- •A Few Glimpses
- •Into the History of Britain
- •Unit 1 Claudius (10 bc - 54 ad)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 2 Agricola (40 - 93 ad)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 3 Arthur (dates unknown)
- •The Venerable Bede (673 ad - 735 ad)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 4 Alfred the Great (849 ad - 899 ad)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 5 William the Conqueror (c.1028 - c.1087)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 6 Henry I (c.1069 - 1135)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 7 John (c.1167 - 1216)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 8 William Wallace (c. 1270 - 1305)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 9 Thomas More (1478 - 1535)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 10 Mary I (1516 - 1558)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 11 Oliver Cromwell (1599 - 1658)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 12 Samuel Pepys (1633 - 1703)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 13 Captain James Cook (1728 - 1779)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 14 Admiral Horatio Lord Nelson (1758 - 1805)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 15 William Wilberforce (1759 - 1833)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 16 Duke of Wellington (1769 - 1852)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 17 Feargus o'Connor (c.1796 - 1855)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 18 Victoria (1819 - 1901)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 19 George V (1865 - 1936)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 20 Stanley Baldwin (1867 - 1947)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 21 Alan Turing (1912 - 1954)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 22 Clement Attlee (1883 - 1967)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 23 Margaret Thatcher (1925 - 2013)
- •Assignments
- •Unit 24 Watson and Crick (1928- )
- •Assignments
- •Unit 25 Battle of the Marne: 6-10 September 1914
- •Assignments
- •Unit 26 Battle for Gallipoli: February 1915 - January 1916
- •Assignments
- •Unit 27 Daily Mirror Headlines: The Battle of the Somme, Published 31 July 1916
- •Assignments
- •Unit 28 Battle of Passchendaele: 31 July - 6 November 1917
- •Assignments
- •Unit 29 Versailles and Peacemaking: The American Liberal Peace Programme
- •Assignments
- •Unit 30 Versailles and Peacemaking: Challenges to Wilson
- •Assignments
Assignments
1) Translate the text paying special attention to historical terminology.
2) Give Ukrainian equivalents to the following:
coinage; charters; education; code of laws; justice; settlements; guerrilla warfare; to baptise; to devastate; weaknesses in leadership;
3) Give definitions to the following:
Danelaw; to withdraw; sponsor; the boundaries ; to harass; strong belief;
4) Answer the questions on the text:
- Who was Alfred's father?
- What was Wessex in 870?
- Wnen was the Battle of Ashdown?
- Who was Guthrum's sponsor?
- Why did Alfred attempt to improve the defences of his kingdom?
5) Put questions to the underlined words in the text.
6) Speak on this issue adding extra information from other sources.
Interactive content:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/archaeology/excavations_techniques/launch_tl_ages_treasure.shtml
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Unit 5 William the Conqueror (c.1028 - c.1087)
This theme is dealt with in a lot of historical sources. The following citation is to illustrate this: «William was Duke of Normandy and, as William I, the first Norman King of England.
William was born in around 1028, in Falaise, Normandy the illegitimate son of Robert I, Duke of Normandy. He was thus known as 'William the Bastard' to his contemporaries. On his father's death in 1035, William was recognised as heir, with his great uncle serving as regent. In 1042 he began to take more personal control. From 1046 until 1055 he dealt with a series of baronial rebellions. William's political and military successes helped him in negotiations to marry Matilda, daughter of Count Baldwin of Flanders in 1053.
Early in 1066, Edward, king of England died and Harold, Earl of Wessex was crowned king. William was furious, claiming that in 1051 Edward, a distant cousin, had promised him the throne and that Harold had later sworn to support that claim.
William landed in England on 28 September 1066, establishing a camp near Hastings. Harold had travelled north to fight another invader, Harold Hardraade, King of Norway and defeated him at Stamford Bridge near York. He marched south as quickly as he could and on 14 October, his army met William's. It was a close-fought battle lasting all day, but Harold was killed and his army collapsed. William was victorious. On Christmas Day 1066 he was crowned king in Westminster Abbey. A Norman aristocracy became the new governing class and English bishops were replaced with Norman ones.
The first years of his reign were spent crushing resistance and securing his borders, which he did with ruthless efficiency. He invaded Scotland in 1072 and concluded a truce with the Scottish king. He marched into Wales in 1081 and created special defensive 'marcher' counties along the borders. The last
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serious rebellion, the Revolt of the Earls, took place in 1075. In 1086, William ordered a survey to be made of the kingdom: this was to be the Domesday Book.
With the kingdom increasingly settled, William spent most of his last 15 years in Normandy, leaving the government of England to regents, usually clergymen. He spent the last months of his reign fighting the French king Philip I. He died on 9 September 1087 from injuries received when he fell off his horse at the Siege of Mantes. He divided his lands between two of his sons, with Robert receiving Normandy and William Rufus, England.»
