Introduction to the History of Britain (BBNAN12500)

Lecture Course and Exam for Second-Year Students

Examiner: Pintér Károly

Availability: during office hours and by email:

Form of Exam: Written.

Rules of Exam:

Registration: You have to register for each exam occasion on Neptun until 12 p.m. (noon) of the day before exam day. No one is allowed to take the exam without registration, since I will not be able to enter your grade into Neptun without you having been registered for that exam day. The maximum limit for each exam day depends on the capacity of the hall the test is written in as well as the overall number of registered students. It is strictly forbidden to register for more than one day since these people take places away from others. The make-up exam on the last week of the exam period is reserved primarily for failed students, therefore it will not be opened until all the other exam occasions have been finished. If you decide to take the exam for the first time on the make-up exam date, you automatically lose the opportunity for a resit and your mark will be final.

Changing or cancelling registration: You are free to change your mind after registration until 12 p.m. (noon) of the day before the exam day. You may only register for places left free on other days; if all places are occupied, you can only postpone your exam to the day of the make-up exam (see previous point).

Examination day: All people who have registered should appear by official beginning time. Latecomers forfeit their right to be examined.

Form and Content of the Exam: The written examination consists of two parts: test questions and a short discussion of a broader historical problem.

1.  The test questions are intended to find out whether the student has acquired the basics of British history. The questions may include multiple-choice questions, sentence completions, definitions of events or concepts, matching exercises (dates with events, people with dates, people with events, concepts with definitions, etc.). The minimal requirements are specified in the form of a short list of dates and events, most important personalities (whose career students should be familiar with in some detail) and most important historical concepts; they are provided below.

2.  The discussion question will be an opportunity for the student to connect related events, people and historical developments in a short summary. Students are expected to write in proper English (no incomplete sentences, abbreviations, etc.) and demonstrate their overall grasp of British history.

Evaluation of the exam: Students receive one grade for the whole exam text. Pass level is defined as 55 % of the maximum score, and each grade matches the next 10% bracket, so 85% is required for an excellent (5) grade.


44 Events and Dates:

43–409: Britannia Roman province in the territory of modern England and Wales

597: Augustine arrived in the kingdom of Kent and began the conversion of the Anglo-Saxons; beginning of Roman Christianity in England

865: Danish invasion of in East Anglia; the first permanent Viking settlement in England

954: The last Viking king of York was killed: the first unification of England under the Wessex dynasty (King Edgar)

1066: Edward the Confessor died without an heir. Harold Godwinson was elected king. Harold defeated and killed Harald Hardrada, King of Norway in the battle of Stamford Bridge. William, Duke of Normandy, defeated and killed Harold at the battle of Hastings: the Norman conquest of England

1169: First invasion of Ireland by the English kings; occupation of Dublin and area and a permanent claim of supremacy over Ireland

1215: John issued Magna Carta, considered the earliest document of the English constitutional tradition

1284: Edward I occupied Wales and united it with England

1314: Battle of Bannockburn, in which Robert Bruce finally defeated Edward II; Scotland preserved its independence against England

1339–1453: The Hundred Years' War; a series of wars in which England occupied territories in France but eventually lost them all

1348–49: The Black Death; the most devastating plague epidemic in European history

1455–85: The Wars of the Roses, a series of civil wars between two rival dynasties and their supporters

1485: The Battle of Bosworth, in which Henry Tudor, Duke of Richmond defeated and killed Richard III; end of the civil war and beginning of the House of Tudor

1534: Act of Royal Supremacy; the beginning of the Prostestant Church of England

1588: Defeat of the Spanish Armada

1603: Death of Queen Elisabeth and succession of James I, King of Scotland; England and Scotland are united under the same ruler; beginning of the House of Stuart

1607: The foundation of Virginia colony, the first permanent English colony in North America

1642–1646: The Civil War between King and Parliament

1649: Charles I was executed and England declared a Commonwealth led by Oliver Cromwell

1660: Charles II was recalled to the throne: Restoration of the Monarchy

1688–1689: The Glorious Revolution without bloodshed: Mary II, James II’s daughter and his husband, the Dutch William III of Orange were invited to the English throne; the Bill of Rights: the establishment of the constitutional monarchy in England

1690: The Battle of the Boyne, in which James II’s Catholic Irish forces were defeated by William of Orange’s Protestant army: Ireland remained under English Protestant dominance

1701: Act of Settlement: it provides for the succession of the House of Hannover and excludes Catholics from the succession

1707: Act of Union: the independent Scottish government was abolished and Great Britain was created

1715 and 1745: Two Jacobite Rebellions in Scotland in support of James II’s son and grandson: both were defeated by the British government, and the Scottish Highland clans were suppressed afterward

1783: The 13 North American British colonies become independent as the United States of America

1801: Unification of the kingdoms of Great Britain and Ireland: Creation of the United Kingdom

1805: Nelson destroyed the French navy at Trafalgar

1815, June 18: Battle of Waterloo, the final defeat of Napoleon by British and Prussian forces

1832: First Reform Act: about 20% of the adult male population of Britain may vote (twice as many as before): enfranchisement of new industrialists and the rich middle class

1845–47: The Potato Famine in Ireland, which had devastating consequences on the population of Ireland

1867: Second Reform Act: the size of the electorate was doubled, the middle class and some of the urban working class enfranchised

1884: Third Reform Act: 63% of the adult male population was enfranchized

1914 August 4-1918 November 11: Britain involved in World War I

1918: Fourth Reform Act: all men over 21 and women over 30 were enfranchised; size of the electorate almost tripled

1919–1921: Civil War in Ireland, followed by the Anglo-Irish Treaty; Southern Ireland was turned into the Irish Free State with dominion status; six Northern counties refused to join and remained part of the UK

1929–32: The Great Depression

1939 Sept 3-1945 May 9: Britain involved in World War II

1947: The Indian colonies became independent; beginning of the disintegration of the British Empire

1968: Beginning of the Northern Irish ’Troubles’: riots and terrorist acts between Catholics and Protestants

1973: Britain joined the European Economic Community (EEC)

1997: Devolution in Scotland and Wales: an autonomous Scottish Parliament and a Welsh Assembly was created following a referendum in both countries

1998: The Good Friday Agreement: established a Northern Irish Assembly and a regional government based on power sharing (representation of both Catholics and Protestants)

2016: Referendum on EU membership: the majority votes for Brexit

20 Persons:

Alfred

William the Conqueror

Henry II

John I Lackland

Edward I

Henry VIII

Elizabeth I

James I

Charles I

Oliver Cromwell

Charles II

William III of Orange

Sir Robert Walpole

Horatio Nelson

Victoria

Benjamin Disraeli

William Gladstone

David Lloyd George

Winston Churchill

Margaret Thatcher

20 Concepts (+ those already listed among Dates and Events):

Lollards

Puritans

divine right

contract theory

Commonwealth (17th century)

Tories

Whigs

Jacobites

Dissenters/Nonconformists

splendid isolation

Liberal Party

Conservative Party

Reform Acts

Home Rule

Labour Party

Entente

appeasement

Allies

Commonwealth (20th century)

devolution