Annie Hughes Griffiths holds the Welsh women’s petition for peace at the White House on February 21 1924, alongside (l-r) Gladys Thomas, Mary Ellis and Elined Prys.
WCIA/Temple of Peace Archives
A tour of the US was the culmination of an extraordinary peace campaign that gathered 390,296 signatures from women all over Wales. So why does it not appear in any history books?
A group of witches offering wax effigies to the Devil in a 17th-century woodcut.
Pictorial Press Ltd/Alamy
The Mari Lwyd and the plygain are two prominent Welsh traditions celebrated over Christmas and the new year.
Men and boys, many dressed as women, attacking a turnpike gate in protest at charges at tollgates on public roads in west Wales. The Illustrated London News, 1843.
World History Archive/Alamy
Four hundred and forty men and boys were killed in the Senghenydd colliery disaster, with the youngest victims aged just 14 years old.
David Olusoga is calling on schools to teach more about the histories of the other nations of the UK in his new BBC show, Union.
BBC/Wall to Wall Media
If history is to be of any use to those who study it, it ought to help them understand the nature of the country and society they live in.
A halfpenny token issued by the Parys Mining Company of Anglesey in 1788. The hooded druid design was used for many years and was the first of hundreds of token designs.
BrandonBigheart/Wikimedia
Since 2011, professional and amateur archaeologists in Cardiff have been unearthing prehistoric artefacts. But last summer, they began to discover something even more extraordinary.
Hundreds of thousands of hours of broadcasting history are available for the first time.
National Library of Wales
Gareth Jones reported on Moscow’s genocide against the Ukrainian people in the 1930s. His story holds lessons and an example for those reporting on the latest conflict.
A stone statue of Dewi Sant inside St Davids Cathedral in Pembrokeshire.
Peter Barritt/Alamy