lundi 9 mars 2026

Iran picks new leader as oil crisis looms

The surprising signs of Parkinson’s you might not spot | Five big changes coming for landlords this year
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Monday, 9 March 2026

Issue No. 379

Good morning.

Iran has named the son of the former ayatollah as its new supreme leader. Mojtaba Khamenei is a conservative hardliner whose father, mother, wife and son have been killed in the past eight days. An olive branch with the US therefore seems unlikely, and Akhtar Makoii explains why Khamenei may even struggle to consolidate power.

The global economy is taking a battering. Overnight, the price of oil surged past $100 a barrel, and with the 24-mile wide Strait of Hormuz closed to Western business, energy prices are set to skyrocket. Jonathan Leake, our Energy Editor, reports on the cataclysmic fallout from Iran’s crippling geopolitical play.

Chris Evans, Editor

P.S. There are only a few days left to claim one year of The Telegraph for £1.99 per month, including all the articles in this newsletter. If you are already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

How the global economy was left on the brink by a tiny 24-mile wide waterway

The surprising signs of Parkinson’s you might not spot

Plus, five big changes coming for landlords this year

Final days to claim your email-exclusive offer

Get a year’s access for £1.99 per month. That’s just £23.88 for your first year.

 

Defiant Iran turns to Khamenei’s son

Mojtaba Khamenei, the late ayatollah’s son, has been appointed to succeed his father

Akhtar Makoii

 

Iran has named Mojtaba Khamenei, the 56-year-old son of the late Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, as the Islamic Republic’s third supreme leader.

The Assembly of Experts formally announced his selection overnight after a nine-day succession process, with Iran’s Revolutionary Guards and National Police both promising full allegiance.

Supporters of the Islamic Republic rallied after midnight in Tehran and other cities, pledging support to the new supreme leader.

The appointment is significant for several reasons.

Mojtaba lacks the senior religious credentials traditionally expected for the role – he holds the rank of hojjatoleslam, several levels below grand ayatollah.

He is simultaneously the most powerful man in Iran and potentially the most vulnerable supreme leader the country has ever had.

Donald Trump has already signalled disapproval and Israel has warned it will target anyone seeking to fill the role.

He takes power during an active war, with bombs falling, oil facilities burning and Iran’s military command structure severely weakened.

Vehicles at Tehran oil depot melt after US and Israeli strikes

Whether he can consolidate authority – religious, political, and personal – over a fractured system remains the central question facing Iran right now.
Read the full story here

David Blair: New supreme leader shows folly of Trump’s war

Profile: Iran’s shadowy new leader hated America before. Now it’s personal

 

How the global economy was left on the brink by a tiny 24-mile wide waterway

Jonathan Leake

Jonathan Leake

Energy Editor

 

The Strait of Hormuz, only 24 miles wide and surrounded by sun-baked rocky deserts, is among the world’s least appealing seaways, but what lies beyond attracts 40,000 tankers and cargo vessels a year.

The countries lining the Gulf produce not only a fifth of the world’s oil and gas but also a raft of other essential commodities.

They include half the world’s nitrogen-based fertilisers, vital for farms across America and Europe. The Gulf also produces a fifth of the world’s sulphur, essential for industries ranging from metal production and petrol-refining to manufacturing complex electronics.

The Strait is vital for goods going the other way too; tens of millions of people from the Middle East rely on food imports passing through it.

As multiple economic and human disasters ripple out from the Strait, who will blink first? Iran? Or Donald Trump?

This piece of analytical journalism is only available to subscribers.
Sign up to read it here

Meanwhile, In Washington, there is anxiety about spiralling gasoline costs, not just in the White House but on the streets.

Customers keep asking why there has been a “jump at the pumps”, and there are queues as motorists rush to fill up their cars. Trump will be watching closely. Every US president knows that when prices at the pump spike, their poll ratings plummet.
Trump claims ‘a small price to pay’ as oil rockets through $100

Latest updates: Asian markets plunge after oil surges by 25pc

 

Iran must-reads

Trump says ending Iran war will be ‘mutual’ decision with Netanyahu

Donald Trump has said the decision to end the war with Iran will be a “mutual” one with Benjamin Netanyahu. The US president said that Israel’s prime minister will have input on resolving the spiralling conflict, which has now entered its 10th day. Speaking in response to attacks by the Iranian regime on the Gulf states, the prime minister of Qatar described them as a “betrayal” and a “dangerous miscalculation”.

Elsewhere, Sir Keir Starmer has spoken to Trump for the first time since the US president criticised him for not supporting strikes on Iran. The conversation came hours after Trump rebuked Sir Keir again, following reports that Britain was preparing an aircraft carrier to go to the Middle East.

Were Britain to deploy HMS Prince of Wales, it may need to be escorted by a French warship with most of the Royal Navy’s fleet unavailable or undergoing maintenance. With a number of European ships set to converge on Cyprus following the drone attack on RAF Akrotiri, Emmanuel Macron will visit the island today, pushing France to the front of Europe’s military response while Sir Keir, and Britain, are left in the cold.

Follow the latest updates here

 

Under siege, Iran turns to its deadly weapon of choice

For Iran to kill six American troops, one might assume that a fearsome cruise missile, such as the Khorramshahr, which carries warheads weighing up to 1,800kg, was deployed. However, the strike was probably carried out by a cheap and crude low-flying Iranian Shahed drone that cost as little as $10,000. Serious but not, perhaps, a surprise: these drones have been wreaking havoc in Ukraine since the Tehran regime started selling them to Russian forces in the early phases of Vladimir Putin’s invasion.

Continue reading

 

Iran’s IRIS Dena was destroyed by a US submarine torpedo, in the first such attack since the Falklands war

Audacious submarine kill shatters illusion of Indian power

The commander of the Iranian navy grinned as he shook hands with his Indian counterpart, both dressed in immaculate white-gold uniform, a show of India’s supposed global prowess. Just two weeks later, an Iranian ship was lying in pieces at the bottom of the Indian ocean, shattering any illusion of Indian global power.

Continue reading

 

Opinion

Tom Sharpe Headshot

Tom Sharpe

The battle for the Strait of Hormuz is coming. What can Britain do?

This fight is coming to us whether we like it or not and we should respond accordingly

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Hamish de Bretton-Gordon</span> Headshot

Hamish de Bretton-Gordon

The US has now removed two dictators. Putin will be trembling in his boots

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">William Sitwell</span> Headshot

William Sitwell

It’s time the BBC slapped a tobacco-style warning on Chris Packham

Continue reading

 

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In other news

This picture shows a man who looks like Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor with a young woman on his lap

Your sport briefing

Your essential reads

Laura Beck and her partner, Jez Murphy, live on a converted narrowboat in Middlesex

Cheaper than a London flat, but you have to empty the loo: the highs and lows of narrowboat life

Unable to afford a flat in London, Laura Beck and Jez Murphy bought a second-hand narrowboat. Now, having painted the hull, fixed the rusting roof, renovated the interior, rewired, and installed a pizza oven and a gelato-maker, Laura, gives Marina Gask a very honest assessment of life on the water.

Continue reading

 

The surprising signs of Parkinson’s you might not spot

While a tremor is synonymous with Parkinson’s, “30 per cent of people with the condition will never have one, and each patient can have quite an individual response to it,” says Dr Robin Fackrell, a consultant in geriatric and general medicine. That’s because Parkinson’s has over 40 different symptoms, some of which can appear up to a decade before diagnosis. Here, with the help of a specialist, Telegraph Health lists nine uncommon symptoms you should look out for and when to visit a GP.

For subscribers only

 

Arlene Costello with her daughter Marie-Claire, formerly known as Sophie

‘I changed my daughter’s name because it didn’t suit her’

When Arlene Costello and her husband Michael welcomed their third child into the world, they named her Sophie. Less than a week later, Arlene couldn’t help feeling it had been a mistake. “I didn’t dislike the name, but I just really felt as though it wasn’t ‘her’ name,” she says. So, aged two weeks, Sophie became Marie-Claire. Since then, Arlene has learnt of scores of other mothers who have suffered “baby-name regret”. Heather Main reports on a growing phenomenon.

Continue reading

 

Seize the day

The five big changes coming for landlords this year

From this April, Britain’s landlords will face a wave of changes that could drastically affect the rental market. Property owners will need to prepare themselves for the coming months. In this guide, Telegraph Money investigates what these changes could mean for you.

Continue reading

Below are two more articles that I hope will improve your day:

  • The Sunday night staple Call the Midwife cranks up the nostalgia and the supernatural as it reaches the end of the road. The finale will leave a huge hole in the BBC schedule. Read our five star review here.
  • From a special variety of rose to personalised jewellery, Telegraph writers and readers share 35 of their recommendations for thoughtful Mother’s Day gift ideas.
 

Caption competition with...

Matt Cartoon
Matt Pritchett

Matt Pritchett

Cartoonist

 

Hello,

Thank you for all your brilliant submissions this week. Unsurprisingly, the conflict in Iran was the theme of most of your captions, but this one took the cake. Well done, Una Dane.

Above is this week’s cartoon, a familiar sight this week in Dubai. Send me your captions here and may the best man or woman win.

Matt Cartoon

P.S. For an inside look at what inspires my weekly cartoons, you can sign up for my personal subscriber-exclusive newsletter here.

 

Your say

Cymru conversation

Every weekday, Orlando Bird, our loyal reader correspondent, shares an off-piste topic that has brought out the best of your opinions and stories.

Orlando writes...
The Prince and Princess of Wales marked St David’s Day with a message delivered in Welsh. They have apparently been using Duolingo to brush up their skills. When in Rhondda, and all that.


 

Many were impressed by their efforts, but Huw Baumgartner, writing from Pembrokeshire, was less enthused: “Only 18 per cent of the Welsh population can speak the language of heaven, so the people’s tongue is, in practical terms, English. I fully support the capacity for Welsh speakers to conduct their lives in the language, but the priority given to it by the devolved Government, especially in education, is disproportionate and tends to niggle the forgotten majority.”


 

P Johnson, a fellow Pembrokeshire dweller, tended to agree: “We find the prioritising of Welsh at the top of road signs very distracting. While driving, it takes extra seconds to scan the Welsh wording before arriving at the English directions, thus taking your eyes off the road. This is surely a safety issue.”


 

Some Welsh place names could take rather longer than that to scan. Marilyn Parrott told how, “when I started at grammar school in Cardiff, it was compulsory to learn Welsh for a year. Sixty years on, I can still pronounce Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogery chwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch without hesitation, repetition or deviation.”


 

There’s a line in Kingsley Amis’s great novel The Old Devils, set in South Wales, that never fails to make me smile: “They went outside and stood where a sign used to say Taxi and now said Taxi/Tacsi for the benefit of Welsh people who had never seen the letter X before.” It has probably led me to take a flippant attitude to this topic – along with being made to learn a few bits of Cornish, a language that scores profoundly low on usefulness, when I was at primary school.

What do you think? Send your responses here and the best of the bunch will feature in a future edition of From the Editor PM, to which you can sign up here.

Please confirm in your reply that you are happy to be featured and that we have your permission to use your name.

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including PlusWord, Sorted, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was PROTRUDED. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Please let me know what you think of this newsletter. You can email me your feedback here.

Thank you for reading. Have a fulfilling day and I hope to see you tomorrow.

Chris Evans, Editor

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dimanche 8 mars 2026

Iran: Your questions answered

‘Why I’m suing Gerry Adams’ | ‘I’m a longevity doctor. This is why I’ll never give up alcohol’
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Sunday, 8 March 2026

Issue No. 378

Good morning.

Events in the Middle East have dominated our headlines for more than a week now, and in the maelstrom of news that has followed, there have been countless developments to stay on top of. Over the past few days, we asked for your questions on the conflict and sent them to our expert reporters around the world. Below, you’ll find their answers, as well as the latest updates from the war.

Elsewhere, Gerry Adams will be in court next week to face accusations that he played a “pivotal role in the Provisional IRA”. Ahead of the case, The Telegraph has unearthed some eye-opening revelations. Robert Mendick, our Chief Reporter, has the story.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

P.S. There are only a few days left to claim one year of The Telegraph for £1.99 per month, including all the articles in this newsletter. If you are already a subscriber, make sure you’re logged in to read today’s stories.


 

In today’s edition

‘I was messy, scared and furious: What nobody told me about becoming a young widow’

We could soon be at war … but Reeves is busy battling the Ministry of Defence

Plus, ‘I’m a longevity doctor. This is why I’ll never give up alcohol’

Final days to claim your email-exclusive offer

Get a year’s access for £1.99 per month. That’s just £23.88 for your first year.

 

Iran: The latest and your questions answered

An oil depot exploded in Tehran on Saturday night

Ben Farmer

Ben Farmer

Reporting from Dubai

 

With the Middle East conflict in its second week, Donald Trump is firing diplomatic rockets at Britain, even as American and Israeli forces continue to pound Iran.

Hours after it was disclosed that the Royal Navy was preparing an aircraft carrier for possible deployment to the Middle East, the US president responded with more criticism of the UK’s failure to help America sooner.

Trump called the UK “our once great ally” and said the Navy’s carrier was not needed any more. He wrote: “That’s OK, Prime Minister Starmer, we don’t need them any longer – But we will remember. We don’t need people that join wars after we’ve already won!”

Meanwhile, Israeli forces said overnight they had struck a Beirut hotel to target commanders of Iran’s Revolutionary Guard. Several oil depots were also hit in Iran, in what appeared to be the first strikes on the country’s energy infrastructure since the war began.

Follow the latest updates in our live blog

Trump tells Starmer: We don’t need your aircraft carriers

In this newsletter and in From the Editor PM (which you can sign up to
here), we asked you for your questions on the Iran war for our reporters based in the war zone and around the world. Our inbox was flooded with brilliant questions. Here is a selection and our experts’ answers:

Damian Shipton: Do you see this spiralling into World War Three?

No. The only way for that to happen would be for America to clash with Russia or China or both. However, there is zero chance of either Vladimir Putin or Xi Jinping risking war with the United States for the sake of Iran’s regime.

Russia might give some help to Iran’s leadership – reports suggest they may be passing on targeted information about US forces in the Middle East – and China will seize the opportunity to denounce America around the world.

Even so, that is almost certainly where matters will end. Russia and China will both stay out of this conflict.

– David Blair, Chief Foreign Affairs Commentator

Another reader asked:
Why is Iran being targeted regarding nuclear weapons and not other countries who we are told are doing the same?

This war is not primarily about Iran’s nuclear programme: America and Israel have destroyed the country’s navy and air force and as many of its ballistic missiles as possible.

They are trying to weaken Iran in every way, including by killing its leadership.

The 12-day war last June was when Israel and America pulverised Iran’s nuclear plants. Why were they worried about Iran’s nuclear ambitions?

Mourners in the city of Qom attend the funeral of those killed in the conflict

Mourners in the city of Qom attend the funeral of those killed in the conflict

Remember that Iran has signed the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and agreed never to build nuclear weapons. Yet, before last year’s war, Iran had enriched a stockpile of uranium to the very threshold of what you would need to make a nuclear bomb. I don’t know of any other signatory to the NPT that has done the same.

– David Blair, Chief Foreign Affairs Commentator

Vittal Vandavasu: How realistic is the idea of Kurdish fighters taking territory inside Iran?

This is a question the Iranian Kurdish fighters may very well be asking themselves. The answer, however, could vary significantly depending on the ultimate goal. Trump has said he isn’t looking for regime change, but wants a say in picking the next leader. However, the Iranian Kurd separatist groups have spoken publicly about their goals for greater “self-determination” in the event of regime change. While both Trump and the Kurds oppose the regime, they are targeting different stated outcomes.

If the Kurdish fighters entered Iran, would they be taking territory to hold for themselves, or not? If the former, could they manage to hold it long-term or would they be challenged by other groups, potentially fracturing the nation and risking civil war?

– Sophia Yan, Senior Foreign Correspondent

Hugh Cowan asked: Why is it taking so long for the Navy to leave port and go south?

The Navy no longer has any major warship in the region. So it would always take around a week to arrive.

However, it also did not have a ship prepared to deploy. It means HMS Dragon, which was still undergoing maintenance, has to be armed and supplied and then get its ship’s company on board.

HMS Dragon

Crew members boarded HMS Dragon at the in Portsmouth early on Wednesday morning

Some of the maintenance work also has to be finished first, which is slowing things down.

We have written a lot about the demise of our Navy. You may find this brilliant analysis by David Blair and this news piece on the delays helpful.

– Tom Cotterill, Defence Editor

Jane Emmerson:
What chance do the Kurdish fighters realistically have of success in overthrowing the present regime?

On their own, Iranian Kurdish fighters would face a David vs Goliath scenario. Figures I’ve heard range wildly from a few hundred to a few thousand; some experts estimate they have 1,500 fighters at best. Kurd groups themselves have refused to say anything about this publicly. In wartime, there are reasons to let both artificially high and low numbers circulate.

Even without knowing their true strength, the Kurds would be outnumbered and outgunned. However, they could be nimble and mighty, launching surprise attacks to harass, disrupt or deter the Iranian regime.

Protesters

Demonstrators hold images of Iran’s late supreme leader during an anti-Israeli and US rally in Tehran

Still, to really make an impact the Kurds would need US and Israeli help from the skies to destroy enough personnel and infrastructure that the regime’s security forces would offer little or no resistance, simply laying down their arms. They’d also need a groundswell of public support and an uprising to overthrow the regime.

It’s a lot of what ifs – not impossible, but also not a guaranteed chain of events.

My colleague Memphis Barker wrote this piece on this subject, which you might find useful.

– Sophia Yan, Senior Foreign Correspondent

Another reader asked: Why are we not using Gibraltar as a base for our ships?

Gibraltar has been used in the past by the Navy. Ships from the carrier strike group stopped over last year during their trip to the Far East, and nuclear submarine HMS Astute arrived there briefly a few weeks ago before she sailed for Australia.

The main point around why Gibraltar isn’t yet being used is that we don’t have the ships currently at sea to get there. That’s because the fleet has shrunk – and a large bulk of it is undergoing maintenance following last year’s nine-month carrier strike mission, as well as major long-term upgrades.

– Tom Cotterill, Defence Editor

Clive Saunders:
Iran has attacked neighbouring Arab countries with drones and missiles. Why have they not responded?

The Gulf states are no great friends of Iran’s regime, but they also fear the escalation that could come from all-out war and the anarchy that could also come from an unpredictable change of government in Tehran. Both would be harmful to the sense of stability they want to portray.

Missiles launched by Iran as part of retaliatory attacks

The past six days have, therefore, put them in a tight spot: do they retaliate and risk escalation, or sit on their hands and look weak to their populations? So far, they have chosen restraint, even though several of the states have capable militaries.

Fortunately for them, their air defences are so far performing well. In the United Arab Emirates for example, the military has been able to intercept and shoot down well over 90 per cent of incoming drones and missiles.

– Ben Farmer, Foreign Correspondent, in Dubai

Mark Hutchison asked: Where is China in all of this?

Beijing has always believed the West’s traditional alliances would lead to its eventual downfall.

Xi Jinping is likely to believe he’s seeing that right now, as the US has quickly dragged its allies into an impossible scenario. American partners have been sucked into the war, either forced to offer up military resources or attacked for hosting US troops – in Britain’s case, both.

This is also why China hasn’t rushed to offer Iran greater support – why expose itself without any benefits?

For now, China will feel the pinch with a global shipping crisis and rising energy prices. But in the long run, Beijing sees the current scenario as part of a broader trend: a faltering US-led world order paving the way for the new China model.

Ambrose Evans-Pritchard on the business desk covered this topic in his comment piece, which you can read here.

– Sophia Yan, Senior Foreign Correspondent

Thanks to everyone who sent in a question. As the war continues to rumble on, we hope to do another Q&A in future. Please keep your questions coming by emailing us here.

 

‘Why I’m suing Gerry Adams’

Jonathan Ganesh lost two friends and was severely wounded in the IRA’s bombing of London’s Docklands in 1996

Robert Mendick

Robert Mendick

Chief Reporter

 

Jonathan Ganesh has been waiting a long time to look Gerry Adams in the eye. Next week, he will finally get his chance.

Adams is to appear in court to face accusations that played a “pivotal role in the Provisional IRA”, in a case brought by terror victims, including Ganesh. They are suing Adams for symbolic damages of just £1. Thirty years ago, Ganesh was severely wounded in the IRA’s devastating bombing of London’s Docklands. Two people – friends of Ganesh – were killed.

Adams, to be clear, strongly denies ever being a member of the IRA and as recently as last year, won substantial damages and costs against the BBC, having successfully brought a libel action in Dublin against the corporation.

Gerry Adams, pictured here in Sinn Féin posters on a Belfast wall in 1998, made a failed legal bid to reveal the identities of the witnesses giving evidence against him

Ahead of the court case, The Telegraph has unearthed a diplomatic cable in which Sir John Major identified Adams as a member of the IRA’s Army Council, the decision-making body of the Provisional IRA.

In the cable, dated March 5 1997, just a couple of months before he left Downing Street, Sir John tells Madeleine Albright, the then US secretary of state, that both Adams and Martin McGuinness, who would become deputy first minister in the Northern Ireland government, had been members of the IRA army council.

According to the cable, Sir John reportedly told Albright: “Adams and McGuinness were both on the Army Council and had been so for many years. The idea that the military wing acts without the knowledge of the political side is fanciful. They all knew and all set the strategy together.”
Read the full article

Gerry Adams was senior IRA commander, official files say

 

Opinion

Matthew Gould Headshot

Matthew Gould

Iranians fear the secret power of Britain – if only we had any

Belief in a conspiracy of malign UK interference in Persian affairs goes wide and deep

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Janet Daley</span> Headshot

Janet Daley

The Arab states are a greater victim of Iran’s evil regime than the West

Continue reading

 
<span style="color:#DE0000;">Daniel Hannan</span> Headshot

Daniel Hannan

Starmer has delighted our enemies, disheartened our friends and debased our nation

Continue reading

 
Matt Cartoon
 

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In other news

Six Nations Recap

A truly disastrous day for Steve Borthwick saw England lose to Italy for the very first time, piling pressure on the head coach. England has now lost three matches in a row but this was the worst defeat yet. Oliver Brown writes that the England players no longer look like they are fighting for their coach.

England threw away a winning position in a total capitulation, which Daniel Schofield has dissected, and very few players, if any, came out with credit in our player ratings.

Will Greenwood’s biggest frustration was England’s insistence on kicking the ball away at every opportunity. Borthwick has insisted he is the right man for the job, but he really needs his England side to deliver a performance in the final round against France, where they will be huge underdogs.

Italy beating England was not the only upset of the day, however, as Scotland blew this topsy-turvy championship wide open by upsetting France in a 90-point epic.

Scotland, Ireland and France all have a chance of winning the title next weekend, while England seeks to avoid winning only one game in a Six Nations campaign for the very first time.

 

Weekend reads

It is understood that the Defence Secretary promised Rachel Reeves that he would not need to come back for more cash

Britain must rearm – but Reeves is busy battling the Ministry of Defence

Britain’s Armed Forces have been squeezed so severely that the Ministry of Defence is now “down to removing biscuits” to save cash, writes Matt Oliver, our Industry Editor. With HMS Dragon set to arrive in Cyprus a fortnight late, a £28bn funding shortfall threatens the nation’s military readiness. With the Treasury playing hardball, generals face an impossible choice.

Continue reading

 

Irish author John Banville, 80, pictured in his home in Dublin

John Banville: ‘The Catholic Church was a state terrorist organisation’

“I’m very indiscreet in interviews,” says Ireland’s greatest living writer. He proves his point over a few glasses of wine in his Dublin home, talking entertainingly and intelligently about his country’s self-delusions, the death of the literary “big beast”, the “dark comedy” of growing old, and his own notoriously complex romantic life.

Continue reading

 

Heather and Edward Cavenagh-Mainwaring in their ancestral home of Whitmore Hall

‘Our house has been in the family for 940 years but we’ve not lived in it’

For 940 years, the Cavenagh-Mainwaring family has held Staffordshire’s Whitmore Hall. Now, 34th-generation owner Edward is trying to tame the 1,450-acre estate. A sinkhole for energy and money, the historic home has grown into a heavy burden. To save his 17-year-old daughter Adelaide from the same fate, Edward has launched Operation Simplify, including swapping dairy herds for a £7.50-a-head wild swimming sanctuary. Balancing tradition and the modern cost of living is, it turns out, a tough task.

Continue reading

 

Rosie Moss, 45, whose husband, Ben, died in a diving accident in 2018, now hosts a podcast and has written a book about coping with grief

‘I was messy, scared and furious: What nobody told me about becoming a young widow’

When my husband died suddenly, I was left with three small children and a maelstrom of emotions, writes Rosie Moss. I found myself swearing in Center Parcs and drinking too much, lonely and unravelling. I did not always grieve gracefully. In time, the stark reality of my loss galvanised me into sharing my experience with others.

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Your Sunday

‘I’m a longevity doctor. This is why I’ll never give up alcohol’

“So much of modern medicine is motivated through fear – fear of food, fear of alcohol, fear of life,” says Dr Simon Feldhaus. “What is the point of living a long life if it is one of restriction and abstinence, not joy?” Contrary to the advice that abstaining from a glass of wine is always best for health, the longevity expert explains how alcohol tolerance is partly genetic – and more nuanced than we’ve been led to believe.

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Here is another helpful article for you this morning:

 

Inexplicable

‘When I was a child, I awoke to the sensation of being strangled’

Every week, Sarah Knapton, our Science Editor, and Joe Pinkstone, our Science Correspondent, demystify your supernatural experiences. From ghoulish encounters to bizarre coincidences, there’s always a scientific explanation and nothing is as strange as it seems.

A baffled reader writes...
“At about the age of four, I awoke to the sensation of being strangled. Although dismissed by my parents I wouldn’t go back to that bedroom ever.

“Years later, I went with friends to a psychic church just to be curious. The psychic picked me out and it felt like he was staring into my soul. He then said your grandad’s here and he’s got a budgie on his shoulder, which he always did!

“Then came the sentence: ‘They did try to choke you, it wasn’t imagination!’ I nearly passed out on the spot! I have never been able to make sense of that one.”
Christina

 


Sarah and Joe answer:

In 1781, the Swiss artist Henry Fuseli painted the disturbing image of a woman in the grip of a nightmare.

Clad in a flimsy white robe, the unconscious subject throws her arms back in submission, while a demon sits on her stomach.

The Nightmare (1781)
 

Its erotic gothic undertones caused quite a stir when exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1782, yet its origins lie in the ancient folklore that spoke of strange creatures visiting sleepers at night.

It may help explain what happened to Christina.

In English and North American legends, a witch-like figure called “the night hag” or “old hag” sits on the chest of those asleep, leaving them hag-ridden. This creature appears in Fuseli’s later work: The Night-Hag visiting the Lapland Witches.

Likewise, in some Arab countries, a “jinn” or genie is said to perch on its victim’s chest at night, while in Bengali folklore a supernatural entity called Boba strangles a person who lies on their back.

In all cases victims report being completely conscious, but unable to speak or move, often feeling as if they cannot breathe or are being choked, similar to what Christina experienced.
Read the full answer here

Plus, send in your questions for Sarah and Joe here

 

One great life

Sir David Kirch, reclusive collector of rare banknotes who gave £100 million to the elderly of Jersey

David Kirch

David Kirch amassed 15 tons of airship memorabilia, including a singed bottle of beer salvaged from the Hindenburg

Sir David Kirch, who has died at the age of 89, was a multi-millionaire property speculator and collector of rare banknotes and airship memorabilia, who said his two happiest encounters with money were, first, making it, and secondly, giving it away, writes Andrew M Brown, Obituaries Editor.

The handsome Kirch was regarded as a reclusive enigma, his habits during his Sixties heyday sketched out by the Evening Standard: “At weekends, he takes his mother down to his cottage at Shoreham-on-Sea, otherwise he sits alone in his 15-room mansion in Hyde Park Gate and watches colour TV after eating his solitary dinner served by his Spanish butler.”

After making a fortune buying up chunks of Kensington and the West End, Kirch eventually settled as a tax exile in Jersey. In 2006, when he turned 70, he marked the milestone by handing out £100 Co-op vouchers at Christmas to every islander aged 70 and over – which was about 9,000 people.

He liquidated his assets to fund a charitable trust to provide homes for Jersey pensioners, replaced his Rolls with a Mini, and auctioned off his collections.

Read the full obituary here.

 

Puzzles

Panagram

Find as many words as you can in today’s Panagram, including the nine-letter solution. Visit Telegraph Puzzles to play a range of head-scratching games, including PlusWord, Sorted, and Quick, Mini or Cryptic Crosswords.


 

Yesterday’s Panagram was GOLDFINCH. Come back tomorrow for the solution to today’s puzzle.

 

Thank you for reading.

Allister Heath, Sunday Telegraph Editor

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