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Typology: Summaries
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FOR LEARNERS OF E NG L I S H
James O ’Driscoll
FOR LEARNERS OF E NGL I S H
O X FO R D
Contents
Introduction
01 Country and people Geographically speaking • P olitically speaking The fo u r nations • The dom inance o f England N ational loyalties
02 History (^) 15 Prehistory • The Roman period (4 3 -4 1 0 ) • The Germanic invasions (410-1066) • The medieval period (1 0 6 6 -1 4 5 8 ) • The sixteenth century • The seventeenth century • The eighteenth century - The nineteenth century • The tw entieth century
06 Political life 69
The public a ttitude to politics • The style o f democracy • The constitution • The style o f politics • The party system • The m odern situation
07 The monarchy so The appearance • The reality • The role o f the monarch • The value o f the m onarchy • The future o f the m onarchy
08 The governm ent The cabinet • The Prime M inister service • Local governm ent
The civil
03 Geography (^) 32
C lim ate • Land and settlem ent • The environm ent and pollu tio n • London • Southern England • The M idlands o f England • N orthern England • Scotland • Wales • N orthern Ireland
09 Parliament The atm osphere o f Parliam ent • An M P’s life Parliam entary business • The party system in Parliament • The House o f Lords
04 Identity 43 Ethnic identity: the fo u r nations • O ther ethnic identities • The fam ily • Geographical identity • Class • Men and women • Social and everyday contacts • Religion and politics • Identity in N orthern Ireland • Being British • Personal identity: a sense o f hum our
05 Attitudes 58
Stereotypes and change • English versus British • A m u lticu ltu ra l society • Conservatism • Being different • Love o f nature • Love o f animals • Public-spiritedness and am ateurism • Form ality and in fo rm a lity • Privacy and sex
10 Elections 99 The system • Formal arrangements • The campaign • Polling day and election night • Recent results and the future • M odern issues
11 The law 107 The police and the public • Crime and crim inal procedure • The system o f justice • The legal profession
12 International relations 113 British people and the rest o f the w o rld • The British state and the rest o f the w o rld • Transatlantic relations • European relations • Relations inside Great Britain • Great Britain and N orthern Ireland
13 Religion 121
Politics ■ Anglicanism • C atholicism • O ther conventional C hristian churches • O th e r religions, churches, and religious movements
14 Education 130
Historical background • M odern times: the education debates • Style • School life • Public exams • Education beyond sixteen
15 The econom y and
everyday life
Earning money: w orking life • W o rk organizations Public and private in d u stry • The d is trib u tio n o f w ealth • Using money: finance and investment • Spending money: shopping • Shop opening hours
16 The media 151 The im portance o f the national press • The tw o types o f national newspaper • The characteristics o f the national press: politics • The characteristics o f the national press: sex and scandal • The BBC • Television: organization • Television: style
17 Transport 161 On the road • Public tra n s p o rt in tow ns and cities Public tra n s p o rt between towns and cities • The channel tunnel • A ir and w ater
19 H ousing 173 Houses, n o t flats • Private property and public property • The im portance o f ‘ hom e’ • Individuality and co n fo rm ity • Interiors: the im portance o f cosiness • O w ning and renting • Homelessness • The future
20 Food and drink Eating habits and attitudes • A lcohol • Pubs
Eating o u t
21 Sport and com petition 190 A national passion • The social im portance o fs p o r t • Cricket • Football • Rugby • Anim als in sp o rt • O th e r sports • G am bling
22 The arts The arts in society • The characteristics o f British arts and letters < Theatre and cinema • M usic • W ords • The fine arts
23 Holidays and
special occasions
T raditional seaside holidays • Modern holidays • Christmas • New Year • O th e r notable annual occasions
18 Welfare The benefits system • Social services and charities • The N ational Health Service • The medical profession
shortened to cthe UK’ and in internet and email addresses it is ‘.uk’.
In other contexts, it is referred to as ‘Great Britain’. This, for example,
is the name you hear when a m edal winner steps onto the rostrum at
the Olympic Games. The abbreviation ‘GBP’ (Great Britain Pounds) in
international bank drafts is another example o f the use o f this name.
In writing and speaking th a t is n o t especially form al or informal, the
nam e ‘Britain’ is used. The norm al everyday adjective, when talking
about som ething to do with the UK, is ‘British’ (W h y is B rita in ‘ G r e a t? ).
G re a t B rita in a n d Ire la n d
L o o k in g f o r a n a m e
It’s n o t easy to keep geography and politics apart. Geographically speaking, it is clear th a t Great B ritain, Ireland and all those smaller islands belong together. So you w ould th in k there w ould be a (single) name fo r them. D uring the nineteenth and tw entieth centuries, they were generally called T h e British Isles'. But most people in Ireland and some people in Britain regard this name as outdated because it calls to mind the tim e when Ireland was politica lly dom inated by Britain.
So w hat can we call these islands? Am ong the names which have been used are ‘The north-east A tlantic archipelago’, T h e north-west European archipelago’, cIONA’ (Islands o f the N orth A tlantic) and simply T h e Isles’. But none o f these has become widely accepted.
The m ost com m on term at present is ‘Great B ritain and Ireland’. But even this is not strictly correct. It is n o t correct geographically because it ignores all the sm aller islands. And it is n o t correct politica lly because there are tw o small parts o f the area on the maps w hich have special political arrangements. These are the Channel Islands and the Isle o f M an, w hich are ‘crown dependencies’ and n o t officially p a rt o f the UK. Each has com plete internal self-government, including its own parliam ent and its own tax system. Both are ‘ ruled’ by a Lieutenant G overnor appointed by the British government.
OF GREAT BRITAIN AND NORTHERN IRELAND
REPUBLIC OF IRELAND D u b lin
. 4EIRI-)
L o n d o n
Channel 200km Islands
S o m e h is to r ic a l a n d p o e tic n am es
Albion is a w ord used by poets and songwriters to refer, in different contexts, to England or to Scotland o r to Great Britain as a whole. It comes from a Celtic w ord and was an early Greek and Roman name fo r Great Britain. The Romans associated Great Britain w ith the Latin word ‘albus’, meaning white. The white chalk cliffs around Dover on the English south coast are the first land form ations one sights when crossing the sea from the European mainland.
Britannia is the name th a t the Romans gave to th e ir southern B ritish province (w hich covered, approxim ately, the area o f present-day England and Wales). It is also the name given to the fem ale em bo d im e n t o f B ritain, always shown w earing a helmet and h o ld in g a trid e n t (the symbol o f pow er over the sea), hence the p a trio tic song which begins ‘ Rule B ritannia, B ritannia rule the waves’. The figure o f B ritannia has been on the reverse side o f m any British coins fo r more than 300 years.
The four nations
People often refer to Britain by another name. They call it ‘E ngland5. But this is n o t correct, and its use can make some people angry. England is only one o f ‘the four n atio n s’ in this p a rt o f the world. The others are Scotland, Wales, and Ireland. Their political unification was a gradual process th a t took several h u n d red years (see chapter 2). It was com pleted in 1800 when the Irish parliam ent was joined w ith the parliam ent for England, Scotland, and Wales in W estminster, so th a t the whole area became a single state - the U nited Kingdom o f G reat Britain and Ireland. However, in 1922, m ost o f Ireland became a separate state (see chapter 12).
At one time, culture and lifestyle varied enorm ously across the four nations. The d o m in an t culture o f people in Ireland, Wales and H ighland Scotland was Celtic; th a t o f people in England and Lowland Scotland was Germanic. This difference was reflected in the languages they spoke. People in the Celtic areas spoke Celtic languages; people in the G erm anic areas spoke G erm anic dialects (including the one which has developed into m odern English). The nations also tended to have different economic, social, and legal systems, and they were independent o f each other.
O t h e r sig n s o f n a tio n a l id e n tity
Briton is a w o rd used in o fficial contexts and in w ritin g to describe a citizen o f the U nited K ingdom. ‘A ncient B rito n s’ is the name given to the people w ho lived in southern B ritain before and d u rin g the Roman o ccu p a tio n (AD 4 3 -4 1 0 ). T h e ir heirs are th o u g h t to be the Welsh and th e ir language has developed in to the m odern Welsh language.
Caledonia, Cam bria and Hibernia were the Roman names fo r S cotland, W ales and Ireland respectively. The w ords are co m m o n ly used to d a y in scholarly classifications (fo r example, the type o f English used in Ireland is som etim es called ‘ H iberno- English’ and there is a division o f geological tim e know n as ‘the C am brian p e rio d ’ ) and fo r the names o f organizations (fo r example, ‘Glasgow C a le donian’ U niversity).
Erin is a poetic name fo r Ireland. The Emerald Isle is a n o th e r way o f referring to Ireland, evoking the lush greenery o f its countryside.
John Bull (see below) is a fictional character w ho is supposed to personify Englishness and certain English virtues. (He can be compared to Uncle Sam in the USA.) He appears in hundreds o f nineteenth century cartoons. Today, somebody dressed as him often appears at football o r rugby matches when England are playing. His appearance is typical o f an eighteenth century country gentleman, evoking an idyllic rural past (see chapter 5).
P op u latio n s in 2 0 0 6
Scotland N orthern Ireland
©
Wales England
(figures in m illions)
UK Total
These figures are estimates provided by the Office fo r N ational Statistics (England and Wales), the General Register Office fo r Scotland and the N orthern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency. In the tw enty-first century, the to ta l population o f Britain has risen by about a quarter o f a m illion each year.
M u s ic a l in s tru m e n ts
The harp is an em blem o f both Wales and Ireland. Bagpipes are regarded as d istinctively S cottish, although a sm aller type is also used in tra d itio n a l Irish music.
The dom inance o f England
There is, perhaps, an excuse for the people who use the word ‘E ngland’ when they m ean ‘B ritain’. It cannot be denied th a t the d o m in an t culture o f Britain today is specifically English. The system o f politics th a t is used in all four nations today is o f English origin, and English is the m ain language o f all four nations. Many aspects o f everyday life are organized according to English custom and practice. But the political unification o f B ritain was n o t achieved by m u tu al agreem ent. O n the contrary, it happened because England was able to assert her econom ic and m ilitary power over the other three nations (see chapter 2).
Today, English d o m ination can be detected in the way in which various aspects o f British public life are described. For example, the supply o f m oney in B ritain is controlled by the Bank o f England (there is no such th in g as a ‘Bank o f B ritain’). A nother example is the nam e o f the present m onarch. She is universally know n as ‘Elizabeth II’, even th o u g h Scotland and N o rth e rn Ireland have never had an ‘Elizabeth I’. (Elizabeth I o f England and Wales ruled from 1553 to 1603). The com m on use o f the term ‘A nglo’ is a fu rth er indication. (The Angles were a G erm anic tribe who settled in England in the fifth century. The word ‘E ngland’ is derived from their name.) W hen newspapers and the television news talk ab o u t ‘Anglo-American relations’, they are talking ab o u t relations between the governm ents o f B ritain and the USA (and no t ju st England and the USA).
In addition, there is a tendency in the names o f publications and organizations to portray England as the norm and other parts o f Britain as special cases. Thus there is a specialist newspaper called
the Times Educational Supplement, b u t also a version o f it called the
Times Educational Supplement (Scotland). Similarly, the um brella
organization for employees is called the ‘Trades U nion C ongress’,
b u t there is also a ‘Scottish Trades U nion C ongress’. W hen
som ething pertains to England, this fact is often n o t specified in
its name; when it pertains to Wales, Scotland or N o rth ern Ireland,
it always is. In this way, these parts o f B ritain are presented as
som ething ‘o th e r’.
N ational loyalties
The dom inance o f England can also be detected in the way th a t many
English people don’t bother to distinguish between ‘Britain’ and ‘England’. They write ‘English’ next to ‘nationality’ on forms when they are abroad and talk about places like Edinburgh as if it was p art o f England.
Nevertheless, when you are talking to people from Britain, it is safest to use ‘B ritain’ when talking ab o u t where they live and ‘B ritish’ as the adjective to describe their nationality. This way you will be less likely to offend anyone. It is, o f course, n o t w rong to talk ab o u t ‘people in England’ if th a t is w hat you m ean - people who live w ithin the geographical boundaries o f England. After all, m ost British people live there ( P o p u la tio n s in 2 0 0 6 ). But it should always be rem em bered th a t England does n o t make up the whole o f the UK (C a re fu l w ith t h a t a d d re s s !).
C a re fu l w it h t h a t a d d re s s!
W hen you are addressing a letter to somewhere in B ritain, do n o t w rite anything like ‘ Edinburgh, England’ o r ‘ C ardiff, England’. You should w rite ‘ Edinburgh, S cotland’ and ‘ C ardiff, W ales’
T h e p e o p le o f B rita in
% o f UK population in 2001
w hite other
Asian Indian
Asian Pakistani
mixed ethnicity
w hite Irish
black Caribbean
black African black Bangladeshi Chinese Asian other
One o fth e questions in the 2001 census o fth e UK was ‘W hat is your ethnic group?’ and the categories above were offered as choices. Here are some o fth e results, listed in order o f size.
As you can see, ab o u t one in nine people identified themselves as som ething oth e r than ‘w hite B ritish’. The largest category was ‘w hite o th e r’, b u t these people were from a variety o f places and m any were only tem porarily resident in Britain. As a result, they do n o t form a single identifiable com m unity. (For these and oth e r reasons, the same is largely true o f those in the w hite Irish and black African categories.) By fa r the largest recognizable ethnic grouping was form ed by people whose ethnic roots are in the Indian subcontinent (Indian, Pakistani and Bangladeshi in the ch a rt); together they made up more than tw o m illion people. The other established, recognizable ethnic group in Britain were black Caribbeans (a little over h a lf a m illion people).
W h a t this ch a rt does n o t show are all the people w ho came to Britain from eastern Europe (especially Poland) in the years 2004-2007. T h e ir numbers, estimated between three quarters o f a m illion and one m illio n , represent the largest single wave o f im m igration to Britain in more than 300 years. However, it is n o t clear at this tim e how many w ill set up home in Britain.
A nother p o in t about the people o f Britain is w o rth noting. Since the 1980s, more people im m igrate to Britain than emigrate from it every year. A quarter o f all babies born in Britain are born to at least one foreign-born parent. A t the same tim e, emigration is also very high. The people o f Britain are changing.
02
Prehistory
Two th o u san d years ago there was an Iron Age Celtic culture/ o o> th ro u g h o u t the north-w est E uropean islands. It seems th a t the Celts had interm ingled w ith the peoples who were there already; we know th a t religious sites th a t h ad been b uilt long before their arrival continued to be used in Celtic times.
For people in B ritain today, the chief significance o f the prehistoric period is its sense o f mystery. This sense finds its focus m ost easily in the astonishing m onum ental architecture o f this period, the rem ains o f which exist th ro u g h o u t the country. W iltshire, in so u th w estern England, has two spectacular examples: Silbury Hill, the largest burial m o u n d in Europe, and Stonehenge (S to n e h e n g e ). Such places have a special im portance for some people with inclinations towards mysticism and esoteric religion. For example, we know th a t Celtic society had a priestly caste called the D ruids. Their nam e survives today in the O rder o f Bards, Ovates, and Druids.
History
S to n e h e n g e
Stonehenge was b u ilt on Salisbury Plain some tim e between 5, and 4,300 years ago. It is one o f the m ost fam ous and mysterious archaeological sites in the w orld. One o f its mysteries is how it was ever b u ilt at all w ith the technology o fth e tim e (some o f the stones come from over 200 miles away in Wales). A nother is its purpose. It appears to function as a kind o f astronomical clock and we know it was used by the Druids fo r ceremonies marking the passing o f the seasons. It has always exerted a fascination on the British im agination, and appears in a number o f novels,
These days, it is n o t only o f interest to tourists b u t is also held in special esteem by certain m inority groups. It is now fenced o ff to protect it from damage.
H a d r ia n ’ s W a ll
H adrian’s Wall was b u ilt by the Romans in the second century across the northern border o f their province o f Britannia (which is nearly the same as the present English-Scottish border) in order to protect it from attacks by the Scots and the Piets.
The Rom an period (43-410)
The Roman province o f Britannia covered m ost o f present-day England and Wales, where the Romans im posed their own way o f life and culture, m aking use o f the existing Celtic aristocracy to govern and encouraging them to adopt Rom an dress and the Latin language. They never went to Ireland and exerted an influence, w ithout actually governing there, over only the so uthern p art o f Scotland. It was during this tim e th a t a Celtic tribe called the Scots m igrated from Ireland to Scotland, where, along with another tribe, the Piets, they became opponents o f the Romans. This division o f the Celts into those who experienced Roman rule (the Britons in England and Wales) and those who did n o t (the Gaels in Ireland and Scotland) may help to explain the emergence o f two distinct branches o f the Celtic group o f languages.
The remarkable thing about the Romans is that, despite their long occupation o f Britain, they left very little behind. To many other parts o f Europe they bequeathed a system o f law and adm inistration which forms the basis o f the m odern system and a language which developed into the m odern Romance family o f languages. In Britain, they left neither. Moreover, m ost o f their villas, baths and temples, their impressive network o f roads, and the cities they founded, including Londinium (London), were soon destroyed or fell into disrepair. Almost the only lasting reminders o f their presence are place names like Chester, Lancaster and Gloucester, which include variants o f the Latin word castra (a military camp).
The Germanic invasions (410-1066)
The Roman occupation had been a m atter o f colonial control rather th an large-scale settlement. But during the fifth century, a num ber o f tribes from the European m ainland invaded and settled in large numbers. Two o f these tribes were the Angles and the Saxons. These Anglo-Saxons soon had the south-east o f the country in their grasp. In the west, their advance was temporarily halted by an army o f (Celtic) Britons under the com m and o f the legendary King A rthur (K in g A rth u r ). Nevertheless, by the end o f the sixth century, they and their
S om e im p o r t a n t d a te s in B ritis h h is to r y
55 BC
The Roman general Julius Caesar lands in B ritain w ith an expeditionary force, wins a battle and leaves. The firs t ‘date’ in p o p u la r British history.
AD 43
The Romans come to stay.
v/ JL o fth e Iceni tribe leads a bloody revolt against the Roman occupation. It is suppressed. There is a statue o f Boadicea, made in the nineteenth century, outside the Houses o f Parliament, which has helped to keep her m em ory alive.
410
432
The Romans leave B ritain
St. Patrick converts Ireland to Christianity.
St. Augustine arrives in 597 B ritain and establishes his headquarters at Canterbury.
K in g A lfre d
King Alfred was n o t only an able w a rrio r b u t also a dedicated scholar (the only English monarch fo r a long tim e afterw ards w ho was able to read and w rite) and a wise ruler. He is known as ‘Alfred the G reat’ - the only monarch in English history to be given this title. He is also popularly known fo r the story o fth e burning o fth e cakes.
W hile he was w andering around his co u n try organizing resistance to the Danish invaders, Alfred travelled in disguise. On one occasion, he stopped at a w o m a n ’s house. The wom an asked him to w atch some cakes th a t were cooking to see th a t they did n o t burn, w hile she w ent o ff to get food. Alfred became lost in th o u g h t and the cakes burned. When the w om an returned, she shouted angrily at Alfred and sent him away. Alfred never to ld her th a t he was her king.
This is the most famous date in English history. On 14 O ctober o f th a t year, an invading army from N orm andy defeated the English at the Battle o f Hastings. The battle was close and extremely bloody. A t the end o f it, m ost o fth e best w arriors in England were dead, including their leader, King Harold. On Christmas day th a t year, the N orm an leader, Duke W illiam o f N orm andy, was crowned king o f England. He is known in popular history as ‘W illiam the C onqueror’ and the date is remembered as the last time th a t England was successfully invaded.
The m edieval period (1066-1458)
The successful N orm an invasion o f England (1066) b ro u g h t B ritain in to the m ainstream o f w estern European culture. Previously, m ost links had been w ith Scandinavia. Only in Scotland did this link survive, the w estern isles (until the 13th century) and the n o rth e rn islands (until the fifteenth century) rem aining u n d er the control o f Scandinavian kings. T h ro u g h o u t this period, the English kings also owned land on the co n tin en t and were often at war w ith the French kings.
Unlike the Germanic invasions, the N orm an invasion was small-scale. There was no such thing as a N orm an area o f settlement. Instead, the N orm an soldiers who had invaded were given the ownership o f land - and o f the people living on it. A strict feudal system was imposed. Great nobles, or barons, were responsible directly to the king; lesser lords, each owning a village, were directly responsible to a baron. Under them were the peasants, tied by a strict system o f m utual duties and obligations to the local lord, and forbidden to travel w ithout his permission. The peasants were the English-speaking Saxons. The lords and the barons were the French-speaking Norm ans. This was the start o f the English class system (L a n g u a g e a n d social class).
The system o f strong governm ent which the N orm ans introduced made the Anglo-N orm an kingdom the m ost powerful political force in Britain and Ireland. N ot surprisingly therefore, the authority o f the English m onarch gradually extended to other parts o f these islands in the next 250 years. By the end o f the th irteen th century, a large p art o f eastern Ireland was controlled by Anglo-Norm an lords in the nam e o f their king and the whole o f Wales was under his direct rule (at which time, the custom o f nam ing the m onarch's eldest son the 'Prince o f Wales’ began). Scotland m anaged to rem ain politically independent in the medieval period, b u t was obliged to fight occasional wars to do so.
The cultural story o f this period is different. In the 250 years after the N orm an Conquest, it was a Germanic language, Middle English, and no t the N orm an (French) language, which had become the dom inant one in all classes o f society in England. Furtherm ore, it was the Anglo-Saxon concept o f com m on law, and not Roman law, which form ed the basis o f the legal system.
1066
The Battle o f Hastings.
O King W illia m ’s l U O O o fficia ls com plete the Dom esday Book, a very detailed, village-by-village record o fth e people and th e ir possessions th ro u g h o u t his kingdom.
1170
The m urder o f Thom as Becket, the Archbishop o f Canterbury, by soldiers o f King Henry II. Becket becomes a p o pular m artyr and his grave is visited by pilgrim s fo r hundreds
Geoffrey Chaucer in the fourteenth century, recounts the stories to ld by a fictional group o f pilgrim s on their way to Canterbury.
1171
The N orm an baron known as Strongbow and his follow ers settle in Ireland.
Despite English rule, n o rthern and central Wales was never settled in
great num bers by Saxons or Normans. As a result, the (Celtic) Welsh
language and culture rem ained strong. Eisteddfods, national festivals
o f Welsh song and poetry, continued th ro u g h o u t the medieval period and still continue today. The Anglo-Norman lords o f Ireland remained loyal to the English king but, despite laws to the contrary, mostly adopted the Gaelic language and customs.
The political independence o f Scotland did not prevent a gradual switch to English language and custom s in the lowland (southern) p art o f the country. Many Anglo-Saxon aristocrats had fled there after the N orm an conquest. In addition, the Celtic kings saw th a t the adoption o f an A nglo-N orm an style o f governm ent would strengthen royal power. By the end o f this period, a cultural split had developed between the lowlands, where the way o f life and language was sim ilar to th a t in England, and the highlands, where Gaelic culture and language prevailed - and where, due to the m ountainous terrain, the au th o rity o f the Scottish king was hard to enforce.
It was in this period th a t Parliam ent began its gradual evolution into the democratic body which it is today. The word ‘parliam ent’, which comes from the French word parler (to speak), was first used in England in the thirteenth century to describe an assembly o f nobles called together by the king.
R o b in H o o d
Robin H ood is a legendary fo lk hero. King Richard I (1 1 8 9 -9 9 ) spent m ost o f his reign fig h tin g in the ‘crusades’ (the wars between C hristians and M uslim s in the M id d le East). M eanw hile, England was governed by his b ro th e rjo h n , w ho was u n p o p u la r because o f all the taxes he im posed. A ccording to legend, Robin H ood lived w ith his band o f ‘ m erry m en’ in Sherw ood Forest outside N o ttin g h a m , stealing from the rich and giving to the poor. He was co nstantly hunted by the local sh e riff (the royal representative) b u t was never captured.
L a n g u a g e a n d s o c ia l class
As an example o f the class d istin ctio ns introduced in to society a fte r the N orm an invasion, people often p o in t to the fa ct th a t m odern English has tw o w ords fo r the larger farm anim als: one fo r the living anim al (cow, pig, sheep) and a n o th e r fo r the anim al you eat (beef, pork, m u tto n ). The fo rm e r set come fro m Anglo-Saxon, the la tte r from the French th a t the N orm ans b ro u g h t to England. O nly the N orm ans n o rm a lly ate m eat; the p o o r Anglo-Saxon peasants did n o t!
agree to the Magna Carta (Latin meaning ‘Great C harter’ ), a docum ent in which the king agrees to fo llo w certain rules o f government. In fact, neitherjohn no r his successors entirely followed them , b u t the Magna C arta is remembered as the first time a m onarch agreed in w riting to abide by form al procedures.
1295
The Model Parliament sets the pattern fo r the future by including elected representatives from urban and rural areas.
the lowlands o f Scotland, it took a more idealistic form. Calvinism,
with its strict insistence on simplicity and its dislike o f ritual and
celebration became the dom inant religion. It is from this date th a t the stereotype image o f the dour, thrifty Scottish developed. However, the highlands rem ained Catholic and so further widened the gu lf between the two parts o f the nation. Ireland also remained Catholic. There, Protestantism was identified with the English, who at th a t tim e were making further attem pts to control the whole o f the country.
H e n ry V III
Henry VIII is one o f the m ost well- known m onarchs in English history, chiefly because he to o k six wives durin g his life. He has the p o p u la r image
in this re p u ta tio n. He was a natural leader b u t n o t really interested in the day-to-day running o f governm ent and this encouraged the beginnings o f a professional bureaucracy. It was d u rin g his reign th a t the reform ation to o k place. In the 1 530s, H enry used P arliam ent to pass laws w hich swept away the pow er o f the Roman Church
in England. However, his quarrel w ith Rome was no th in g to do w ith doctrine. It was because he w anted to be free to m a rry again and to a p p o in t w ho he wished as leaders o fth e church in England. Earlier in the same decade, he had had a law passed w hich dem anded com plete adherence to C atholic b e lie f and practice. He had also previously w ritte n a polem ic against Protestantism , fo r w hich the pope gave
the fa ith ). The initia ls F.D. still appear on British coins today.
E liz a b e th I
Elizabeth I, daughter o f Henry VIII, was the firs t o f three long-reigning queens in British history (the other tw o are Queen V icto ria and Queen Elizabeth II). D uring her long reign she established, by skilful diplom acy, a reasonable degree o f internal stability in a firm ly Protestant England, allow ing the grow th o f a s p irit o f p a triotism and general confidence. She never m arried, b u t used its possibility as a d ip lo m a tic to o l. She became known as ‘ the virgin queen’. The area w hich later became the state o f V irginia in the USA was named a fte r her by one o fth e many English explorers o f the tim e (Sir W a lte r Raleigh).
JLO O O A fleet o f ships sent by the C atholic King Philip o f Spain to help invade England, is defeated by the English navy (w ith the help o f a violent sto rm !).
1603 James VI o f Scotland becomesjames I o f England as well.
A group o f Catholics fail in their a tte m p t to blow up the king in Parliam ent (see chapter 23).
T h e C iv il W a r
T his is rem embered as a contest between a risto cra tic, royalist ‘ C avaliers’ and p u rita n ica l p a rlia m e n ta ria n ‘ R oundheads’ (because o fth e style o f th e ir hair-cuts). The R oundheads were v icto rio u s by 1 645, although the w a r perio d ica lly continued u n til 1 649.
1642 The Civil W ar begins.
W hen James I became the first English king o f the S tuart dynasty, he was already James VI o f Scotland, so th a t the crowns o f these two countries were united. A lthough their governments continued to be separate, their linguistic differences were lessened in this century. The kind o f Middle English spoken in lowland Scotland had developed into a w ritten language known as ‘Scots’. However, the Scottish P rotestant church adopted English rather than Scots bibles. This and the glam our o f the English court where the king now sat caused m odern English to become the w ritten standard in Scotland as well. (Scots gradually became ju st ca dialect’.)
In the seventeenth century, the link between religion and politics became intense. At the start o f the century, some people tried to kill the king because he wasn’t C atholic enough. By the end o f the century, an o th er king had been killed, partly because he seemed too Catholic, and yet another had been forced into exile for the same reason.
This was the context in which, during the century, Parliam ent established its supremacy over the monarchy. Anger grew in the country at the way the S tuart monarchs raised money w ithout, as tradition prescribed, getting the agreem ent o f the House o f Com m ons first. In addition, ideological Protestantism , especially Puritanism , had grown in England. Puritans regarded the luxurious lifestyle o f the king and his followers as immoral. They were also anti-Catholic and suspicious o f the apparent sympathy towards Catholicism o f the Stuart monarchs.
This conflict led to the Civil War (The Civil War), which ended w ith com plete victory for the parliam entary forces. Jam es’s son, Charles I, became the first m onarch in Europe to be executed after a form al trial for crimes against his people. The leader o f the parliam entary army, Oliver Cromwell, became ‘Lord P rotector’ o f a republic w ith a m ilitary governm ent which, after he had brutally crushed resistance in Ireland, effectively encom passed all o f Britain and Ireland.
But by the tim e Cromwell died, he, his system o f governm ent, and the p u ritan ethics th a t went w ith it (theatres and other form s o f am usem ent had been banned) had become so unpo p u lar th a t the executed king’s son was asked to return and become King Charles II.
T h e seventeenth cen tu ry
1 / a / 1 Q Charles I is executed. The Restoration o f i U T y For the firs t and only l U O U the monarchy and the tim e, Britain briefly becomes a republic Anglican religion, and is called ‘the C om m onw ealth’.