British History-1
British History-1
British History-1
The Romans ruled Britain for over two hundred years and left behind three
things of importance: their roads, the sites of important cities (notably
London), and the seeds of Christianity. The Latin way of life – villas, arts,
language and political organization – all vanished, however, after the
invasions from Northern Europe by the Angles, Saxons and Jutes from the
5th century onwards.
These pagan peoples were easily converted to Christianity and the preachers
from Rome brought with them learning and civilization. Christianity was an
important factor in enabling the various kingdoms created by the Nordic
invaders to be united under Egbert in the 9 th century. The Vikings (the name
means ‘warrior’) first raided England to plunder it, and then in the days of
Alfred of Wessex they began ‘to win wide lands to plough and to rule’. In the
10th century England fell under Danish rule, with King Canute finally
managing to unite the Anglo-Saxons and Danes at the beginning of 11 th
century.
PRE-NORMAN BRITAIN
Complete this chart:
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MEDIEVAL ENGLAND (1066 – 1485)
After defeating the Anglo-Saxon king Harold at the battle of Hastings in
1066, William of Normandy introduced the Norman feudal system,
rewarding his French-speaking followers with land in return for their
continued support, and French remained the language of the upper classes
and administration until the 14th century.
The power of these Norman Barons gradually increased and during the
reign of the Plantagenets began, together with the Church, to challenge the
King’s absolute power, which resulted in King John being forced to sign
Magna Carta at Runnymede in 1215. This document contained a long list of
limitations to the King’s power and these rights obtained by the Barons were
eventually extended to the entire population.
The origins of Parliament are to be found in the reign of John’s
successor, Henry III. It was a meeting of the King and his Barons and
servants at which various administrative and financial problems were
discussed. In order to make it easier to put the decisions taken into practice,
each Shire had to elect a number of knights to this experiment and in 1295
called a parliament that became known as the Model Parliament, at which
barons, earls and the high clergy (bishops and abbots) were present,
together with the knights and burgesses representing the shires and
boroughs. The ‘House of Commons’ as a separate Chamber resulted from the
unofficial meetings of these knights and burgesses. The person chosen to
‘speak’ for the ‘commoners’ in Parliament became known as the Speaker.
The Hundred Years’ War fought between France and England had a
devastating effect on the English economy. The high taxation necessary to
finance the war and the Black Death (a plague in 1348 that killed a third of
the population of England) led to such extreme hardship for the peasant
class that there was a revolt in 1381. Although the Peasants’ Revolt was soon
put down, it led to greatly improved conditions for the peasant class and was
the first step toward the ending of the feudal system in England.
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No sooner was the Hundred Years’ War over than a long power struggle
(1455-85) began for the English Crown between two families: The House of
Lancaster and the House of York. The War of the Roses (so called because
both families used a rose as their symbol) ended when Henry VII (Henry of
Tudor) united the two rival houses, giving origin to the Tudor dynasty.
During Henry’s reign the medieval period came to a close. Men were
no longer tied to manors and estates in the country; the power of towns, with
their educated and industrious middle classes, began to make itself felt;
and there was a revival, or Renaissance, of learning, partly as a result of the
printing press, which ended the Church’s monopoly of learning.
Henry’s son and heir, Henry VIII (1509 – 1547), was typical
Renaissance prince: handsome, ambitious, learned and unscrupulous. He
also had an instinctive understanding of his times. It was his creation of the
Royal Navy that enabled England to realize her imperialistic ambitions under
Elisabeth and defy the Pope and the Catholic powers of Europe.
Henry used Parliament to establish himself as the head of the
Protestant Church of England with the Act of Supremacy in 1534. His
decision to act through Parliament greatly strengthened this institution,
which had lost virtually all its authority under Henry VII. There was general
support on the part of the English people, who were resentful of papal
interference in national affairs. His Reformation led to the creation of the
religiously distinct Anglican Church. The dissolution of the monasteries
(and the confiscation of their large estates) served to destroy papal authority
in England and at the same time provide Henry with much needed wealth.
Elisabeth I (1558 – 1603) was an outstanding ruler. She restored
national unity, opposing extremist doctrines and supporting a moderate form
of Protestantism similar to that of her father’s. Her reign is considered by
many as the Golden Age of English history, producing not only poets of the
stature of Shakespeare and Spenser, but also prosperity for the entire nation.
The discovery of America placed Britain at the centre of the world’s trading
routes and brilliant naval commanders (especially Sir Francis Drake and Sir
Walter Raleigh) enabled England to dominate these trade routes. During this
period great trading companies, like East India Company, were also
established. Parliament was regularly called and consulted, while Justices of
the Peace administered justice and carried out all the ordinary functions of
local government.
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Convinced of the divine right of kings, the Stuart kings James I and
Charles I followed the medieval notion of monarchy, ignoring Parliament.
Charles I raised taxes without its permission and prevented it from meeting
for 11 years until he needed its help to raise the money to fight the war
against Scotland. Relations between King and Parliament became so bad that
civil war eventually broke out (1642).
The majority of the nobles supported Charles and the majority of the
gentry supported Parliament in this fight over who should have sovereign
power. After Oliver Cromwell had led the Parliamentarian Roundheads to
victory (1648), Charles I was executed for treason and Cromwell became
Lord Protector. England was now a Republic.
The monarchy (together with the Anglican Church and the House of Lords)
was restored in 1660, two years after Cromwell’s death, when Charles II was
invited to sit on the throne of a country tired of the harsh morality of Puritan
rule. The Plague, which killed almost 70,000 of London’s inhabitants, and
the Great Fire (1666), which destroyed most of the city during his reign,
were considered signs of God’s wrath by the Puritans.
Although Charles had restored some power to the monarchy by the time
James II came to the throne, Parliament’s support was necessary to govern
the country. Parliament was dominated by two groups: the Whigs, who had
tried to exclude Charles’ Catholic brother from the throne, and the Tories,
the conservative aristocracy that had favored the royal prerogative.
However, his filling of civil and military posts with Catholics while the
Protestants were being murdered in France so angered Parliament that the
Tories and Whigs agreed to invite the Protestant William of Orange and Mary
(James II’s daughter) to take the crown as joint sovereigns. This Glorious
Revolution (1688, so-called because it was bloodless) was accompanied by
a Bill of Rights, which made it obligatory for the sovereign to rule with
Parliament’s assistance and outlawed Catholicism for all Englishmen,
including the King.
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3 What was the original difference between the Whig and Tory parties?
4 Why did James II lose the support of the Tories?
5 Why was the Bill of Rights so important?
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VICTORIAN BRITAIN
During Queen Victoria’s sixty-four year reign (1837 – 1901) the British
Empire, led by an array of great statesmen and supported by great industrial
expansion, grew to size so vast that ‘the sun never sets upon it’. This Empire,
whose creation began initially from commercial motives, was also added to
for strategic and even missionary reasons and eventually comprised about a
quarter of the world’s population and land surface. Yet only towards the end
of the nineteenth century was there any strong public sentiment in favour of
it.
Victoria’s long reign saw many changes in British institutions and the British
‘way of life’. Her practice on insisting on being informed about government
policy while remaining politically neutral fixed the position of the Crown in
the Constitution. Her rejection of the amusements and life of the aristocracy
enabled the common people to identify themselves with this simple wife and
widow, which led to a revival of popular support for the monarchy. Above all,
her essentially middle-class views and life-style, combined with the rise of
the middle classes themselves, led to an affirmation of values – the
paternalistic integrity and discipline of the family, the sobriety and
Puritanism of public life – which in later years came to be known as ‘Victorian
values’ to which the Thatcher Government of the 1980s wished to return.
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and in 1893 the founding of the Labour Party, led by Keir Hardie, gave the
proletariat a greater voice in Parliament.
1 Summarize the working and living conditions of the working classes in
Britain during the 19th century.
2 Summarize how Parliament reacted to these conditions.
3 Summarize how the working classes themselves reacted.
World War I
Britain was not the only European country with an empire. France, Germany,
Belgium, Austria and Hungary were all imperialistic powers, and other
countries such as Italy also had dreams of empire. British industry no longer
enjoyed the total domination of world markets that it had in the 19 th century;
Germany was rapidly becoming the dominant economic power in Europe.
The rivalry between the Great European powers led almost inevitably to the
outbreak of World War I in 1914. It was the bloodiest war in history. When it
ended in 1918 in victory of allied powers of Britain, France, America and
Italy, more then 10 million men had been killed. In Britain, the only positive
outcome of the war was that women’s contribution to the war effort had
been so important that it was impossible to deny them the right to vote in
the 1919 elections.
One of the strongest phenomena of World War I was the wealth of literature
and poetry produced by young, upper/class officers serving in the British
Army during the war. Read and study one of the most famous poems, written
in 1914 by Rupert Brooke who died in 1915 while on active service in the
Royal Naval Division.
The Soldier
If I should die, think only this of me:
That there’s some corner of a foreign field
That is for ever England. There shall be
In that rich earth a richer dust concealed;
A dust whom England bore, shaped, made aware,
Gave, once, her flowers to love, her ways to roam,
A body of England’s, breathing English air,
Washed by the rivers, blest by suns of home.
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And think, this heart, all evil shed away,
A pulse in the eternal mind, no less
Gives somewhere back the thoughts by England given;
Her sights and sounds; dreams happy as her day;
And laughter, learnt of friends; and gentleness,
In hearts at peace, under an English heaven.
1 The First four lines of the poem imagine the death and burial of the soldier.
Where?
2 The next four lines recall some of the things the soldier loved about
England. What are they?
3 What is the poet’s idea contained in line 9-11 of the poem?
4 Lines 12/14 of the poem recall some more memories of England. What are
they?
World War II
Britain soon involved in another war, for which it was ill-prepared. The Prime
Minister Chamberlain had done everything possible to appease Germany
(including accepting occupation of Czechoslovakia) while the country tried to
rearm, but Britain and France were still not ready when they declared war on
Germany on 3 September 1939 after Hitler’s invasion of Poland. As Germany
swept through Europe, Britain found herself almost alone and only a
courageous effort by her Air Force (prompting Churchill’s famous speech:
‘Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so
few.’) prevented Germany from invading Britain. Germany’s subsequent
unsuccessful invasion of Russia, together with their intervention of the
United States, enabled Britain and her allies to stop Germany once more. The
war had cost Britain a quarter of its national wealth.
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Complete the following sentences to obtain a summary of the passage:
1 Britain allowed Germany to invade Czechoslovakia because …
2 However, Britain was still unprepared for war when …
3 The country was saved by …
4 Germany lost the war after …
5 For Britain the war had been very …
POST-WAR RECONSTRUCTION
Labour’s triumph
The war was great class leveller, but it was Labour’s offering of a concrete
programme as opposed to the ideological worries of Churchill that enabled
the party to obtain a massive majority in the 1945 elections. The Labour
government, under Prime Minister Clement Attlee, using the planning
experience gained during the war, nationalized the railways and the coal,
steel, shipbuilding, gas and electricity industries, and extended the social
services provided by the state to include such things as insurance against
unemployment, sickness and old age, a weekly benefit for minimum needs,
and free medical health care for everyone (National Health Service). This
legislation came to be known as the Welfare State.
In foreign policy India and Pakistan, together with a number of other former
colonies, were finally granted independence, as Britain made the painful
decision of turning its back on its former Empire to strengthen ties with
Europe. The first sign of this was membership of the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO).
Mark the following statements True or False and correct any false statements
in order to obtain a summary of the passage.
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1 Under the three Conservative governments the economy grew
considerably.
2 This growth was caused primarily by the public sector.
3 This period became known as the ‘affluent society’ because most
households were able to buy a car, a TV and a fridge.
4 The Labour Party won the 1964 election because wages continued to rise.
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