History

This module briefly presents aspects of the British history. As the subject is enormous, only a few picks are available here. You can watch the video and learn more about the History of the Royal Family and read about the History of Britain in brief. Still, ample and detailed material is provided in the additional sources. 


Task 1: Go to Bubbl.us and create a mind map of the currently living members of the Royal Family (include name and royal title). As soon as you generate the mind map, PrtScr it, create a photo (jpeg) on Paint (available for free in Windows) and upload the photo in the Portfolio created for the course in Google Drive. 



The History of Britain in brief 

     Little is known about people inhabiting the British Isles in the pre-Celtic period (before 800 BC) Some monuments built by them have been preserved such as Stonehenge, erected some time before 1000 BC.
    The first Celtic tribes, the Goidels or Gales are believed to have come to the British isles between 800 & 700 BC. Two centuries later they were followed by the Brythons or ancient Britons after whom the country was called Britain.
    The first Roman invasion was led by Julius Caesar in 55 BC. But Britain was not conquered until some 90 years later, under Emperor Claudius, in 43 AD. Although the Roman occupation of Britain lasted nearly 400 years, it’s effects were few. The people did not adopt the Latin language and so Latin did not displace Celtic.
     In the middle of the 5th century, three Germanic tribes-The Angles, Saxons and Jute’s invaded Britain from the continent. From the 8th century the Anglo-Saxons had to face Scandinavian invaders-the Danes and the Norsemen sometimes refereed to as Vikings –who occupied parts of Britain & made some permanent settlements. The Scandinavian invasions continued till the 11th century. The Anglo Saxon period can be characterised as a period of transition from a tribal to feudal organisation of society.
     The period of feudalism started around 1066 and lasted to the 15th century. In this period the modern English nation and language came into being. It was a period of struggle for power between kings and between powerful nobles, a period of frequent wars, bloodshed and suffering. But it was also a period in which the development of the wool trade and the early decline of feudalism prepared the way for England’s rise as a world power.
    The period between 1485 and 1603 is known as the Tudor Period. It was a turning point in English history. England became one of the leading powers. The two famous rulers of the House of Tudor were Henry VIII and Elisabeth I. The Elizabethan age produced the world’s greatest playwright William Shakespeare.
    The first 40 years of the 17th century can be characterised as a period of growing conflict between the King and parliament, representing the interests of the bourgeoisie. The conflict let to the civil war in the 1640 which resulted in the abolition of the monarchy and in Cromwell’s military rule in the middle of the century. This period ended in the Glorious Revolution which marked the end of the English bourgeois revolution.
      In the period of 1688 to 1760 England definitely took the lead in European commerce created the conditions necessary for the establishment of an empire and prepared the way for the industrial revolution.
      During the Industrial Revolution (1760 – 1850) Britain became the first industrial power in the world, “the workshop of the world”. The Anglo-French rivalry for world domination which had started in the previous period continued and culminated in the Napoleonic Wars (1803 – 1815).
      The Victorian era which comprised the second half of the 19th century, called after queen Victoria, was a period in which Britain became the strongest world power: besides being the greatest financial and commercial power, the greatest sea power and the greatest colonial power. It was the era of the greatest colonial expansion, especially in Africa.
     The 20th century is a period of the decline of Britain as a world power, a period of crises of the two world wars, from which Britain emerged as a victor, but greatly weakened. It is characterised by the disintegration of Britain’s colonial empire and the effort to adjust Britain to the new situation by joining the other developed capitalist countries of Western Europe in a European Union. 




Task 2: Select the correct answers in the multiple choice quiz (on Google form). 

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