
Under him Albania joined the Italian coalition against Yugoslavia, Italy, Hungary and Bulgaria in 1924 - 27. ÌýAfter the United Kingdom's and France's political intervention with the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, inÌý1927, the alliance crumbled. In 1928 the country's parliament declared Albania a kingdom and Zogu King.
King Zog remained a conservative, but initiated reforms, for example, in an attempt at social modernisation the custom of adding one's region to one's name was dropped. Zog also made donations of land to international organisations for the building of schools and hospitals. Mussolini's forces overthrew King Zog when Italy invaded Albania in 1939.
The royal family settled in England, first at The Ritz in London, then moving for a very short period in 1941 to Ascot in Berkshire, (near his nieces who were at school in Ascot), and then in 1941 to Parmoor House, Parmoor, near Frieth, in Buckinghamshire with some staff of the court living in locations around Lane End. He was an occasional guest at Claridge's on Brook Street in Mayfair. It is said that he once talked of using part of his huge fortune to buy The Times, telling Auberon Herbert: "I won't give a penny more than ten million for it". Records of his conversations with friends and family indicate that he wished to set up a feudal kingdom outside Albania if he was not restored to the throne. It is said that Hitler had given him a scarlet Merc and that he drove it around for a time until events on the continent made it too embarrassing. Zog died in the 1960’s.
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Contact ÌýMaking History |
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Use this link to email Vanessa Collingridge and the team: email Making History
Write to: Making History
´óÏó´«Ã½ Radio 4
PO Box 3096
Brighton
BN1 1TU
Telephone: 08700 100 400
Making History is produced by Nick Patrick and is a Pier Production. |
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See AlsoThe ´óÏó´«Ã½ is not responsible for the content of external sites |