Girls at War
Girls at War
Girls at War
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I- Early Britain
There is no accurate picture of what the early settlement of Britain was actually like.
Historians and archaeologists are constantly revising traditional theories about the gradual growth of
the country as new evidence comes to light. However, it is thought that the 1st settlers the Iberians/
Iberian Beakers came to the island about 3000 BC. They were dark-haired Iberians from the Iberian
Peninsula (Spain) or maybe even the North African coast. The Iberians were hunters, and later they
became primitive farmers. They were the men of the Bronze Age who raised Stonehenge – a center
of religious worship that was probably built over a period of a thousand years. It was also a capital
whose authority extended all over the British Isles, where similar but smaller ‘henges’ were
constructed. Historians know very little about those remote times, and what they know is only through
archeological revelations.
2. The Celts
From around 700 BC to 500 BC or 300 BC the Celts (North- western Germany and the
Netherlands) arrived on the island. The Celts were men of iron, who could make better weapons.
They were more technically advanced than the Iberians. The Celts spoke different dialects such as
Erse, Gaelic and Welsh (they are still spoken in Great Britain). The Celts imposed themselves as
aristocracy on the conquered Iberian tribes in Britain and in Ireland. Eventually, the races mixed but
not in the same proportions throughout the island. The inhabitants of the so-called Celtic Britain
(Cornwall, Wales, and the Scottish Highlands) are the descendants of the oldest people. They are
often called ‘the Celtic Fringe’, but, as a matter of fact, most of them are of pre-Celtic origin – their
forefathers were not the fair-haired or red-haired Celts but the dark-haired Iberians.
Britain became a sphere of Roman interest in the 1st century B.C. Julius Ceasar attempted
to conquer Britain twice, in 55 and 54 B.C., his main aim being to prevent the Britons from providing
their kinsmen in today’s France with military aid. But the actual Roman conquest of Britain by
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Emperor Claudius took place in 43 A.D. By 80 A.D.; the Romans had conquered today’s England,
Wales and southern Scotland. but problems in other parts of their empire made them withdraw behind
the so-called Hadrian’s Wall (wall designed by Emperor Hadrian; it was erected between 122 and
After crushing the Britons’ resistance, the Romans Romanised the southern areas (i.e. they
imposed their civilisation and way of life on native people); northern Britain and Wales were placed
under military control and the natives were allowed to carry on with their own way of life. The impact
of Roman civilization started to appear. In this context, the villas (large farms) were plentiful, the
cities were becoming larger, the commerce developed (London was the greatest center of trade). The
most obvious characteristic of Roman Britain was its towns, which were the basis of Roman
administration and civilisation. Many grew out of Celtic settlements, military camps or market
centres. The Romans left about twenty large towns of about 5, 000 inhabitants, and almost one
hundred smaller ones. Many of these towns were at first army camps, and the Latin word for camp,
castra, has remained part of many town name s to this day (with the ending chester, caster or cesrer)
: Gloucester, Leicester, Doncaster, Winchester, Chester, Lancaster and many others besides. These
towns were built with stone as well as wood, and they had planned streets, markets and shops. Some
buildings had central heating. They were connected by well-built roads that continued to be used long
after the Romans had left, and became the main roads of modern Britain.
The Romans stayed for nearly 400 years. Their rule in Britain declined towards the end of the
4th century as the whole Roman Empire was falling apart. The last Roman legions were withdrawn
Anglo-Saxons (Angles, Saxons and Jutes) came from three Germanic tribes. They had
already started attacking the south coast of Britain in the 3rd century, but in the 5th century, they
conquered and settled the whole of today’s England. They destroyed the Romano-British civilization
and established their own, agricultural one. The Saxons, Angles and the Jutes certainly wreaked havoc
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in the orderly Romano-Celtic world. The Latinized Britons were slaughtered or pushed away to the
mountainous areas where the primitive Celtic or pre-Celtic tribes had so far resided. The Anglo-
Saxons penetrated into the interior of the country through the rivers and the Roman roads, which only
hastened the pace of conquest and destruction. Consequently, the Celts were doomed to be defeated.
The Anglo-Saxons established a number of kingdoms, some of which still exist in county or
regional names to this day: Essex (East Saxons), Sussex (South Saxons), Wessex (West Saxons),
Middlesex (probably a kingdom of Middle Saxons), East Anglia (East Angles). By the middle of the
seventh century the three largest kingdoms, those of Northumbria, Mercia and Wessex, were the
most powerful. The Saxons divided the land into new administrative areas, based on shires or
counties. "Shire" is the Saxon word, "county" is the Norman one, but both are still used. These
shires, established by the end of the tenth century, remained almost exactly the same for a thousand
years. Over each shire was appointed a shire reeve, the king's local administrator. In time, his name
became shortened to "sheriff". Shires were further divided into units called hundreds. The most
powerful nobles were the ealdormen, who eventually became known by the Scandinavian term earls.
The earls were originally royal officials assigned big, contiguous blocks of English territory,
5.The Vikings
Danish Vikings had conquered a large part of north-eastern England and created a
confederation of Scandinavian communities called Danelaw (878-975) there. The term ‘Danelaw’
was used in the 11th century to indicate an area in which customary law was influenced by Danish
practice. In fact, the coming of the Danes gave a powerful stimulus to the development of English
Common Law (the very word ‘law’ is of Danish origin). The Vikings were very appreciative of law
and had men especially trained in legal arguments and procedures. The Anglo Saxons took over from
Alfred the Great of Wessex (871-c.900) defeated the Danes and his successors reconquered
the Danelaw in the 10th century. However, a new Danish invasion shattered England in 978: in 1016,
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Canute (1016-35), the King of Denmark and Norway, became the first king of a fully united England.
His Scandinavian Empire, however, broke up under his incompetent successors and the Saxon heir,
Edward unwittingly prepared the way for the Norman Conquest: he introduced Norman
nobles into high state offices and left behind a disputed succession. After his death, Harold, son of
the mightiest English nobleman, was chosen to become king. However, the Duke of Normandy and
the King of Norway claimed the English throne too, and both of them attacked England almost
simultaneously in 1066. Harold defeated the Norsemen, but he was himself defeated and killed in
the battle of Hastings in October 1066 by William of Normandy. The battle gave the English a
profound shock because of the military superiority and ruthlessness displayed by the Normans. The
brilliance of their strategy and their awesome cavalry threw England on her knees. Consequently,
William of Normandy succeeded Harold on the English throne and become the king of England.
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After being crowned a king, William the Conqueror William established in England the
Norman feudal system. William organised his English kingdom according to the feudal system
which had already begun to develop in England before his arrival. The word "feudalism" comes
from the French word feu, which the Normans used to refer to land held in return for duty or service
to a lord. The basis of feudal society was the holding of land, and its main purpose was economic.
The central idea was that all land was owned by the king but it was held by others. Called "vassals",
in return for services and goods. The king gave large estates to his main nobles in return for a promise
to serve him in war for up to forty days. The nobles also had to give hi m part of the produce of the
land. The greater nobles gave part of their lands to lesser nobles, knights. and other "freemen". Some
freemen paid for the land by doing milirary service. while others paid rent. The nob le kept "serfs" to
work on his own land. These were not free to leave the estate, and were often little better than slaves.
There were two basic principles to feudalism: every man had a lord. and every lord had land,
The king was connected through this "chain" of people to the lowest man in the country. At each level
a man had to promise loyalty and service to his lord. This promise was usually made with the lord
sitting on his chair and his vassal kneeling before him, his hands placed between those of his lord.
This was called "homage", and has remained part of the coronation ceremony of British kings and
queens until now. On the other hand, each lord had responsibilities to his vassals. He had to give them
King William I revived the Anglo-Saxon system of shires, and a royal officer was placed at
the head of each. The new king also established the fiscal basis of the state by ordering a detailed
survey of property value in every shire (the Domesday Book, 1086-87). He divided bigger districts
into smaller shires and kept the Anglo-Saxon system of sheriffs to counterbalance the power of his
Barons. In other words, each shire had its own sheriff, a man of baronial rank to whom William
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entrusted collecting his taxes and administering his laws. The King did his utmost to tighten his grip
The Britons were surprise to see that their culture was, for the first time, under French cultural
dominance and influence. In addition, their language, English, had lost its status. In this context, three
languages became used in England instead of two: a) Norman-French, the language of the ruling
aristocracy and law courts, b) Latin, the language of educated people, and c) English, spoken by
common Englishmen. The social pyramid was also distorted; the French invaders became the upper-
class aristocracy who ruled over the English. French became the language of the upper classes, of law
and government and the army, whilst English was the language of the Anglo-Saxon peasants.
2.1 Henry I
William’s son Henry I continued the process of strengthening the power of the state (1100-35) and
especially by Henry II (1154-89). Henry II was the first Plantagenet king, a descendant of the
Plantagnet House/Dynasty that ruled England for 331 years, from 1154 to 1485. He ascended
the throne after thirty years of anarchy (the War of Succession, 1135-54). He ruled over a vast empire
comprising England, Normandy and a larger part of France than that controlled by the king of France.
He restored the royal rights, tightened the control over sheriffs and tried to get all courts under the
royal control (he failed with ecclesiastical courts – his conflict with Thomas Becket).
2.2 Henry II
Henry II, who appointed Becket archbishop of Canterbury in 1162, wanted to transfer
jurisdiction over criminal clergy to secular courts, as church courts were often reluctant to convict
guilty clergymen. Becket refused, and a long struggle involving the pope and the king of France ended
with Becket’s murder in Canterbury Cathedral in 1170. The murderers were knights carrying out
what they thought was the king’s will, although Henry never gave a formal order. Becket was widely
recognized as a saint and martyr across Europe, and Henry did penance for his part in the murder in
1174, being publicly flogged by monks at Canterbury. Becket’s shrine at Canterbury became a
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major pilgrimage site not just for English people but for Europeans, and criminal clergy continued to
2.3 Richard I
Richard I (ruled 1189–99) was the next Plantagenet king. He spent most of his time on
Crusades. The Crusades were efforts by Christians from Europe to gain control of Jerusalem and
other parts of the Middle East that were known as the Holy Land. Richard spent only six months
King John (ruled 1199–1216) is sometimes known as the last of the Angevin dynasty. He was
the last English king to reign over Anjou, which he lost in the early 1200s. Under John – notorious
for his greediness – everybody had to pay higher taxes. King John was also in a state of dispute with
the Church because the Pope appointed the Archbishop without his consent. What fueled the situation
was the loss Normandy, where some English nobles still had possessions, which further compromised
his reputation. In 1215, he made an effort to recover Normandy and asked his nobles to fight for him;
they turned against him and marched to London where angry merchants joined them. The purpose
was to limit the king’s power and to make him rule according to law. In 1215 they forced him to sign
agreement regulating the relations between the Crown and the upper and middle classes that later
came to be regarded as the cornerstone of English civil liberties. The two most important matters
covered by this agreement were these: firstly, no free man could be arrested and imprisoned except
by the law of the land, and when arrested, he had the right to a fair and legal trial; secondly, no
Magna Carta limited the rights of the king and protected the rights of his subjects. John
declared that he had been forced to sign the Magna Carta against his will and he tried to gather support
from France to fight the barons. He died before he could carry this out, leaving his crown to his nine-
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Last but not least, Magna Carta was reported to have limited the royal power and laid the
foundations for the later Parliamentary monarchy. Magna Carta marks a clear stage in the collapse
of English feudalism. The nobles did not allow John's successors to forget this charter and its
promises. Every king recognized Magna Carta, until the Middle Ages ended in disorder and a new
Henry III (ruled 1216–72) spent a large part of his reign fighting the barons. They disliked the
fact that the king had chosen many foreigners to be his close advisers. In 1264 the barons staged a
rebellion, under the leadership of Simon de Montfort, but this was crushed the following year.
Under Edward I (ruled 1272–1307) Parliament developed into a body of men who had to approve
all the laws that the king made. The men who made up Parliament were noblemen and church
leaders.
Edward I was a great reformer and a good soldier. He brought stability to the country for the
first time in many years He will always be remembered for summoning the Model Parliament
(1295), called so because it contained representatives of the three estates of Barons, Clergy and
Commons (i.e. all the elements of a future parliament). His son, Edward II (ruled 1307–27),
however, was a weak leader and was forced to abdicate (give up the throne).
England began a long struggle with France that was later called the Hundred Years’
War (1337–1453). This began when Edward III (ruled 1327–77) tried to claim the French throne.
There was a 28-year truce during the reign of Richard II (ruled 1377–99), but the war continued
Henry V (ruled 1413–22) emerged as one of the great English warrior kings of the Middle
Ages. He scored several victories against the French, in particular at the Battle of Agincourt (1415),
when his troops beat a much larger French force. Henry V eventually united the crowns of England
and France through his marriage to the French princess Catherine of Valois.
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Henry V died young, and the throne passed to his son, Henry VI (ruled 1422–61 and 1470–
71), who was not even one year old when he became king. Others ruled for him until he grew up,
but when he did he was not a good ruler. Much of the land his father had gained was lost within a
few years.
Several powerful men in the kingdom began to fight for control of the government. This led
to a long period of civil war between the Houses of Lancaster and York, known as the Wars of
the Roses (1455–85 : the House of Lancaster had a red rose in its flag and the House of York had a
white rose in its flag). Both descended from Edward III and now wanted to take possession of the
Crown. During this period Henry VI was overthrown and imprisoned by his cousin, Edward of
York, who became Edward IV (ruled 1461–70 and 1471–83). He, too, was overthrown briefly, but
he regained power in 1471. Edward IV died in 1483, and left his two young sons—including
Edward V—in the care of his brother Richard. The boys were taken to the Tower of London.
After a few months they disappeared and were never seen again. Richard had himself crowned
Richard III was the last of the Plantagenet line. His reign lasted only two years. In 1485
Henry Tudor killed Richard at the Battle of Bosworth and became Henry VII—the first of
The internal and external conflicts of the 14th century were accompanied by a great cultural
revival in England—the revival of English as a literary language. After the Norman Conquest of
England in 1066, English had virtually disappeared as a written language as literature was written in
French or Latin. English always remained the spoken language of ordinary people, however, and its
vocabulary was enriched by French and Latin words. By the 14th century, English—now Middle
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literature and poetry in the works of a striking group of contemporaries: Geoffrey Chaucer (ca. 1343–
Chaucer, by profession a government clerk and diplomat, was the most important of these
poets. He is best known for The Canterbury Tales, an unfinished group of poems recounting the
stories told by a group of pilgrims on the way to Thomas Becket’s shrine at Canterbury. The pilgrims,
male and female, are members of different social classes and professions, and their stories give vivid
pictures of medieval culture. John Gower, whom his friend Chaucer called “moral Gower,” was a
more serious poet. He wrote verses in English, French, and Latin. His most important poem is one
written in English, Confessio Amantis, or Lover’s Confession, probably completed in 1390. William
Langland is known for one poem: The Vision of Piers Plowman, an allegorical vision concerned
with the corruption of contemporary society and the difficulty of leading a truly Christian life. The
author scourges the corruption of the clergy, but his knowledge of religion indicates that he may well
Piers Plowman (1367-70). William Langland’s alliterative dreamy poem espoused piety, offering
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (late 14th century). Influenced by the French romans, this
anonymously penned Arthurian poem sees Gawain manfully battling temptations of the flesh and a
virescent knight.
Pearl (c.1370). Pearl is all heavenly visions. The unknown author, distraught at the death of his
The Canterbury Tales (c.1387-1400). More storytelling, but Chaucer’s ragbag of characters broke
new ground in characterisation and subtlety. For many, the founding work of modern English
literature.
Le Morte d’Arthur (1470). Arthurian legend resurrected once more along French models but
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Marie de France. She was French (it’s in the name see) but lived most of her life in England,
writing rhyming couplets in Anglo-Norman. Her major work was Lais (late 12th century), 12
Julian of Norwich. Julian was dying, aged 30, when a miraculous vision intervened and inspired a
profound, perceptive volley on faith and, in particular, sin; Sixteen Revelations of Divine Love
Margery Kempe. The wandering King’s Lynn housewife (she travelled to Jerusalem, Rome and
Poland) dictated her thoughts on life (she was illiterate), notably childbirth (she went through it 14
times) and wild lust. Read all about it in the Book of Margery Kempe (late 1430s). Some have
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The year 1485 is usually considered the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the
English Renaissance, the most lustrous and glorious period in the history of the English nation, which
coincided with a century of Tudor rule (1485–1603). Henry Tudor, Earl of Richmond from Wales
defeated King Richard III in the battle of Bosworth (1485), establishing the greatest of all English
The three most remarkable monarchs of the House of Tudor were Henry VII, who laid the
foundations of a powerful state; Henry VIII, who established the national church and built the Royal
Navy; and Elizabeth I, who kept England on the course to becoming a heretical sea power.
Henry VII (1485-1509) made use of the situation after the end of the Wars of the Roses to
establish an absolute monarchy. He created new nobility from the upper-middle class: the new
noblemen were entrusted with state offices, especially in the Privy Council, the predecessor of the
modern Cabinet, and in the prerogative courts Henry had set up. He avoided military conflicts, but
protected trade and manufacturing and encouraged overseas expeditions. That is why Tudor
Under Henry VIII (1509-47), the Church was subjected to the state power due to the king’s
quarrel with the Pope over divorcing his first wife (the English Reformation, the 1530s). This act
removed the last power of the feudal period that hampered the development of parliamentary
government. Later on, the parliament passed The Act of Supremacy – 1534 that destroyed all
monasteries and acknowledged Henry Head of the Church of England. It was a Protestant church (a
Christian church, but for people who believe in a different kind of Christianity) called the Church of
England, and the king controlled it. Anyone who disagreed with the new church was executed - killed
for his/her crime. Thomas Cromwell prepared a survey of Church property that was the first organized
Parliament was traditionally split into two 'Houses'. The House of Lords consisted of the
feudal aristocracy and the leaders of the Church; the House of Commons consisted of representatives
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from the towns and the less important landowners in rural areas. It was now more important for
monarchs to get the agreement of the Commons for policy-making because that was where the newly
powerful merchants and land - owners (rich people) were represented. After the death of her father,
Henry VIII, Mary Tudor (1553-58), known as Bloody Mary, was crowned Queen of England. She
unsuccessfully tried to re-catholicise the country; she executed hundreds of Protestants who refused
The religious struggles ended under Elizabeth I (1558-1603; Elizabethan Settlement): the
English Church became the official Church of England and its doctrine was clearly formulated.
England started to appear as a military power, especially after defeating the Spanish Armada, one of
the biggest maritime forces in Europe, in 1588. Therefore, the year 1588 is considered as one of the
turning points in the history of England and the world – a point at which at which England started to
take over the lead in the overseas discoveries and commerce. Ships also began to travel to other parts
of the world. East India Company was founded in 1599 to trade with India. Gradually it brought
under its control the empty territories and in the Stuart’s times, it became monopolist, controlling
In North America, the colony of Virginia was named after the Virgin (unmarried) Queen
Elizabeth I. Voyages of discovery resulted in establishing colonies in various parts of the world. Thus
Elizabeth, continuing her father and grandfather’s policy, gave a new direction to the expansive
energy of the English people. The Tudors not only laid the foundations for the Empire but also
mapped out Great Britain. When the Queen died in 1603 the majority of English considered
themselves ardent Protestants, and they led highly religious lives based on the study of the Bible. The
Bible together with the study of classics made England an important center of the Renaissance,
Britain’s Renaissance began a century after Italy’s, and literature, not the visual arts, was the
main beneficiary. The Reformation was key: as man’s relationship with God evolved, creativity
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explored the changes. Writers pondered their own place in the grand scheme of things, weaving in
the expressive humanism that was reviving the spirit of Antiquity on the Continent. Thomas More’s
Utopia (1516) explored these ideas in prose but the greatest literary advances came in poetry. Poets
took up Chaucer’s mantle using the sonnet, a 14-line verse form pioneered by early Italian
Renaissance word mogul, Petrarch. English writers mimicked Petrarch’s idealised love poetry and,
as the 16th century grew old, wrapped classical allusions and contemporary concerns in increasingly
innovative language. Sonnet writing in the Elizabethan and Jacobean era wasn’t the preserve of
‘authors’ – writing poetry was evidence of your Renaissance Man/Woman credentials, so the likes of
Walter Raleigh and even Queen Elizabeth herself had a go. The Elizabethan period was a very
important time for English literature. Many people liked to go to the theatre, and William
Shakespeare wrote a lot of plays and poems at this time. While Renaissance prose was overshadowed
by poetry, a few notables did emerge. They used the classical spirit of the era. John Lyly wrote
Euphues, The Anatomy of English Wit (1578) a florid romantic treatise-cum-novel that gave England
its first encounter with ‘euphemism’. However, Francis Bacon was the major contributor. His
thoroughly readable Essays (1597) chewed on the day’s gristle, from revenge to gardening, forever
The English Renaissance flourished beyond the Tudor epoch, through Stuart times and
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1- James I
The Stuart monarchs, from James I onwards, were less successful than the Tudors were. They
quarreled with Parliament, which resulted in civil war. James VI of Scotland (the son of Mary of
Scotland, Elizabeth’s cousin) was called to succeed Elizabeth on the English throne as James I (1603-
25). James I was accepted by the English without much ado. However, his financial difficulties,
combined with his belief in the “divine right of kings” and unwise religious and foreign policy,
angered Parliament. James I intended to rule without Parliament as much as possible. He preferred
a small council and believed that the king was chosen by God and therefore only God could judge
him. In 1605 there was a failed Catholic assassination attempt against the king (by blowing up the
House of Lords), called as Gunpowder Plot. The most famous conspirator was Guy Fawkes. He
and his small group of Catholics had been caught trying to blow up the Houses of Parliament with
King James inside. The group put 36 barrels of gunpowder in cellars underneath the Houses of
Parliament in London, ready to set off a massive explosion. However, one member of Fawkes’ group
sent a letter to his friend who worked in Parliament, warning him to stay away on 5 November. The
King’s supporters got hold of the letter and the plot was rumbled. The gunpowder plotters were were
arrested and sentenced to death by hanging, drawing and quartering. On the very night that the
Gunpowder Plot failed, on 5 November 1605, bonfires were set alight to celebrate the safety of the
King. Since then, November 5th has become known as Firework Night, Bonfire Night or Guy
Fawkes Day, “as a day of thanksgiving for `the joyful day of deliverance”.
In 1607, “James I’s reign saw the foundation of the colony of Jamestown in Virginia, which
became a center of tobacco production. The king himself, however, was one of the foremost
opponents of the new plant. His A Counter-Blaste to Tobacco (1604) denounced it in scorching terms
as unhealthy, sinful, and disgusting.” About 10 years later, in 1620, Plymouh Colony, later
Massachusetts Colony, the first permanent colony in New England, was also founded when the
Pilgrim Fathers, 102 people, left England seeking religious freedom, and then on the ship Mayflower
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they got to the New World and introduced Puritanism. Actually, during the seventeenth century,
twelve British colonies were born in the New World. The Northern colonies were named New
England, the middle ones were established along the River Delaware and the southern colonies were
Ulster plantation is also related to James I’s name. Being also the King of Ireland, the
Protestant James wanted to unite his three kingdoms (England, Scotland and Ireland) and “strengthen
his rule in Ireland where he faced opposition and rebellion from the Catholic, Irish speaking
population.” Therefore, from 1609 onwards, people from England and Scotland were encouraged to
move to the northern part of Ireland (named Ulster) to make it friendlier towards James by taking
huge areas of land from the local Irish population and giving them to the planters. This act worsened
the tense relationship between the Catholics and Protestants, which reached its peak in various
waves throughout history; first in the English Civil War in the seventeenth century-England and then
during the period called the Troubles in the nineteenth century-Northern Ireland.
2- Charles I
After James I death in 1625, his son, Charles I, succeeded him. He argued with Parliament
because he spent a lot of money fighting wars in Europe. On March 10, 1629 Charles I decided to
dissolve Parliament, beginning an 11-year period known the Personal Rule or Eleven Years’
(Tyranny). Charles surprised everyone by being able to rule successfully without Parliament. He got
rid of much dishonesty that had begun in the Tudor period and continued during his father's reign. He
was able to balance his budgets and make administration efficient. Charles saw no reason to explain
his policy or method of government to anyone. By 1637 he was at the height of his power. His
authority seemed to be more completely accepted than the authority of an English king had been for
centuries. It also seemed that Parliament might never meet again. In 1642, he started a civil war (1642-
49). Oliver Cromwell as leader of Parliaments army won the war, and Charles I was executed.
Consequently, England was a republic for the next 11 years, ruled by Oliver Cromwell. It was the
first time that England had been a republic, having no king or queen. As a puritan, Cromwell believed
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in a simple, hard-working life - and when he ruled, there was no sport or dancing in England, and
After the death of Cromwell, the House of Lords and the Anglican Church, together with the
monarchy (Charles II-1660-85) were restored in 1660. However, the Great Plague of 1665 and the
Great Fire of London in 1666 made Charles II’s ruling conditions difficult.
In 1660, Charles II established the Royal Society for supporting natural science, and, indeed,
the seventeenth century saw great scientific discoveries: William Harvey discovered the circulation
of the blood; Isaac Newton, gravity; Thomas Savery developed water pump, which later led to the
invention of steam engine. The first newspapers, which appeared in the same century, were a new
Politically, Two factions developed in parliament, the Tories (an Irish name for thieves,
Crown loyalist who defended divine right monarchy and Anglicanism ) and the Whigs (a rude name
for cattle drivers; opponents of the court who were supporters of Parliamentary monarchy and
The conflict between monarch and Parliament soon re-emerged after Charles II had died. His
brother, James II, tried to give full rights to Catholics and to promote them in his government. He
had serious problems with Parliament and he tried to catholicize the Church and removed the laws
that stopped Catholics from taking positions in government and Parliament. James II had already
shown his dislike of Protestants while he had been Charles II’s governor in Scotland. The Tories and
Anglicans now joined the Whigs in looking for a Protestant rescue. Consequently, they invited
William of Orange to invade Britain, which led to the so-called the 'Glorious Revolution’. It was
‘glorious' because it was bloodless, but it was in fact nothing less than coup d’état which put
Parliament above the King. It laid down the principle that the Crown derived its authority not from
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4-The Glorious Revolution (Prince William III and his cousin Mary Stuarts)
Prince William III (William of Orange, 1689-1702), ruler of the Netherlands, and his Stuart
wife, Mary II (queen of England, Scotland, and Ireland and daughter of King James II), accepted
Parliament’s invitation to become king and queen. In this way, a monarch could rule only with the
support of Parliament. Parliament immediately drew up the Bill of Rights in 1689 (Acts declaring
the rights and liberties of subjects), making Britain a constitutional monarchy in which the overall
power over the state lies with Parliament, not with the monarch, which limited some of the powers of
the monarch (notably, the power to dismiss judges). In 1701, he passed the Act of Settlement
according to which only a Protestant could inherit the crown. This act “has remained in force ever
since he passed the Act of Settlement according to which only a Protestant could inherit the crown.
It was not until 1650 that the first coffee house in England (and only the second in Europe)
was opened at Oxford, advertised as ‘a simple Innocent thing, incomparable good for those that are
troubled with melancholy’. But from the very beginning coffee houses proved to be centres of
intellectual debate, visited by writers, scholars, wits and politicians. Likewise, tea had become a
national drink by 1700, when 50,000 kg were already being imported each year. The precise date of
tea’s appearance in England is about the first decade of the seventeenth century. It came from Holland,
where the Dutch East India Company had opened commercial relations with China ahead of its
English rival. While coffeehouses were visited by men, their wives held tea parties at home. Tea’s
feminine image was partly because it was introduced to England by Catherine of Braganza, the
Portuguese Queen to Charles II. Although it was served in some of the exclusively male coffee-houses
that opened in London after 1652 it was not usual in these before the 1690s, and was never the
Coffee and tea were both instrumental in the civilizing process experienced by Western
Europe in the seventeenth century.229 “Men who drank in … London coffee-houses were subject to
the house rules that prohibited swearing, gambling, quarrelling and profane language.
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Mary and William III died without heir, so Mary’s sister Anna became queen as the last
Stuart. Since the Scottish were unsatisfied, in order to avoid war, England proclaimed that unless the
Scots agreed on a full union with England by Christmas Day 1705, England breaks all economic
relation with them. As a result, the Treaty of Union of 1707 “made England and Scotland one country
under the new name of United Kingdom of Great Britain.” Separate parliaments were abolished
and at Westminster the new Parliament of Great Britain was established: the Scots were given 45
seats in the House of Commons and 16, in the Lords. Scotland gained equal share from English ports
When England banned the trade with its overseas colonies and lost trading privileges in France
and Low Countries by the end of the seventeenth century, Scottish demanded the end of the union for
the first time When Queen Anne (1665–1714) died, George, from the House of Hanover (1714–
1727), became king. Robert Walpole, his minister, considered Britain’s first Prime Minister “lived in
10 Downing Street from 1735 having insisted that it become the residence of the First Lord of the
Treasury, rather than being given to him personally. He developed the idea that government ministers
should work together in a small group, which was called the Cabinet. He also made sure that the
power of the king would always be limited by the constitution: the king could not remove or change
laws; the king was dependent on Parliament for his financial income and for his army and the king
was supposed to ‘choose’ his ministers. Even today the government of Britain is “Her Majesty’s
Government.” But in fact, the ministers belonged as much to Parliament as they did to the king.
William Pitt “the Elder,” later Lord Chatham, became another influential political representative. He
was certain that Britain must beat France in the race for an overseas trade empire. The war against
France’s trade went on all over the world. In Canada, the British took Quebec in 1759 and Montreal
the following year and India, the “jewel in the Crown.” The British pride was expressed in a national
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Later, George III (1760–1820) signed the Treaty of Paris in 1763, which redistributed
imperial lands. The areas of Lower Canada, land up to the Mississippi, Florida, India and Senegal
were ceded to Britain. The British handed Cuba and Manila over to the Spanish. In order to pay back
the national debt due to the colonial wars, England imposed taxes on luxury goods, such as tea, coffee
and chocolate while granted no political right to the colonies with which it traded.239 In 1764 this
led to a quarrel over taxation between the British government and its colonies in America. The
colony’s moto was: “No taxation without representation.” The situation worsened when in 1773 a
group of colonists (the Sons of Liberty) disguised in Indian costume boarded the ships at the port of
Boston and threw 342 chests of tea into the sea rather than pay tax on it. The event became known as
the Boston Tea party. The American War of Independence had thus begun, which ended in 1783
with the Peace of Versailles, in which Britain accepted the independence of the USA, and the British
lost every American colony except for Canada. The war in America gave strength to the new ideas
of democracy and of independence. Many British politicians openly supported the colonists, e.g.,
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Beginning in the last half of the 18th century and extending into the early 20th century, first
Great Britain and then Western Europe, the United States, and several other parts of the globe
experienced the vibrant stirrings of a major technical and economic transformation. The following
list shows a few examples of British scientific inventions and social development from the 18th to
the late 19th century, that is the Georgian and Victorian period. The latter period takes its name after
Queen Victoria (1837–1901), who was the last British monarch of the House of Hanover. All in all,
Britain could excel as its coal extraction – which formed the basis of development – was nine times
that of France, Germany, Russia and Belgium combined, and her naval force made Britain an Empire
a successful colonizer.
The Victorian British Empire dominated the globe, though its forms of rule and influence were
uneven and diverse. The traffic of people and goods between Britain and its colonies was constant,
complex, and multidirectional. Britain shaped the empire, the empire shaped Britain, and colonies
shaped one another. British jobs abroad included civil and military service, missionary work, and
infrastructure development. People from various imperial locations traveled to, studied in, and settled
in Britain. Money, too, flowed both ways—the empire was a source of profit, and emigrants sent
money home to Britain—as did goods such as jute, calico cotton cloth, and tea.
Dramatic expansion of the empire meant that such goods came to Britain from all over the
world. Between 1820 and 1870 the empire grew, shifted its orientation eastward, and increased the
number of nonwhite people over whom it exerted control. Much of this expansion involved violence,
including the Indian Mutiny (1857–59), the Morant Bay Rebellion (1865) in Jamaica, the Opium
Wars (1839–42, 1856–60) in China, and the Taranaki War (1860–61) in New Zealand. India became
central to imperial status and wealth. There was significant migration to the settler colonies of
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Australia and New Zealand and later to Canada and South Africa. From 1870 until 1914 continued
aggressive expansion (including Britain’s participation in the so-called Scramble for Africa) was
assisted by new technologies, including railways and telegraphy. Britain took control of large parts
of Africa (including Egypt, Sudan, and Kenya), which together were home to about 30 percent of the
African population. The same period also saw the start of anticolonial movements that demanded
freedom from British domination in India and elsewhere. These would ultimately lead to
Britain’s status as a world political power was bolstered by a strong economy, which grew
rapidly between 1820 and 1873. This half-century of growth was followed by an economic depression
and from 1896 until 1914 by a modest recovery. With the earliest phases of industrialization over by
about 1840, the British economy expanded. Britain became the richest country in the world, but many
people worked long hours in harsh conditions. Yet, overall, standards of living were rising. While the
1840s were a bad time for workers and the poor—they were dubbed “the hungry forties”—overall
the trend was toward a less precarious life. Most families not only had a home and enough to eat but
also had something leftover for alcohol, tobacco, and even vacations to the countryside or the seaside.
Of course, some decades were times of plenty, others of want. Relative prosperity meant that Britain
was a nation not only of shopkeepers but of shoppers (with the rise of the department store from mid-
century transforming the shopping experience). Increased wealth, including higher real wages from
the 1870s, meant that even working-class people could purchase discretionary items. Mass production
meant that clothes, souvenirs, newspapers, and more were affordable to almost everyone. Added to
the changes above, other social, religious and cultural changes took place in Victorian Britain:
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Most Victorian Britons were Christian. The Anglican churches of England, Wales, and Ireland
were the state churches (of which the monarch was the nominal head) and dominated the religious
landscape (even though the majority of Welsh and Irish people were members of other churches).
The Church of Scotland was Presbyterian. There was some religious diversity, as Britain also was
home to other non-Anglican Protestants (notably Methodists), Roman Catholics, Jews, Muslims,
Hindus, and others (at the end of the period there were even a few atheists).
Changes in thinking
• The most important idea of the nineteenth century was that everyone had the right to personal
• Weakening of religious life: according to the 1851 census, only 60 per cent of the population
went to church – of these only 5.2 million Anglicans, 4.5 million Nonconformists and almost
• Charles Darwin published The Origin of Species (1859) which further strengthened crisis in
the Church. His theory of evolution by natural selection (the survival of the fittest) unsettled
Redbrick universities: they were built in the new industrial cities in England. The term “redbrick”
distinguished the new universities, often brick-built, from the older, mainly stone-built universities
of Oxford and Cambridge. They taught more science and technology to ‘feed’ Britain’s industries.
Today, 5 of the original 6 Redbrick Universities are rated among the top 100 universities in the
world, according to the QS World University Rankings (e.g., University of Liverpool, University of
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5. Gender and class in Victorian society (late 19th – early 20th century)
Victorian society was organized hierarchically. While race, religion, region, and occupation
were all meaningful aspects of identity and status, the main organizing principles of Victorian society
were gender and class. Victorian gender ideology was premised on the “doctrine of separate spheres.”
This stated that men and women were different and meant for different things. Men were physically
strong, while women were weak. Men were independent, while women were dependent. Men
belonged in the public sphere, while women belonged in the private sphere. Men were meant to
participate in politics and in paid work, while women were meant to run households and raise families.
Women were also thought to be naturally more religious and morally finer than men (who were
distracted by sexual passions by which women supposedly were untroubled). While most working-
class families could not live out the doctrine of separate spheres, because they could not survive on a
single male wage, the ideology was influential across all classes.
Class was both economic and cultural , and it encompassed income, occupation, education,
family structure, politics, and leisure activities. The working class, about 70 to 80 percent of the
population, got its income from wages, with family incomes usually under £100 per annum. Many
middle-class observers thought that working-class people imitated middle-class people as much as
they could, but they were mistaken; working-class cultures (which varied by locality and other
factors) were strong, specific, and premised on their own values. The middle class, which got its
income (of £100 to £1,000 per annum) from salaries and profit, grew rapidly during the 19th century,
from 15 to over 25 percent of the population. During the 19th century, members of the middle class
were the moral leaders of society (they also achieved some political power). The very small and very
wealthy upper class got its income (of £1,000 per annum or often much more) from property, rent,
and interest. The upper class had titles, wealth, land, or all three; owned most of the land in Britain;
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From the late Middle Ages to the mid-19th century, due to religious influences, upper-and
middle-class women, wives were expected to conform to the “Angle in the House” image, to be
obedient, silent, submissive and passive having no socio-political rights and financial independence.
The term ‘feminism’ covers “the revolutionary ideas, struggles and activities of the ‘women’s
movement,’ focused…on gaining the right of women’s suffrage but also on achieving economic,
financial and educational equality. The most significant results were: Married Women’s Property
Act of 1882 and 1893 (middle-class wives could keep their earnings during marriage), in 1870s the
extension of secondary and university education had started for girls; the Custody of Infants Act of
1839 allowed a mother to propose custody of her children in case of divorce; the Matrimonial Cause
of Act of 1857, which set up the Divorce Court and, though unequal in its treatment of husbands and
wives, laid the foundations of modern family law. Finally, women “got the vote in two stages” in
1918 and 1928; the [m]iddle class housewives comprised the largest group to be enfranchised in the
first phase, whereas the Equal Franchise Act of 1928 “gave equal voting rights for both men and
women.
6. Victorian literature
The flamboyance of Romantic literature was tempered by realism in the Victorian age, by the
urge to deal more directly with the social issues of the day. With the novel in huge demand, authors
turned their sights on the working classes. As the Victorian period wore on, the novel, echoing the
timbre of the times, got darker, preoccupied increasingly with the seamier side of life and moral and
social decay. Fiction became phenomenally popular. Novels, both good and bad, were devoured by
Charles Dickens. The pre-eminent Victorian novelist wove satire and caricature around
serpentine plots. His 15 novels began with The Pickwick Papers (1837) and finished with Our Mutual
Friend (1865), his style growing more sober and complex with age. Dickens picked at society’s
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festering sores – in the workhouses, asylums and factories – tugging away at public scruples, but his
prime talent was for characterisation. From the grotesque Fagin in Oliver Twist (1838) to the loveable
Joe Gargery of Great Expectations (1861), his creations leap off the page, even now, 150 years on.
William Makepeace Thackeray. In Thackeray, Dickens had his closest rival. He too explored a form
of realism and he too caricatured the upper middle class. Thackeray’s writing also got darker as it
matured. However, he highlighted social strife using a historical rather than contemporary setting,
most famously in Vanity Fair (1847-48), set amid the Napoleonic Wars.
The Brontë sisters. Dickens and Thackeray had a stab at the female psyche, but the sisters
from Yorkshire really opened it up, even if they did have to adopt male pseudonyms to secure
publication. Each of their best novels – Jane Eyre (Charlotte (1847), Wuthering Heights (Emily
(1847) and The Tenant of Wildfell Hall (Anne (1848) – recalled the Romantic tradition, with their
love and despair, yet each also examined the realities of life.
George Eliot. No author picked the Victorian psyche apart quite like George Eliot (real name
Mary Ann Evans). She wrote of provincial life, pushing realism forward with a rare grasp of human
nature. Adam Bede (1859), The Mill on the Floss (1860) and Middlemarch (1871-72) all pitted
the individual, their strengths, failings and hopes, against the expectations and actualities of society.
Thomas Hardy. The Dorset novelist came later in the Victorian era, bringing a new degree
of naturalism to the novel. His starkly sketched characters, fighting the fickleness of class, gender and
bad weather in deepest Wessex, were hostages to fate. Tess of the D’Urbervilles (1891) was Hardy
distilled, its heartfelt study of an agrarian labourer enough to put anyone off love or farming for life.
He gave up novels after critics called Jude the Obscure (1895) blasphemous and obscene, so damning
was it of Victorian convention; however, he’s still regarded as the most popular of Britain’s novelists.
1- Vanity Fair (1847-48) William Makepeace Thackeray. Orphan girl Becky Sharp pulls herself
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2- Wuthering Heights (1847) Emily Brontë. The most emotive of Victorian novels was an
3- Jane Eyre (1847) Charlotte Brontë. Jane negotiates a series of setbacks – fire, a mad wife
locked in the attic and much more – to secure happiness with the dubious Mr Rochester.
4- Chronicles of Barsetshire (1855-1867) Anthony Trollope. A series of six novels set in the
West Country withrecurrent characters; the first great novel sequence of English lit.
5- Woman in White (1860) Wilkie Collins. Victorian Gothic horror par excellence, tinged with
6- Great Expectations (1861) Charles Dickens. Humble Pip goes off to be a gentleman, but
money and love aren’t all he’d hoped for in one of Dickens’ most twisting, didactic novels.
7- Middlemarch (1871-72) George Eliot. Multiple plots in a provincial Midlands town, linked
8- The Strange Case of Doctor Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886) Robert Louis Stevenson. The
9- Tess of the D’Urbervilles (1891) Thomas Hardy. The best of Hardy’s rural realism: a clever
10- Dracula (1897) Bram Stoker. Irishman Stoker wrote bits of the chilling epistolary tale in
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followed each other on the British throne in the twentieth century. Their rule had been challenged by
the World Wars, Great Depression and the Cold War. Great Britain’s participation in the world wars
had had a great impact on its imperial power and the global map. After WWI, it became clear that
Britain could no longer afford an empire; had no right to rule people who did not want to be ruled
by Britain, and the Royal Navy was not strong enough to protect all the Empire all over the world.
It is a free association of sovereign states comprising the United Kingdom and a number
of its former dependencies who have chosen to maintain ties of friendship and practical
cooperation and who acknowledge the British monarch as symbolic head of their association. The
modern Commonwealth of Nations was born in 1949. King George VI was the first Head of the
Commonwealth, and Queen Elizabeth II became Head when he died. But the British king or queen
is not automatically Head of the Commonwealth. Commonwealth member countries choose who
becomes Head of the Commonwealth. It comprises 53 countries (31 500 000 km2), across all
continents with 2.3 billion people (almost a third of the world population).
The fall of the British Empire was accompanied by the immigration of people from empire
nations to Britain… The 1948 arrival of the Empire Windrush, a ship bringing hundreds of
immigrants from Jamaica, is often treated as a founding date for multicultural Britain, although
there were already small Caribbean immigrant communities. There were no restrictions on
immigration within the empire until 1962, so migration was one solution to the poverty and
political turmoil facing British colonies. Later, Asian immigrants started to arrive from India and
Pakistan and from East Africa. By 1985, there were about five million recent immigrants and their
children out of a total population of about fifty-six million. In the 1980s the black’s bad housing
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Britain declared war against Germany on 4 August 1914 (battles at Somme, in Iraq and
Palestine, Gallipoli on the Dardanelles). The nation was told that it was defending the weak
(Belgium) against the strong (Germany), and that it was fighting for democracy and freedom. The
war cost almost a million British and Empire lives and 35 billion pounds, but it also initiated the
invention and development of radio and aviation. Life for women also changed during the war.
Because so many men were away fighting, a lot of women took paid jobs outside home for the
first time. The approval of their significant place in society found expression in giving them the
right to vote in 1918 and 1928. By 1918 there were five million women working in Britain.
The 1930s, Great Depression-era’s protests “were all symptoms of the dramatic collapse
of Britain’s Victorian manufacturing economy after 1918. During the Edwardian years the great
nineteenth-century staples – coal, cotton, shipbuilding, iron and steel – had enjoyed a final boom,
although less because of their own efficiency than because the rapid growth of other economies
had created a temporary demand for British goods… But entrepreneurs had invested rashly and
oversupplied the market. As a result, by the summer of 1920 domestic demand had collapsed and
foreign markets wanted fewer British goods. It resulted a high rate of unemployment and poverty,
which was the “chief targets of the six National Hunger Marches that began in the autumn of 1922
and continued in 1925, 1930, 1932, 1934 and 1936. During the Great Depression, a worldwide
economic crisis between 1929 and 1933 saw over 3 million unemployed in Britain.
The areas most affected by the depression were those which had created Britain’s
industrial revolution (Clydeside, Belfast, the industrial north of England and southeast Wales).
Because the worst effects of the depression in Britain were limited to certain areas, the
government did not take the situation seriously enough. In the 1930s, the British economy started
to recover (e.g., growing motor industry). By 1937 the British industry was producing weapons,
aircraft and equipment for war, with the financial support of the United States.
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However, new industries such as aviation and car production flourished mostly in
southern and central England. Added to this, by 1939, 75 percent of households had electricity
after in 1926 the Central Electricity Generating Board – which owned and operated the National
Grid – with powers to raise capital on ordinary commercial lines and a responsibility to establish
“We are not fighting to restore the past. We must plan and create a noble future.” Said, Winston
In the 1930s the old democracies of Western Europe were overshadowed by the
two rival ideological states: Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia. Neville Chamberlain, the British Prime
Minister (1937–1940) is best known for his foreign policy of appeasement with the Nazi Germany
that is to grant Hitler’s territorial wishes in order to avoid war. In this sense, WWII had begun as a
traditional European struggle, with Britain fighting to save the “balance of power” in Europe, and to
control the Atlantic Ocean and the sea surrounding Britain. But the war quickly became worldwide.
Both sides wanted to control the oil in the Middle East, and the Suez Canal, Britain’s route to India.
When the British fail to protect Norway, Chamberlain was replaced by Winston Churchill.
Although Britain was again on the side of the winners, almost one and a half million people in London
were made homeless by German bombing, and over 303,000 English soldiers and 60,000 civilians in
After WWII, the world was divided into capitalist (the USA and Western Europe) and
communist countries (Soviet Union and its satellite states). As for the foreign policy of these states,
during the Cold War, “subjugated countries followed a foreign policy compatible with the interests
of the Soviet Union” whereas the western countries’ affairs were influenced by the capitalist powers.
In 1949 Britain joined with other Western European countries to form the Council of Europe, to
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achieve greater unity between members. The characteristics of British foreign and defence policy in
the Cold War included defencism’, ‘nuclearism’, ‘Atlanticism’, ‘globalism’ and ‘hermeticism.
Later, Britain’s financial and economic difficulties increased. For example, in the same year,
in 1956 in the Suez Crisis, Egypt nationalized the Suez Canal which threatened the British
communication with the Far East. It urged Britain to become a member of the European Community
on 1 January 1973, but most British continued to feel that they had not had any economic benefit
from Europe.
When the first female prime minister, Margaret Thatcher (1979–1997), the Iron Lady (got
her nickname for her hostility to West’s policy of detente283) had come to power, she called on the
nation for hard work, patriotism and self-help. She wanted free trade at home and abroad, individual
enterprise and less government economic protection or interference. Thatcher promised to stop
Britain’s decline, but by 1983 she did not succeed. Unemployment had risen from 1.25 million in
1979 to over 3 million. Further, by selling assets such as British Telecom and British Airways on the
6. Literature
Evelyn Waugh. Waugh was deeply influenced by his conversion to Catholicism in 1930.
Prior to that he ridiculed high society and public school life expertly in Decline and Fall (1928);
afterwards the posh, decadent Catholics of Brideshead Revisited (1945) were endearingly human and
redemptive. In both periods his work pulsed with satire. Waugh also wrote war novels like Men at
George Orwell. No author communicated post-war paranoia better than the man born Eric
Blair in India in 1903. The allegorical Animal Farm (1946) pondered the pitfalls of Stalinism using a
clique of power hungry pigs, while Nineteen Eighty-Four (1949) commented more overtly on
totalitarianism with its expertly coloured story of life with Big Brother and Newspeak.
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Graham Greene. A Catholic like Waugh, Greene stuffed his novels with ethical paradoxes.
His anti-heroes often seem close to salvation despite their flimsy morals; the first, Pinkie, central to
Greene’s formative novel, Brighton Rock (1938), was downright evil. Greene followed up with a
series of thinking man’s thrillers, each with its anxious, seedy setting and each with its stressed,
morally lightweight protagonist. The Power and the Glory (1940) and The Heart of the Matter (1948)
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On 18 September 2014, Scotland hold a referendum to make decision about its future within
Reasons for Scottish independence are: a nation ought to govern itself regardless of other
considerations (nationalist argument), the country could do better on its own as a small European
country (economic argument), to make its own decisions about social policy like migration. Finally,
Scotland voted “No.” When the results were announced, Scotland’s First Minister Alex Salmond
(2007–2014) called for unity and urged the unionist parties to deliver on more powers, and David
Cameron (British PM 2010-2016) said he was delighted the UK would remain together. On 13
October 2014, the parties published proposals on further devolution for Scotland.308 In 2016, Nicola
Sturgeon, the new First Minister of Scotland (2014–), hinted the possibility of holding a second
referendum, but in 2019, Boris Johnson, British Prime Minister refused on the grounds that the 2014
referendum was a “once in a generation opportunity. However, in March 2021, Sturgeon told
Johnson that a second independence referendum was “a matter of when – not if and it is about to
2. Brexit (2016–2020)
The term ‘Brexit’ (British + exit) refers to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern
Ireland leaving the European Union on 31 January 2020. The EU is an economic and political union
involving 28 European countries. It allows free trade and free movement of people, to live and work
in whichever country they choose. The UK joined it in 1973 (when it was known as the European
Economic Community). UK is the first member state who withdrew from the EU.
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Immigration – in 2019 there were approximately 6.2 million people with non-British nationality
living in the UK, and 9.5 million people who were born abroad. It led to the loss of employment and
employment opportunity.
As a consequence, a public vote/referendum was held on 23 June 2016, to decide whether the
UK should leave or remain. Leave won by 52% to 48%. The referendum turnout was very high at
72%, with more than 30 million people voting. After the referendum David Cameron, resigned from
his PM position. The new Prime Minister, Theresa May (2016–2019) also resigned after her Brexit
deal was rejected three times, and she was replaced by the new Prime Minister, Boris Johnson (2019–
). The Parliament rejected Theresa May’s Brexit deal due to the ‘backstop.’ This was designed to
ensure there would be no border posts or barriers between Northern Ireland and the Republic of
Ireland after Brexit. If it had been needed, the backstop would have kept the UK in a close trading
relationship with the EU and avoided checks altogether. But many MPs were critical. They said if the
backstop was used, the UK could be trapped in it for years. This would prevent the country from
striking trade deals with other countries. The backstop has been replaced with new customs
arrangements so that the UK would be able to sign and implement its own trade agreements with
countries around the world. It effectively creates a customs and regulatory border between Northern
Ireland and Great Britain. This means some goods entering Northern Ireland from Great Britain would
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The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is a constitutional monarchy, or
parliamentary system, and is divided into legislative, executive and judicial branches. The monarch
is head of state and has a role on some executive and legislative levels. He reigns with the support of
Parliament, and he is officially the head of all 3 branches of the constitution mentioned above:
Parliament that makes law, Government that executes law and puts them into effect, and Law Courts
There have been few upheavals in the British constitutional system since 1688. Rather,
existing constitutional principles have been pragmatically adapted to new conditions. Britain has no
written constitution contained in any one document. Instead, the constitution consists of statute law
(Acts of Parliament); common law (judge-made law); conventions (principles and practices of
government that are not legally binding but have the force of law); some ancient documents like
These constitutional elements are said to be flexible enough to respond quickly to new
conditions. National law and institutions can be created or changed by the Westminster Parliament
through Acts of Parliament. The common law can be extended by the judges, and conventions can be
Commons and formally the monarch) possesses supreme legislative power in most UK matters.
a. The House of Commons: members of parliament (MP) elected in 650 constituencies. The Prime
Minister, the head of the government is also an MP. Functions of the Prime Minister: leading the
majority party, running the government, appointing Cabinet ministers and other ministers,
representing the nation in political matters. He is advised by the Cabinet. Since the 18th century the
cabinet has been increasingly responsible for deciding policies and controlling, coordinating
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government administration. It meets in private and its discussions are secret. The Cabinet, with about
b. The House of Lords: members are not elected and do not get salary; 70% of them are ‘hereditary
peers’ that is their fathers were peers before them; 30% of them are ‘life peers’ whom the Queen
appointed.
The sovereigns’ duties include: opening and closing Parliament, approving the appointment
of the Prime Minister, giving her Royal Assent to bills, giving hours such as peerages, knighthoods
and medals, Head of the Commonwealth, Head of the Church of England, Commander-in-Chief of
the armed forces. Officially, the monarch is: “By the Grace of God of the United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Northern Ireland and of His other Realms and Territories, King, Head of
the Commonwealth, Defender of the Faith, to whom we do acknowledge all Faith and
Obedience with humble Affection; beseeching God by whom Kings and Queens do reign to bless
His Majesty with long and happy Years to reign over us.
Etiquette (e.g., Beaumont Etiquette) is an essential part of the Royal family’s everyday life.
They represent themselves all the time thus the proper manner and speech is highly expected from
them. Training begins when members of the royal family are very young. A few important rules:
They must greet the King in a specific way: “For men this is a neck bow (from the head
only) whilst women do a small curtsy. Other people prefer simply to shake hands in the usual way
… When addressing the King, the correct formal way to do so is by calling him ‘Your Majesty’.
Children must play outside on a daily basis: children in the royal family follow a very strict
They must dress appropriately at all times: to dress modestly and smartly for all occasions.
“Young male members of the royal family must only wear shorts until they reach the age of eight.
Royal women, meanwhile, should not wear tights and always wear hats to formal events unless it’s
after 6pm, at which point, tiaras are required. Coats must stay on in public and bright nail polish
should be avoided. Additionally, skirts should not be above the knee. Royal family members are also
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all reportedly always required to take a black outfit with them when travelling overseas in case of a
death.”
They avoid certain foods: members of the royal family should not eat shellfish when they
They cannot go to bed before the King: Princes Diana broke this rule once in the era of
Queen Elizabeth.
They must sit in a certain way: “royal women must not sit with their legs crossed at the
knee. Instead, they are advised to keep their knees together and cross their ankles, a pose
known as “the duchess slant” given how the Duchess of Cambridge often sits like this in
They must walk behind the King: “Whenever the royal family is part of a procession, they
No politics allowed: Members of the royal family are not allowed to vote or even publicly
Two heirs cannot fly together: in case something tragic were to happen. Once Prince
George (who is third in line to the throne after Prince Charles (actual king) and Prince
William) turns 12, he will have to fly separately from his father, Prince William.
Royal wedding bouquets contain myrtle. This tradition started with Queen Victoria and
continued with the Duchess of Cambridge’s marriage in 2011. This flower symbolizes
1 Some rules that the king/queen must follow / rules she has changed:
The King/Queen signals when a conversation is over: when Her Majesty moves her purse
from her left arm to her right that apparently signals to her staff that she is ready to move
on to other conversation.
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A Queen cannot enter the army. Queen Elizabeth II was the first female member of the
royal family to break the “men only” rule in the military. In 1945, still as a princess, she joined
The King/Queen should not visit funerals: not to be seen in difficult times.
Until the 1970s, the monarch should not meet his/her people. Elizabeth II was the first
• 2019: Prince Andrew, Queen Elizabeth’s second son and the ex-husband of Sarah Ferguson
(the Duchess of York) served as the UK’s trade envoy from 2001 through 2011, when he stepped
down due to mounting criticism over some of his personal relationships. Namely, he was close friends
with American financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Virginia Roberts, accused
Epstein of forcing her to have sex with the prince when she was just 17 years old, back in 2001. Prince
• 2020: Harry and Markle announced they become ‘senior’ members of the Royal Family:
work and live in America to become financially independent, while continuing to fully support Her
Majesty.
• 9 April 2021: Prince Philip (husband of Queen Elizabeth and Duke of Edinburgh) died in
England
• 8 September 2022 : Elizabeth II, queen of United Kingdom, died in Balmoral Castle,
Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II on September 8, 2022, Prince Charles became
Charles III, king of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Charles III. He was
born November 14, 1948, Buckingham Palace, London, England), king from September 8, 2022. He
is the eldest child of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, duke of Edinburgh.
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On July 29, 1981, Charles married Lady Diana Frances Spencer, daughter of the 8th Earl
Spencer. The royal wedding was a global media event, broadcast live on television and watched by
hundreds of millions of people; following the ceremony, she took the title princess of Wales. The
couple’s first child, Prince William of Wales, became at his birth (June 21, 1982) second in line of
succession to the throne. Their second child, Prince Henry Charles Albert David (known as Harry),
Charles’s marriage to Diana gradually grew strained amid intense scrutiny from the tabloid
press and rumours of infidelity. On December 9, 1992, it was announced that Charles and Diana
had decided to separate but would continue to fulfill their public duties and to share the responsibility
of raising their sons. The couple divorced on August 28, 1996. A year later Diana died in an auto
accident, and popular feeling for her, stronger even in death than in life, served to jeopardize the
traditional form of monarchy that Charles represented. He subsequently spent much effort in
modernizing his public image as the heir apparent. On April 9, 2005, he married Camilla Parker
Bowles (born 1947), with whom he had a long-standing relationship; after the wedding, Parker
The new era with Charles (King Charles III – Sep 2022) as king is beginning to feel more
real. At 73, he is the oldest British monarch to take the throne. During his inaugural address, however,
he pointed out that he has long been serving his country. Catch up on the charities and issues to which
Charles delivered his inaugural address on September 9, 2022. In the televised speech he paid
tribute to his mother’s life and pledged “throughout the remaining time God grants me, to uphold the
Constitutional principles at the heart of our nation.” In addition, he conferred the title prince of Wales
upon his eldest son, William. Also on September 9 Charles met with Prime Minister Liz Truss at
Buckingham Palace.
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XI British Culture
In England the terms ‘British’ and ‘English’ are virtually interchangeable. Venture into Wales
shot down. Here they’re Welsh or Scots, rarely British. Mistakenly calling someone English will
induce a weary sigh, or worse. The old English hegemony over Celtic neighbours has fostered a strong
sense of identity in the smaller nations. They happily display the Welsh dragon or the Scottish saltire,
and the rest of the world admires their national pride. Doing the same in England with the cross of St
George – or even the Union Jack with its whiff of old colonialism and, from the 1980s, its association
with right-wing groups – can bring accusations of jingoism. In England, if pushed to consider their
collective identity, people are perhaps as likely to think of a region as a nation. Cornwall, Yorkshire,
the North East and the North West all have strong personalities, while the wider north/south split
cuts a distinct, usually amicable divide. Urban Britain –London especially – can feel like a different
country to pastoral areas, and some still define themselves in terms of ‘town or country’.
Of course there is no archetypal British personality, no set character to which they all conform.
The media is convinced that there used to be, and discusses the collapse of British values at length:
boozed up, greedy, oversexed, rude and thuggish – the country’s going to the dogs. Obviously, they
exaggerate: the quiet majority slip under the radar and the loud minority are mistaken for the norm.
While there is no consensus on character, most Brits share some common ground. Tolerance remains
a key ingredient.
The multi-dimensional nature of British society, with its mix of ethnicity, race and religion,
speaks of its open-mindedness, as does the proportion (over three quarters) of first generation
In a similar vein, the British won’t tolerate queue jumping, argue for hours about why they,
not their companion, should pay for a round of drinks and have a weakness for the underdog. This
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sense of democracy, a quiet dignity (the old stiff upper lip) and the intolerance of corruption are
perhaps best summed up by the rather woolly sense of ‘fair play’. For all that, it’s worth noting that
open-mindedness, particularly where race is concerned, may ebb somewhat behind closed doors –
public persona and private opinion in Britain (like anywhere else) don’t always tally. Most Brits are
still embarrassed by self-promotion (although bashfulness seems to subside as you travel north) and
overt displays of emotion, hiding instead behind a cynical and self-depreciatory, yet rather smug,
brand of humour.
England’s contribution to both British and world culture is too vast for anything but a cursory
survey here. Historically, England was a very homogeneous country and developed coherent
traditions, but, especially as the British Empire expanded and the country absorbed peoples from
throughout the globe, English culture has been accented with diverse contributions from Afro-
Caribbeans, Asians, Muslims, and other immigrant groups. Other parts of the United Kingdom have
experienced the same social and cultural diversification, with the result that England is not always
distinguishable from Wales and Scotland or even Northern Ireland. The former insularity of English
life has been replaced by a cosmopolitan familiarity with all things exotic: fish and chips have given
way to Indian, Chinese, and Italian cuisine, guitar-based rock blends with South Asian rap and Afro-
Caribbean salsa, and the English language itself abounds in neologisms drawn from nearly every one
Even as England has become ever more diverse culturally, it continues to exert a strong cultural
influence on the rest of the world. English music, film, and literature enjoy wide audiences overseas,
and the English language has gained ever-increasing currency as the preferred international medium
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Historically, English daily life and customs were markedly different in urban and rural areas.
Indeed, much of English literature and popular culture has explored the tension between town and
country and between farm and factory. Today, even though the English are among the world’s most
cosmopolitan and well-traveled people, ties to the rural past remain strong. Urbanites, for example,
commonly retire to villages and country cottages, and even the smallest urban dwelling is likely to
have a garden.
Another divide, though one that is fast disappearing, is the rigid class system that long made
and education. Significant changes have accompanied the decline of the class system, which also had
reinforced distinctions between town and country and between the less affluent north of England and
the country’s wealthy south. For example, whereas in decades past English radio was renowned for
its “proper” language, the country’s airwaves now carry accents from every corner of the country and
its former empire, and the wealthy are likely to enjoy the same elements of popular culture as the less
advantaged.
Many holidays in England, such as Christmas, are celebrated throughout the world, though
the traditional English Christmas is less a commercial event than an opportunity for singing and
feasting. Remembrance Day (November 11) honours British soldiers who died in World War I. Other
remembrances are unique to England and are nearly inexplicable to outsiders. For example, Guy
Fawkes Night (November 5) commemorates a Roman Catholic conspiracy to blow up the Houses of
Parliament in 1605, and Saint George’s Day (April 23) honours England’s patron saint—though the
holiday is barely celebrated at all in England, in marked contrast to the celebrations in Wales,
Scotland, and Ireland for their respective patron saints. Indeed, the lack of official celebration for
Saint George contributes to the ambiguity of “Englishness” and whether it can now be distinguished
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from “Britishness.” The monarch’s official birthday is also observed nationally and commemorated
in the summer by a military parade called Trooping the Colour, which has been celebrated since the
18th century.
English cuisine has traditionally been based on beef, lamb, pork, chicken, and fish, all cooked
with the minimum of embellishment and generally served with potatoes and one other vegetable—
or, in the case of fish (most commonly cod or haddock) deep-fried in batter and served with deep-
fried potato slices (chips). Fish and chips, traditionally wrapped in old newspapers to keep warm on
the journey home, has long been one of England’s most popular carryout dishes. By convention, at
least for middle-income households, the main family meal of the week was the “Sunday joint,” when
a substantial piece of beef, lamb, or pork was roasted in the oven during the morning and served
around midday. In the 1950s and ’60s, however, these traditions started to change. Immigrants from
India and Hong Kong arrived with their own distinctive cuisine, and Indian and Chinese restaurants
became a familiar sight in every part of England. By the 1980s, American-style fast-food restaurants
dotted the landscape, and the rapid post-World War II growth of holiday travel to Europe, particularly
to France, Spain, Greece, and Italy, exposed the English to new foods, flavours, and ingredients, many
of which found their way into a new generation of recipe books that filled the shelves of the typical
English kitchen.
Scotland’s culture and customs remain remarkably vigorous and distinctive despite the country’s
union with the United Kingdom since the early 18th century and the threat of dominance by its more
powerful partner to the south. Its strength springs in part from the diverse strands that make up its
background, including European mainstream cultures. It has also been enriched by contacts with
Europe, owing to the mobility of the Scottish people since the Middle Ages and the hospitality of
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Although bagpipes have ancient origins elsewhere and are found throughout the world,
they are one of the most recognized symbols of Scottish culture. By the 16th century, various clans
had established hereditary pipers, and later the instrument was used in wartime to inflame the passions
of soldiers in battle. The form of the kilt, Scotland’s national costume, has evolved since the
emigration of Scots from Ireland. The modern kilt, with its tartan pattern, became common in the
18th century and served an important role in the formation of a Scottish national identity. Knits from
Fair Isle, with their distinctive designs woven from the fine wool of Shetland sheep, are also world
famous.
One traditional local custom is the ceilidh (visit), a social occasion that includes music and
storytelling. Once common throughout the country, the ceilidh is now a largely rural institution.
Sports such as tossing the caber (a heavy pole) and the hammer throw are integral to the Highland
games, a spectacle that originated in the 19th century; the games are accompanied by pipe bands and
(usually solo) performances by Highland dancers. Other traditions include Burns suppers (honouring
poet Robert Burns), which often feature haggis (a delicacy traditionally consisting of offal and suet
boiled with oatmeal in a sheep’s stomach) and cock-a-leekie (chicken stewed with leeks). Many Scots
consider these games and traditions to be a self-conscious display of legendary characteristics that
have little to do with ordinary Scottish life—a show put on, like national costumes, to gratify the
expectations of tourists and encouraged by the royal family’s annual appearance at the Braemar
Gathering near Balmoral Castle. Scottish country dancing, however, is a pastime whose popularity
Food and drink have played a central role in Scotland’s heritage. In addition to haggis,
Scotland is known for its Angus beef, porridge, stovies (a potato-rich stew), shortbreads, scones,
cheese (Bishop, Kennedy, Caboc, Lanark Blue), toffee, and game dishes (e.g., salmon, venison, and
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grouse). The term whisky is derived from the Gaelic uisge-beatha, meaning “water of life.” Historical
references to whisky date from the late 15th century, though its popularity in the country probably
goes back even farther. Indeed, throughout Scotland private distilleries proliferated in the 17th
century, which led the Scottish Parliament to impose a tax on whisky production in 1644. Today
Cultural life in Northern Ireland tends to follow the contours of political and sectarian differences and
to be marked by any number of shibboleths. For example, Roman Catholics and Protestants may
listen to the same song but call it by different names; however, age, gender, and class play at least as
large a role as religion in explaining many variations in music, drinking, and social life. Although
there is a shared participation in global culture, such as Hollywood movies, football (soccer), and
popular music, both the nationalist and unionist communities maintain their own cultural practices.
Irish music and dance and the Gaelic games (football and hurling) form a cultural focus in nationalist
communities, along with an interest in the Irish language that has led to the establishment of a network
have not been successful, and cultural life has been more influenced by trends in the rest of the United
Kingdom. Much cultural activity in Protestant working-class communities has centred on the Orange
Order and the tradition of marching bands. Both communities have produced internationally known
writers, poets, actors, and musicians, many of whom have spoken out forcefully against sectarian
violence. Government, through its various agencies, takes a keen interest in promoting cultural
practices that transcend sectarian divisions. Cultural life in Northern Ireland tends to be public and
oral. Outsiders are struck by the lively social life, the importance of conversation and the witty
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Northern Ireland is in many ways a traditional society. Church attendance is high (but steadily
declining), family life is central, and community ties are strong. The daily interactions of most people
are confined to members of their own community, whether in urban neighbourhoods or country
villages. Dancing, music, and cultural and community festivals proliferate in Catholic communities,
particularly in the months following St. Patrick’s Day (March 17). Easter and the ancient Celtic
Halloween are celebrated by both communities, albeit separately. Poitín (illegal homemade whiskey)
The centrepiece of Protestant celebrations is the marching season commemorating the Battle
of the Boyne, which marks William III’s victory in 1690 over the deposed Catholic king James II. A
colourful, boisterous tradition, the marches begin about Easter and reach a climax on July 12. They
often wind their way into now majority-Catholic communities, and, because of their political
overtones, the marches have engendered significant hostility from the Catholic community and
regularly embroil the British government in political controversy. Violent clashes between Protestants
interactions between people, particularly those with strangers in public places. Public space is
generally defined as Catholic, Protestant, or mixed—by far the smallest category—and forays across
sectarian boundaries are often avoided. Apart from some middle-class and student areas, most
neighbourhoods are religiously homogeneous and are often defined by “peace walls,” which separate
the two communities. These walls are festooned with lively murals and graffiti that represent some
of the country’s most visible public art. It is in areas where boundaries are fluid and contested and
where poverty and deprivation abound, such as North Belfast, that most sectarian conflict occurs. In
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rural areas there is little direct confrontation, but the bitterness remains; indeed, some of the worst
As primary and secondary school education remains predominantly parochial, there is little
contact between Catholic and Protestant children. The schools became a focal point for attacks,
especially against Catholic children on their way to and from school in North Belfast. Those attacks
attest to the continued deep sectarian divisions that pervade daily life in Northern Ireland.
6. Literature
Best of British Of all the arts, none has contributed more to Britain’s cultural identity than
literature. The last 200 years have been particularly bounteous. The novel, still relatively young as a
literary device, relentlessly breeds great British writers. Scott, Austen, Dickens, Woolf, Orwell,
McEwan: the list is long and rich. Of course, the roots of British literature lie much further back, in a
poetic tradition that reaches from Chaucer through Milton and Burns and on to Motion, with language
and style shaped by different eras. These days, verse has a limited audience, even while a number of
excellent poets continue to publish. Consistently, throughout its journey, British literature has drawn
on wide, exotic influences, from the Scandinavian lore of Anglo-Saxon poem Beowulf to the
British fiction has maintained its variety into the 21st century. Drug culture, ethnicity, science
fiction, fantasy, religion, crime, history: whatever your bag, someone will be writing it and writing it
well. For sheer weight of books sold, no one of late has come close to J.K. Rowling, author of the
Harry Potter series that held children and adults alike rapt until their conclusion in 2007 with Harry
Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Other publishing success stories have burned more slowly; witness
Louis de Bernières’ Captain Corelli’s Mandolin (1993), which showed how ‘literature’ could still
find a wide, popular audience. Any list of great contemporary British writers will also feature (may
even be topped by) Ian McEwan. He describes shocking life-changing incidents before dissecting the
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fallout in eloquent prose. Scottish author Iain Banks has carved a similarly peerless niche with
imaginative, satirical anti-heroes, while countryman Irvine Welsh has waded through Scottish social
murk in the likes of Trainspotting (1993). Zadie Smith (White Teeth (2000) and Monica Ali (Brick
Lane (2003)) both explored multicultural London with brilliant, human stories. Others have poked
around in history for their humanity: Pat Barker (Regeneration Trilogy (1991-95)) and Sebastian
Faulks (Birdsong (1993)) used the First World War, while Sarah Waters plundered a seamy Victorian
London for the crime novel Fingersmith (2002), connecting with a huge readership.
The Amber Spyglass (2000) Philip Pullman. Pullman’s final instalment of His Dark Materials, the
Atonement (2001) Ian McEwan. A teenage crush kick-starts a contemporary classic spanning seven
decades.
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time (2004) Mark Haddon. The narrator, a child
On Beauty (2005) Zadie Smith. Race, class and infidelity through the eyes of two conflicting
Labyrinth (2005) Kate Mosse. An adventure story that divides its time between modern day and
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Bibliography
Asimov, Isaac. The Birth of the United States, 1763-1816, Houghton Mifflin Company, 1974.
Curran, Cynthia. "Private women, public needs: middle-class widows in Victorian England."
Perkin, Herold. The Origins of Modern English Society, Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2005.
Pugh, Martin. We Danced All Night. A Social History of Britain Between the Wars. Vintage
Books, 2013.
Sheerin, Susan, Seath Jonathan, and Gillian White. Spotlight on Britain. Oxford University
Press, 1990.
Somai, Miklós, and Zsuzsanna Biedermann. "Brexit: Reasons and challenges." Acta
Ward, Harry M. The War for Independence and the Transformation of American
Webliography
https://www.britannica.com
https://www.historic-uk.com/HistoryUK/HistoryofBritain/Timeline-Of-The-British-Empire/
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