📕
Chapter 3
A Long and Illustrious History
6 sections · 211 questions
3.1 Early Britain
3.2 The Middle Ages
3.2.1 The feudal system and the Domesday Book
3.2.2 The Magna Carta 1215
3.2.3 The development of Parliament
3.2.4 The Black Death 1348
3.2.5 The Peasants' Revolt 1381
3.2.6 The Hundred Years War and Wars of the Roses
3.2.7 Scotland and Wales in the Middle Ages
3.3 The Tudors and the Stuarts
3.3.1 Henry VII and the Tudor dynasty
3.3.2 Henry VIII and the Church of England
3.3.3 Edward VI and Mary I
3.3.4 Elizabeth I
3.3.5 The Scottish Reformation
3.3.6 James I and James VI
3.3.7 The Gunpowder Plot 1605
3.3.8 Charles I and the English Civil War
3.3.9 Oliver Cromwell and the Commonwealth
3.3.10 The Restoration
3.3.11 The Glorious Revolution 1688
3.3.12 The Bill of Rights 1689
3.4 A global power
3.4.1 The constitutional monarchy and Robert Walpole
3.4.2 The Act of Union 1707
3.4.3 The Scottish clans and the Highland Clearances
3.4.4 The Enlightenment
3.4.5 The Industrial Revolution
3.4.6 The slave trade and its abolition
3.4.7 The American colonies and independence
3.4.8 Wars with France and the Crimean War
3.4.9 The growth of the British Empire
3.4.10 The Victorian Age
3.4.11 The Irish famine and Home Rule
3.4.12 The development of democracy and voting rights
3.5 The 20th century
3.6 Britain since 1945
3.6.1 The welfare state and the NHS
3.6.2 Post-war migration and the Commonwealth
3.6.3 Social change in the 1960s and 1970s
3.6.4 Economic challenges and Thatcher's Britain
3.6.5 Northern Ireland and The Troubles
3.6.6 Devolution
3.6.7 Significant British inventions and inventors