英国历史简介

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英国帝国的辉煌历史

英国帝国的辉煌历史

英国帝国的辉煌历史英国帝国,作为一个曾经庞大而强大的帝国,建立了一个令世界瞩目的历史。

从17世纪开始,英国帝国逐渐扩张,统治着全球各个地区,对全球政治、经济和文化产生了深远影响。

本文将回顾英国帝国的辉煌历史,展示其独特的影响力。

一、探索与殖民英国帝国的辉煌历史始于殖民探索。

在16世纪末和17世纪初,英国人开始探索新的海上航线,希望找到通往东方丝绸之路的替代路径。

这导致了加入葡萄牙和荷兰在南美洲、非洲和印度洋地区的殖民探险中。

随着时间的推移,英国帝国逐渐从殖民点到殖民地转变。

英国在北美洲建立了13个殖民地,这些殖民地后来成为独立的美国。

同时,英国还在加勒比海、非洲和印度建立了殖民地,确立了全球经济的霸主地位。

二、工业革命与帝国建立英国的工业革命被视为世界上第一次工业革命,也是英国帝国建立的关键时期。

从18世纪末到19世纪初,英国的工业生产力飞速增长,机器制造业兴起,以煤炭和铁矿石为基础的工业生产迅速扩大。

工业革命为英国提供了巨大的经济实力,支撑起了建立帝国的基础。

英国开始通过战争和外交手段,逐渐将殖民地纳入其帝国版图之中。

此时,英国帝国的领土包括加拿大、印度、非洲、澳大利亚等地,形成了一个真正意义上的全球帝国。

三、经济与文化影响英国帝国的辉煌历史远不仅仅是领土扩张和政治实力的象征,它对全球经济和文化产生了深远影响。

首先,英国帝国成为了全球贸易的主导者。

英国的殖民地不仅为英国提供了大量的原材料,还给英国提供了庞大的市场。

英国通过实行殖民地主义和经济霸权主义,将殖民地视为经济殖民地,获取了巨大的财富和利益。

其次,英国帝国的领土传播了英语和英国文化。

英语成为了全球通用的国际语言,英国文化如乐队音乐、文学作品和体育运动广泛传播。

这使得英国帝国成为全球化时代的文化巨头,并对全球文化发展产生深远影响。

四、帝国解体与遗产英国帝国的辉煌历史,并不是永恒不变的。

随着时间的推移,持续的殖民主义反抗和国内外的政治变革,英国帝国开始解体。

英国历史概况

英国历史概况

英国历史概况英国历史概况1、古代英国历史1.1 早期定居和古不列颠人古不列颠人是早期定居在英国的凯尔特人部落,他们建立了石头圆形纪念物如巨石阵。

1.2 罗马统治时期罗马人征服了不列颠岛,将其纳入罗马帝国,并建立了伦敦等城市。

1.3 盎格鲁-撒克逊时期盎格鲁-撒克逊人从欧洲大陆迁徙到不列颠岛,并建立了各个王国。

1.4 诺曼征服与中世纪诺曼底公爵威廉征服了英格兰,建立了诺曼底王朝,并在英国建立了君主制度。

2、英国中世纪历史2.1 蒂图斯·奥拉斯托斯时代12世纪末,英格兰国王蒂图斯·奥拉斯托斯通过颁布《大宪章》限制了王权。

2.2 百年战争英格兰与法国进行了一系列战争,被称为百年战争,期间发生了许多著名的战役,如克雷西战役和阿金库尔战役。

2.3 玫瑰战争英国内战发生在15世纪末,红玫瑰派和白玫瑰派之间的争斗,最终由都铎王朝的亨利七世结束。

3、英国近代历史3.1 英国宗教改革亨利八世与天主教会发生冲突,推动了英国的宗教改革和建立了英国国教,即英国国教会。

3.2 英国帝国的崛起16世纪末至20世纪初,英国建立了庞大的殖民帝国,包括美洲、非洲、亚洲等地。

3.3 英国工业革命18世纪末至19世纪初,英国经历了工业革命,由农业社会转变为工业社会。

3.4 第一次世界大战英国参与了第一次世界大战,并与其他盟国一起对抗德国和其同盟国。

3.5 第二次世界大战英国在第二次世界大战中与德国作战,并成为欧洲战场上的一个主要盟国。

4、当代英国历史4.1 冷战时期英国在冷战期间与美国一起对抗苏联和其盟友。

4.2 英国加入欧盟1973年,英国成为欧洲经济共同体(即欧盟前身)的成员国。

4.3 英国退欧2016年,英国举行公投决定退出欧盟,成为脱欧的第一个国家。

5、附件:附件1、英国国旗图案附件2、罗马统治时期的伦敦地图6、法律名词及注释:- 伦敦地图:包括了古代伦敦的重要地标和城市布局。

- 脱欧:英国在公投中决定退出欧盟的过程和结果。

英国的历史

英国的历史

英国的历史英国位于欧洲大陆西北部,全球第三大岛屿,历史悠久,有着丰富而迷人的历史文化。

1.史前时代早在1700万年前,英国便已经出现过人类的祖先——原始猿人,随后的石器时代到了公元前2000年左右,人类学的出现使得文明在这个岛上爆发开来。

英国最早的居民是凯尔特人,游牧生活,主要以农业为主要经济来源。

这一时期,他们在工艺上也取得了很大的进步,建造了大量的古堡和石圈遗迹,最有名的是英国南部的史东赫奇和威尔特希尔。

2.罗马时代公元43年,罗马开始入侵不列颠岛,并于47年征服了西南部。

不列颠岛成为罗马帝国的一个省。

罗马统治期间,英国的农业和手工业蓬勃发展,重要城市如伦敦、曼彻斯特、坎特伯雷等都在这个时期建立,这些城市的城墙更是使他们保持了长期的繁荣。

到4世纪,随着罗马内外部经济和政治危机的加剧,罗马逐渐退出不列颠岛。

3.盎格鲁-撒克逊时期5世纪初,日耳曼族盎格鲁-撒克逊人开始入侵不列颠岛,在罗马军队的撤离下,他们开始占领更多的领土,并建立了自己的国家和文明。

这个时期,英国的政治、文化和社会生活都受到了很大的影响。

在英国南部建立起来的七个盎格鲁-撒克逊国家,包括肯特王国、威塞克斯王国、萨塞克斯王国等。

这些王国从10世纪开始合并,并在1066年形成了统一的不列颠王国。

4.中世纪时期中世纪时期开始于1066年,对英国的影响深远。

这一年,威廉征服者来到英国,爵位制度的出现导致英国建立了现代国家的雏形。

在这个时期,英国农业得到了大力发展,贸易活动也随之繁荣起来。

不过,中世纪时期的英国还是疫病、战争和经济危机的时期。

随着时间的推移,英国逐渐成为了欧洲最强大的国家之一。

5.文艺复兴时期文艺复兴时期是一个文化和艺术的复兴时期,主要流行于16世纪。

在这个时期,英国发生了很多重要的变化,比如天主教在英国失去了非常大的影响力,英国国教也从天主教变成了英国国教。

莎士比亚的戏剧作品在英国文艺复兴时期风靡全球,他的作品是英国文化的重要组成部分。

英国资料简介

英国资料简介

英国资料简介英国是一个历史悠久、文化多元的国家,其资料也是丰富多彩的。

在这篇文章中,我们将为您介绍英国资料的几个方面。

一、英国历史资料英国历史可以追溯到公元前1世纪的罗马时期。

其历史资料包括文献、史诗、传说、纪念碑、建筑和艺术品等。

其中最著名的历史文献之一就是《不列颠史》(The History of the Britons),它是一部关于不列颠历史的书籍,由威尔士人尼尼亚斯(Nennius)在9世纪所著。

此外,英国还有许多历史博物馆和档案馆,如大英博物馆、国家档案馆等,它们收藏了大量的历史资料,供人们学习和研究。

二、英国文学资料英国文学是世界文学的重要组成部分,其代表作品有《哈姆雷特》、《傲慢与偏见》、《双城记》等。

英国文学资料包括小说、诗歌、戏剧等,这些作品反映了英国社会和文化的变迁。

莎士比亚是英国文学的代表人物之一,他的作品被翻译成了多种语言,在世界范围内广受欢迎。

此外,英国还有许多文学奖项,如布克奖、诺贝尔文学奖等,这些奖项激励了英国作家们的创作热情,推动了英国文学的发展。

三、英国艺术资料英国艺术的发展也非常悠久,其艺术资料包括绘画、雕塑、建筑等。

英国的建筑风格多样,包括哥特式、文艺复兴式、巴洛克式等,这些建筑代表了不同的历史时期和文化风格。

英国的艺术品也非常丰富,如莎士比亚肖像画、特纳的油画等,这些艺术品展现了英国艺术的独特魅力。

四、英国科技资料英国是科技发达的国家之一,其科技资料包括发明、创新等。

英国人发明了许多重要的物品,如蒸汽机、电灯、电话等,这些发明推动了人类社会的发展。

此外,英国还有许多著名的科技公司,如英特尔、苹果等,它们的产品在全世界范围内广受欢迎。

总之,英国的资料丰富多彩,反映了英国的历史、文化、艺术和科技等方面。

这些资料对于人们了解英国和了解世界都具有重要意义。

英国历史概览

英国历史概览

英国历史概览英国历史悠久而精彩,经历了许多重大事件和变革。

本篇文章将为您提供一份英国历史概览,回顾英国从史前时期到现代的发展和演变。

一、史前时期英国的历史可以追溯到史前时期,最早有证据显示,约在8000年前,旧石器时代的人们开始在这片土地上定居和狩猎。

他们生活在洞穴和临时建筑中,并使用石器作为工具和武器。

随着时间的推移,新石器时代的农业社会逐渐兴起,人们开始耕作和养殖。

二、罗马统治公元43年,罗马帝国入侵不列颠岛并开始统治这个地区。

罗马帝国的统治持续了近400年,期间不列颠岛发生了巨大变化,包括道路、城市和建筑的建设。

然而,5世纪初,罗马帝国的衰落导致他们撤离不列颠岛,这也标志着英国进入了一个新的时代。

三、盎格鲁-撒克逊时代盎格鲁-撒克逊人自公元5世纪起开始在不列颠岛定居。

他们建立了七个王国,即后来的“七国时期”,包括肯特王国和威塞克斯王国。

这段时期的重要事件是基督教的传入,盎格鲁-撒克逊时代的后期,英格兰的大部分地区皈依了基督教。

四、诺曼征服1066年,诺曼底公爵威廉征服者成功地征服了英格兰。

这一事件在英国历史上具有重要意义,标志着盎格鲁-撒克逊王朝结束,诺曼底王朝开始。

威廉征服者的统治导致英国与欧洲大陆更紧密地联系在一起,带来了许多改变,包括法律、行政和文化方面的改革。

五、中世纪中世纪的英国经历了各种挑战和变革。

在这个时期,宗教改革和国内战争对英国产生了深远的影响。

亨利八世的宗教改革使英国成为一个新教国家,并导致英国与罗马天主教会分道扬镳。

此后的国内战争,尤其是玫瑰战争,进一步加剧了英国社会的动荡。

六、工业革命18世纪末到19世纪初,英国经历了工业革命,这是英国历史上另一个重要的转折点。

工业革命带来了机械化和工业化的浪潮,推动了农业、制造业和交通业的发展。

这一时期的科技和经济变革对英国和全球产生了深远的影响,奠定了英国作为世界强国的基础。

七、帝国时代19世纪后期到20世纪初,英国建立了广泛的殖民帝国,称为不列颠帝国。

英国历史总结(时间线)

英国历史总结(时间线)

英国历史总结(时间线)英国历史总结(时间线)1. 古代英国历史1.1 史前时期 (至公元43年)- 早期居民为石器时代部落- 铁器时代带来农业和青铜工艺的发展 - 凯尔特人的入侵和定居1.2 罗马时期 (公元43年-410年)- 罗马帝国征服英格兰南部- 社会、农业、建筑和法律制度的发展 - 罗马帝国撤退后,英国被分裂成小王国 1.3 盎格鲁-撒克逊时期 (410年-1066年)- 盎格鲁-撒克逊人定居- 基督教传入英格兰- 卡尔斯·英格兰建立统一王国1.4 诺曼征服和中世纪 (1066年-1485年)- 威廉征服者征服英格兰- 封建制度的建立- 英法百年战争2. 近代英国历史2.1 英国文艺复兴和宗教改革 (1485年-1603年)- 亨利八世发起英国宗教改革- 知识和艺术的繁荣- 英国国教成立2.2 英国的帝国扩张 (1603年-1815年)- 英属殖民地的建立和扩大- 英国东印度公司的崛起- 英国在世界各地建立殖民地和贸易站点2.3 工业革命和维多利亚时代 (1815年-1901年)- 工业革命导致经济和技术的巨大进步- 资本主义、工会运动和社会改革- 维多利亚女王统治时期2.4 英国在两次世界大战中的角色 (1901年-1945年)- 第一次世界大战:英国参战并取得胜利- 英国在国际政治舞台上的重要地位- 第二次世界大战:英国是盟军之一,反法西斯战争的胜利3. 当代英国历史3.1 战后重建和福利国家 (1945年-1979年)- 英国实施国家医疗保健和福利制度- 社会主义政策和工业国有化- 殖民地独立和英国的国际地位下降3.2 新自由主义和撒切尔夫人 (1979年-1990年)- 撒切尔夫人上台,推行自由市场经济政策- 工业重组和私有化- 冷战结束和欧盟成员国地位恢复3.3 英国在欧盟和布莱尔时代 (1990年-现在)- 英国加入欧盟- 托尼·布莱尔时期的工党政府- 英国脱欧公投和脱欧进程4. 附件- 图片:古代英国遗址、历史人物等相关图片- 地图:显示古代和现代英国边界5. 法律名词及注释- 盎格鲁-撒克逊:指来自盎格鲁地区和撒克逊地区的日耳曼民族,他们在古代定居并建立了英国的基础。

英国历史简介100字

英国历史简介100字

《英国历史简介》同学们,今天咱们来聊聊英国的历史。

英国可是有着很悠久很丰富的过去呢。

很久很久以前,那里就有了人类的活动。

后来,罗马人来了,他们在英国修建了好多道路和建筑。

比如说那时候修的哈德良长城,就是为了阻挡北方的敌人。

再往后,盎格鲁-撒克逊人来了,他们在这片土地上建立了一些小王国。

到了中世纪,英国的国王和贵族之间经常发生争斗。

像亨利八世,他的故事可多啦,为了能有个儿子继承王位,他可是费了不少心思。

然后就是大航海时代,英国的船队跑遍了全世界,到处建立殖民地。

在近代,英国还发生了工业革命。

工厂里出现了好多新机器,生产东西的速度变得特别快。

英国还经历了两次世界大战,人们的生活受到了很大影响。

总之,英国的历史就像一部长长的故事书,有悲伤,也有欢乐,有战争,也有和平。

同学们,你们是不是觉得很有趣呀?《英国历史简介》同学们,咱们一起走进英国的历史。

很早很早的时候,英国这片土地上就有了各种各样的人。

后来呀,诺曼底公爵威廉征服了英国,开启了新的时代。

在13 世纪,英国有了《大宪章》,这可是很重要的文件,保障了一些人的权利。

到了伊丽莎白一世的时候,英国变得越来越强大,在海上打败了西班牙的无敌舰队。

还有维多利亚时代,那时候英国到处都是工厂,生产出好多东西卖给全世界。

还记得那个叫牛顿的科学家吗?他就是英国人,发现了万有引力定律,可了不起啦。

两次世界大战期间,英国也经历了很多困难,但人们一直努力坚持着。

英国的历史就像一条长长的河流,不断流淌,充满了各种各样的故事。

同学们,听了这些,你们对英国历史是不是有了更多了解呢?《英国历史简介》同学们,现在咱们来了解一下英国的历史。

英国的历史从远古时代就开始啦。

一开始,那里只是一些小小的部落。

后来,基督教传到了英国,对人们的生活产生了很大影响。

在17 世纪,英国发生了资产阶级革命,国王的权力不再像以前那么大了。

18 世纪,瓦特改良了蒸汽机,这可是个大事儿,让工厂的生产变得完全不一样了。

英国史介绍

英国史介绍
确立了君主立宪制的基本原则
-
18
1707年
英格兰王国与苏格兰王国合并,大不列颠联合王国成立
形成了现代英国的基础
-
19
1765年
珍妮纺纱机的发明和应用
工业革命的开始,标志着现代工业社会的兴起
哈格里夫斯
20
1785年
瓦特改进的蒸汽机投入使用
蒸汽机的广泛应用,推动了工业革命的发展
瓦特
21
1837年
英国进入维多利亚女王时期115年自由大宪章建立确立了王权在法律下的原则,为英国宪政史奠定基础
-
8
1337-1453年
百年战争爆发
英法两国之间的长期战争,对两国政治、经济和文化产生深远影响
-
9
1455-1487年
玫瑰战争
英格兰贵族之间的内战,决定了约克王朝和兰开斯特王朝的兴衰
-
10
1461年
约克家族的爱德华四世击败兰开斯特家族,约克王朝建立
英格兰国王与议会之间的战争,导致国王查理一世的被处决
-
15
1649年
英国议会推翻并处死国王查理一世,由奥利弗·克伦威尔领导的英格兰共和国成立
英格兰君主制的终结,共和国的开始
奥利弗·克伦威尔
16
1688-1689年
光荣革命
确立了议会主权的原则,为英国现代宪政制度奠定基础
-
17
1689年
议会通过《权利法案》
约克王朝开始统治英格兰
爱德华四世
11
1534年
英格兰从罗马教廷分离,英格兰国教会初步成立
英格兰宗教改革,与罗马天主教廷决裂
-
12
1588年
英格兰击败西班牙无敌舰队
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[英国]英国简史(英文)2006-1-23页面功能【字体:大中小】【打印】【关闭】HistoryUntil 1707, this section deals primarily with English history. England and Wales were formally united in 1536. In 1707, when Great Britain was created by the Act of Union between Scotland and England, English history became part of British history. For the early history of Scotland and Wales, see separate articles. See also Ireland; Ireland, Northern; and the tables entitled Rulers of England and Great Britain and Prime Ministers of Great Britain.Early Period to the Norman ConquestLittle is known about the earliest inhabitants of Britain, but the remains of their dolmens and barrows and the great stone circles at Stonehenge and Avebury are evidence of the developed culture of the prehistoric Britons. They had developed a Bronze Age culture by the time the first Celtic invaders (early 5th cent. B.C.) brought their energetic Iron Age culture to Britain. It is believed that Julius Caesar's successful military campaign in Britain in 54 B.C. was aimed at preventing incursions into Gaul from the island.In A.D. 43 the emperor Claudius began the Roman conquest of Britain, establishing bases at present-day London and Colchester. By A.D. 85, Rome controlled Britain south of the Clyde River. There were a number of revolts in the early years of the conquest, the most famous being that of Boadicea. In the 2d cent. A.D., Hadrian's Wall was constructed as a northern defense line. Under the Roman occupation towns developed, and roads were built to ensure the success of the military occupation. These roads were the most lasting Roman achievement in Britain (see Watling Street), long serving as the basic arteries of overland transportation in England. Colchester, Lincoln, and Gloucester were founded by the Romans as colonia, settlements of ex-legionaries.Trade contributed to town prosperity; wine, olive oil, plate, and furnishings were imported, and lead, tin, iron, wheat, and wool were exported. This trade declined with the economic dislocation of the late Roman Empire and the withdrawal of Roman troops to meet barbarian threats elsewhere. The garrisons had been consumers of the products of local artisans as well as of imports; as they were disbanded, the towns decayed. Barbarian incursions became frequent. In 410 an appeal to Rome for military aid was refused, and Roman officials subsequently were withdrawn.As Rome withdrew its legions from Britain, Germanic peoples〞the Anglo-Saxons and the Jutes〞began raids that turned into great waves of invasion and settlement in the later 5th cent. The Celts fell back into Wales and Cornwall and across the English Channel to Brittany, and the loosely knit tribes of the newcomers gradually coalesced into a heptarchy of kingdoms (see Kent, Sussex, Essex, Wessex, East Anglia, Mercia, and Northumbria).Late in the 8th cent., and with increasing severity until the middle of the 9th cent., raiding Vikings (known in English history as Danes) harassed coastal England and finally, in 865, launched a full-scale invasion. They were first effectively checked by King Alfred of Wessex and were with great difficulty confined to the Danelaw, where their leaders divided land among the soldiers for settlement. Alfred's successors conquered the Danelaw to form a united England, but new Danish invasions late in the 10th cent. overcame ineffective resistance (see ?thelred, 965?——1016). The Dane Canute ruled all England by 1016. At the expiration of the Scandinavian line in 1042, the Wessex dynasty (see Edward the Confessor) regained the throne. The conquest of England in 1066 by William, duke of Normandy (William I of England), ended the Anglo-Saxon period.The freeman (ceorl) of the early Germanic invaders had been responsible to the king and superior to the serf. Subsequent centuries of war and subsistence farming, however, had forced the majority of freemen into serfdom, or dependence on the aristocracy of lords and thanes, who came to enjoy a large measure of autonomous control over manors granted them by the king (see manorial system). The central government evolved from tribal chieftainships to become a monarchy in which executive and judicial powers were usually vested in the king. The aristocracy made up his witan, or council of advisers (see witenagemot). The king set up shires as units of local government ruled by earldormen. In some instances these earldormen became powerful hereditary earls, ruling several shires. Subdivisions of shires were called hundreds. There were shire and hundred courts, the former headed by sheriffs, the latter by reeves. Agriculture was the principal industry, but the Danes were aggressive traders, and towns increased in importance starting in the 9th cent.The Anglo-Saxons had been Christianized by missionaries from Rome and from Ireland, and the influence of Christianity became strongly manifest in all phases of culture (see Anglo-Saxon literature). Differences between Irish and continental religious customs were decided in favor of the Roman forms at the Synod of Whitby (663). Monastic communities, outstanding in the later 7th and in the 8th cent. and strongly revived in the 10th, developed great proficiency in manuscript illumination. Church scholars, such as Bede, Alcuin, and Aelfric〞as well as King Alfred himself〞preserved and advanced learning.Medieval EnglandA new era in English history began with the Norman Conquest. William I introducedNorman-style political and military feudalism. He used the feudal system to collect taxes, employed the bureaucracy of the church to strengthen the central government, and made the administration of royal justice more efficient.After the death of William's second son, Henry I, the country was subjected to a period of civil war that ended one year before the accession of Henry II in 1154. Henry II's reign was marked by the sharp conflict between king and church that led to the murder of Thomas 角 Becket. Henry carried out great judicial reforms that increased the power and scope of the royal courts. During his reign, in 1171, began the English conquest of Ireland. As part of his inheritance he brought to the throne Anjou, Normandy, and Aquitaine. The defense and enlargement of these French territories engaged the energies of successive English kings. In their need for money the kings stimulated the growth of English towns by selling them charters of liberties.Conflict between kings and nobles, which had begun under Richard I, came to a head under John, who made unprecedented financial demands and whose foreign and church policies were unsuccessful. A temporary victory of the nobles bore fruit in the most noted of all English constitutional documents, the Magna Carta (1215). The recurring baronial wars of the 13th cent. (see Barons' War; Montfort, Simon de, earl of Leicester) were roughly contemporaneous with the first steps in the development of Parliament.Edward I began the conquest of Wales and Scotland. He also carried out an elaborate reform and expansion of the central courts and of other aspects of the legal system. The Hundred Years War with France began (1337) in the reign of Edward III. The Black Death (see plague) first arrived in 1348 and had a tremendous effect on economic life, hastening the breakdown (long since under way) of the manorial and feudal systems, including the institution of serfdom. At the same time the fast-growing towns and trades gave new prominence to the burgess and artisan classes.In the 14th cent. the English began exporting their wool, rather than depending on foreign traders of English wool. Later in the century, trade in woolen cloth began to gain on the raw wool trade. The confusion resulting from such rapid social and economic change fostered radical thought, typified in the teachings of John Wyclif (or Wycliffe; see also Lollardry, and the revolt led by Wat Tyler. Dynastic wars (see Roses, Wars of the), which weakened both the nobility and the monarchy in the 15th cent., ended with the accession of the Tudor family in 1485.Tudor EnglandThe reign of the Tudors (1485——1603) is one of the most fascinating periods in English history. Henry VII restored political order and the financial solvency of the crown, bequeathing his son, Henry VIII, a full exchequer. In 1536, Henry VIII brought about the political union of England and Wales. Henry and his minister Thomas Cromwell greatly expanded the central administration. During Henry's reign commerce flourished and the New Learning of the Renaissance came to England. Several factors〞the revivalof Lollardry, anticlericalism, the influence of humanism, and burgeoning nationalism〞climaxed by the pope's refusal to grant Henry a divorce from Katharine of Arag车n so that he could remarry and have a male heir〞led the king to break with Roman Catholicism and establish the Church of England.As part of the English Reformation (1529——39), Henry suppressed the orders of monks and friars and secularized their property. Although these actions aroused some popular opposition (see Pilgrimage of Grace), Henry's judicious use of Parliament helped secure support for his policies and set important precedents for the future of Parliament. England moved farther toward Protestantism under Edward VI; after a generally hated Roman Catholic revival under Mary I, the Roman tie was again cut under Elizabeth I, who attempted without complete success to moderate the religious differences among her people.The Elizabethan age was one of great artistic and intellectual achievement, its most notable figure being William Shakespeare. National pride basked in the exploits of Sir Francis Drake, Sir John Hawkins, and the other ※sea dogs.§ Overseas trading compan ies were formed and colonization attempts in the New World were made by Sir Humphrey Gilbert and Sir Walter Raleigh. A long conflict with Spain, growing partly out of commercial and maritime rivalry and partly out of religious differences, culminated in the defeat of the Spanish Armada (1588), although the war continued another 15 years.Inflated prices (caused, in part, by an influx of precious metals from the New World) and the reservation of land by the process of inclosure for sheep pasture (stimulated by the expansion of the wool trade) caused great changes in the social and economic structure of England. The enclosures displaced many tenant farmers from their lands and produced a class of wandering, unemployed ※sturdy beggars.§ The Elizabethan poor l aws were an attempt to deal with this problem. Rising prices affected the monarchy as well, by reducing the value of its fixed customary and hereditary revenues. The country gentry were enriched by the inclosures and by their purchase of former monastic lands, which were also used for grazing. The gentry became leaders in what, toward the end of Elizabeth's reign, was an increasingly assertive Parliament.The StuartsThe accession in 1603 of the Stuart James I, who was also James VI of Scotland, united the thrones of England and Scotland. The chronic need for money of both James and his son, Charles I, which they attempted to meet by unusual and extralegal means; their espousal of the divine right of kings; their determination to enforce their high Anglican preferences in religion; and their use of royal courts such as Star Chamber, which were not bound by the common law, to persecute opponents, together produced a bitter conflict with Parliament that culminated (1642) in the English civil war.In the war the parliamentarians, effectively led at the end by Oliver Cromwell, defeated the royalists. The king was tried for treason and beheaded (1649). The monarchywas abolished, and the country was governed by the Rump Parliament, the remainder of the last Parliament (the Long Parliament) Charles had called (1640), until 1653, when Cromwell dissolved it and established the Protectorate. Cromwell brutally subjugated Ireland, made a single commonwealth of Scotland and England, and strengthened England's naval power and position in international trade. When he died (1658), his son, Richard, succeeded as Lord Protector but governed ineffectively.The threat of anarchy led to an invitation by a newly elected Parliament (the Convention Parliament) to Charles, son of Charles I, to become king, ushering in the Restoration (1660). It was significant that Parliament had summoned the king, rather than the reverse; it was now clear that to be successful the king had to cooperate with Parliament. The Whig and Tory parties developed in the Restoration period. Although Charles II was personally popular, the old issues of religion, money, and the royal prerogative came to the fore again. Parliament revived official Anglicanism (see Clarendon Code), but Charles's private sympathies lay with Catholicism. He attempted to bypass Parliament in the matter of revenue by receiving subsidies from Louis XIV of France.Charles's brother and successor, James II, was an avowed Catholic. James tried to strengthen his position in Parliament by tampering with the methods of selecting members; he put Catholics in high university positions, maintained a standing army (which later deserted him), and claimed the right to suspend laws. The birth (1688) of a male heir, who, it was assumed, would be raised as a Catholic, precipitated a crisis.In the Glorious Revolution, Whig and Tory leaders offered the throne to William of Orange (William III), whose Protestant wife, Mary, was James's daughter. William and Mary were proclaimed king and queen by Parliament in 1689. The Bill of Rights confirmed that sovereignty resided in Parliament. The Act of Toleration (1689) extended religious liberty to all Protestant sects; in subsequent years, religious passions slowly subsided.By the Act of Settlement (1701) the succession to the English throne was determined. Since 1603, with the exception of the 1654——60 portion of the interregnum, Scotland and England had remained two kingdoms united only in the person of the monarch. When it appeared that William's successor, Queen Anne, Mary's Protestant sister, would not have an heir, the Scottish succession became of concern, since the Scottish Parliament had not passed legislation corresponding to the Act of Settlement. England feared that under a separate monarch Scotland might ally itself with France, or worse still, permit a restoration of the Catholic heirs of James II〞although a non-Protestant succession had been barred by the Scottish Parliament. On its part, Scotland wished to achieve economic equality with England. The result was the Act of Union (1707), by which the two kingdoms became one. Scotland obtained representation in (what then became) the British Parliament at Westminster, and the Scottish Parliament was abolished.The Growth of Empire and Eighteenth-Century Political DevelopmentsThe beginnings of Britain's national debt (1692) and the founding of the Bank of England (1694) were closely tied with the nation's more active role in world affairs. Britain's overseas possessions (see British Empire) were augmented by the victorious outcome of the War of the Spanish Succession, ratified in the Peace of Utrecht (1713). Britain emerged from the War of the Austrian Succession and from the Seven Years War as the possessor of the world's greatest empire. The peace of 1763 (see Paris, Treaty of) confirmed British predominance in India and North America. Settlements were made in Australia toward the end of the 18th cent.; however, a serious loss was sustained when 13 North American colonies broke away in the American Revolution. Additional colonies were won in the wars against Napoleon I, notable for the victories of Horatio Nelson and Arthur Wellesley, duke of Wellington.In Ireland, the Irish Parliament was granted independence in 1782, but in 1798 there was an Irish rebellion. A vain attempt to solve the centuries-old Irish problem was the abrogation of the Irish Parliament and the union (1801) of Great Britain and Ireland, with Ireland represented in the British Parliament.Domestically the long ministry of Sir Robert Walpole (1721——42), during the reigns of George I and George II, was a period of relative stability that saw the beginnings of the development of the cabinet as the chief executive organ of government.The 18th cent. was a time of transition in the growth of the British parliamentary system. The monarch still played a very active role in government, choosing and dismissing ministers as he wished. Occasionally, sentiment in Parliament might force an unwanted minister on him, as when George III was forced to choose Rockingham in 1782, but the king could dissolve Parliament and use his considerable patronage power to secure a new one more amenable to his views.Great political leaders of the late 18th cent., such as the earl of Chatham (see Chatham, William Pitt, 1st earl of) and his son William Pitt, could not govern in disregard of the crown. Important movements for political and social reform arose in the second half of the 18th cent. George III's arrogant and somewhat anachronistic conception of the crown's role produced a movement among Whigs in Parliament that called for a reform and reduction of the king's power. Edmund Burke was a leader of this group, as was the eccentric John Wilkes. The Tory Pitt was also a reformer. These men also opposed Britain's colonial policy in North America.Outside Parliament, religious dissenters (who were excluded from political office), intellectuals, and others advocated sweeping reforms of established practices and institutions. Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations, advocating laissez-faire, appeared in 1776, the same year as the first publication by Jeremy Bentham, the founder of utilitarianism. The cause of reform, however, was greatly set back by the French Revolution and the ensuing wars with France, which greatly alarmed British society. Burkebecame Britain's leading intellectual opponent of the Revolution, while many British reformers who supported (to varying degrees) the changes in France were branded by British public opinion as extreme Jacobins.Economic, Social, and Political ChangeGeorge III was succeeded by George IV and William IV. During the last ten years of his reign, George III was insane, and sovereignty was exercised by the future George IV. This was the ※Regency§ period. In the mid-18th cent., wealth and power in Great Britain still resided in the aristocracy, the landed gentry, and the commercial oligarchy of the towns. The mass of the population consisted of agricultural laborers, semiliterate and landless, governed locally (in England) by justices of the peace. The countryside was fragmented into semi-isolated agricultural villages and provincial capitals.However, the period of the late 18th and early 19th cent. was a time of dynamic economic change. The factory system, the discovery and use of steam power, improved inland transportation (canals and turnpikes), the ready supply of coal and iron, a remarkable series of inventions, and men with capital who were eager to invest〞all these elements came together to produce the epochal change known as the Industrial Revolution.The impact of these developments on social conditions was enormous, but the most significant socioeconomic fact of all from 1750 to 1850 was the growth of population. The population of Great Britain (excluding Northern Ireland) grew from an estimated 7,500,000 in 1750 to about 10,800,000 in 1801 (the year of the first national census) and to about 23,130,000 in 1861. The growing population provided needed labor for industrial expansion and was accompanied by rapid urbanization. Urban problems multiplied. At the same time a new period of inclosures (1750——1810; this time to increase the arable farmland) deprived small farmers of their common land. The Speenhamland System (begun in 1795), which supplemented wages according to the size of a man's family and the price of bread, and the Poor Law of 1834 were harsh revisions of the relief laws.The social unrest following these developments provided a fertile field for Methodism, which had been begun by John Wesley in the mid-18th cent. Methodism was especially popular in the new industrial areas, in some of which the Church of England provided no services. It has been theorized that by pacifying social unrest Methodism contributed to the prevention of political and social revolution in Britain.In the 1820s the reform impulse that had been largely stifled during the French Revolution revived. Catholic Emancipation (1829) restored to Catholics political and civil rights. In 1833 slavery in the British Empire was abolished. (The slave trade had been ended in 1807.) Parliamentary reform was made imperative by the new patterns of population distribution and by the great growth during the industrial expansion in the size and wealth of the middle class, which lacked commensurate political power. The general elections that followed the death of George IV brought to power a Whig ministrycommitted to parliamentary reform. The Reform Bill of 1832 (see under Reform Acts) enfranchised the middle class and redistributed seats to give greater representation to London and the urban boroughs of N England. Other parliamentary legislation established the institutional basis for efficient city government and municipal services and for government inspection of factories, schools, and poorhouses.The competitive advantage British exports had gained from the Industrial Revolution lent new force to the arguments for free trade. The efforts of the Anti-Corn-Law League, organized by Richard Cobden and John Bright, succeeded in 1846 when Robert Peel was converted to the cause of free trade, and the corn laws were repealed. But Chartism, a mass movement for more thorough political reform, was unsuccessful (1848). Further important reforms were delayed nearly 20 years.The Reform Bill of 1867, sponsored by Disraeli and the Conservatives for political reasons, enfranchised the urban working classes and was followed shortly (under Gladstone and the Liberals) by enactment of the secret ballot and the first steps toward a national education system. In 1884 a third Reform Bill extended the vote to agricultural laborers. (Women could not vote until 1918.) In the 1880s trade unions, which had first appeared earlier in the century, grew larger and more militant as increasing numbers of unskilled workers were unionized. A coalition of labor and socialist groups, organized in 1900, became the Labour party in 1906. In the 19th cent. Britain's economy took on its characteristic patterns. Trade deficits, incurred as the value of food imports exceeded the value of exports such as textiles, iron, steel, and coal, were overcome by income from shipping, insurance services, and foreign investments.Victorian Foreign PolicyThe reign of Victoria (1837——1901) covered the period of Britain's commercial and industrial leadership of the world and of its greatest political influence. Initial steps toward granting self-government for Canada were taken at the start of Victoria's reign, while in India conquest and expansion continued. Great Britain's commercial interests, advanced by the British navy, brought on in 1839 the first Opium War with China, which opened five Chinese ports to British trade and made Hong Kong a British colony. The aggressive diplomacy of Lord Palmerston in the 1850s and 60s, including involvement in the Crimean War, was popular at home.From 1868 to 1880 political life in Great Britain was dominated by Benjamin Disraeli and William E. Gladstone, who differed dramatically over domestic and foreign policy. Disraeli, who had attacked Gladstone for failing to defend Britain's imperial interests, pursued an active foreign policy, determined by considerations of British prestige and the desire to protect the route to India. Under Disraeli (1874——80) the British acquired the Transvaal, the Fiji Islands, and Cyprus, fought frontier wars in Africa and Afghanistan, and became the largest shareholder in the Suez Canal Company. Gladstone strongly condemned Disraeli's expansionist policies, but his later ministries involvedBritain in Egypt, Afghanistan, and Uganda.Gladstone's first ministry (1868——74) had disestablished the Church of England in Ireland, and in 1886, Gladstone unsuccessfully advocated Home Rule for Ireland. The proposal split the Liberal party and overturned his ministry. In the last decades of the 19th cent. competition with other European powers and enchantment with the glories of empire led Britain to acquire vast territories in Asia and Africa. By the end of the century the country was entangled in the South African War (1899——1902). Great Britain's period of hegemony was ending, as both Germany and the United States were surpassing it in industrial production.World War I and Its AftermathVictoria was succeeded by her son Edward VII, then by his son, George V. The Liberals, in power 1905——15, enacted much social legislation, including old-age pensions, health and unemployment insurance, child health laws, and more progressive taxation. The budget sponsored by David Lloyd George to finance the Liberals' program brought on a parliamentary struggle that ended in a drastic reduction of the power of the House of Lords (1911). Growing military and economic rivalry with Germany led Great Britain to form ententes with its former colonial rivals, France and Russia (see Triple Alliance and Triple Entente).In 1914, Germany's violation of Belgium's neutrality, which since 1839 Britain had been pledged to uphold, caused Britain to go to war against Germany (see World War I). Although the British emerged as victors, the war took a terrible toll on the nation. About 750,000 men had died and seven million tons of shipping had been lost. In the peace settlement (see Versailles, Treaty of) Britain acquired, as League of Nations mandates, additional territories in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East. But the four years of fighting had drained the nation of wealth and manpower.The postwar years were a time of great moral disillusionment and material difficulties. To the international problems stemming directly from the war, such as disarmament, reparations, and war debts, were added complex domestic economic problems, the task of reorganizing the British Empire, and the tangled Irish problem. Northern Ireland was created in 1920, and the Irish Free State (see Ireland, Republic of) in 1921——22.The basic domestic economic problem of the post——World War I years was the decline of Britain's traditional export industries, which made it more difficult for the country to pay for its imports of foods and raw materials. A Labour government, under Ramsay MacDonald, was in power for the first time briefly in 1924. In 1926 the country suffered a general strike. Severe economic stress increased during the worldwide economic depression of the late 1920s and early 30s. During the financial crisis of 1931, George V asked MacDonald to head a coalition government, which took the country off the gold standard, ceased the repayment of war debts, and supplanted free trade with protectivetariffs modified by preferential treatment within the empire (see Commonwealth of Nations) and with treaty nations.Recovery from the depression began to be evident in 1933. Although old export industries such as coal mining and cotton manufacturing remained depressed, other industries, such as electrical engineering, automobile manufacture, and industrial chemistry, were developed or strengthened. George V was succeeded by Edward VIII, after whose abdication (1936) George VI came to the throne. In 1937, Neville Chamberlain became prime minister.The years prior to the outbreak of World War II were characterized by the ineffective attempts to stem the rising tide of German and Italian aggression. The League of Nations, in which Britain was a leader, declined rapidly by failing to take decisive action, and British prestige fell further because of a policy of nonintervention in the Spanish civil war. Appeasement of the Axis powers, which was the policy of the Chamberlain government, reached its climactic failure (as became evident later) in the Munich Pact of Sept., 1938. Great Britain had begun to rearm in 1936 and, after Munich, instituted conscription. With the signing of the Soviet-German pact of Aug., 1939, war was recognized as inevitable.World War II and the Welfare StateOn Sept. 1, 1939, Germany attacked Poland. Great Britain and France declared war on Germany on Sept. 3, and all the dominions of the Commonwealth except Ireland followed suit (see World War II). Chamberlain broadened his cabinet to include Labour representatives, but after German victories in Scandinavia he resigned (May, 1940) and was replaced by Winston S. Churchill. France fell in June, 1940, but the heroic rescue of a substantial part of the British army from Dunkirk (May——June) enabled Britain, now virtually alone, to remain in the war.The nation withstood intensive bombardment (see Battle of Britain), but ultimately the Royal Air Force was able to drive off the Luftwaffe. Extensive damage was sustained, and great urban areas, including large sections of London, were devastated. The British people rose to a supreme war effort; American aid (see lend-lease) provided vital help. In 1941, Great Britain gained two allies when Germany invaded the USSR (June) and the United States entered the war following the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor (Dec. 7). Britain declared war on Japan on Dec. 8.The wartime alliance of Great Britain, the USSR, and the United States led to the formation of the United Nations and brought about the defeat of Germany (May, 1945) and Japan (Sept., 1945). The British economy suffered severely from the war. Manpower losses had been severe, including about 420,000 dead; large urban areas had to be rebuilt, and the industrial plant needed reconstruction and modernization. Leadership in world trade, shipping, and banking had passed to the United States, and overseas investments had been largely liquidated to pay the cost of the world wars. This was a serious blow to the。

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