Chapter 1
Chapter 1
Chapter 1
SECTION A Quiz
1
4 Which is the smallest of the four nations?
A Ireland
B Scotland
C Wales
2
8 What proportion of the population of Britain
lives in England?
A more than 1
B about 60%
C less than 40%
3
12 In which of the following does a ‘Great
Britain’ team compete?
A cricket
B the Olympics
C rugby union
4
Section B summary
Put the following clauses and phrases into the
correct order to complete a paragraph summarizing
parts of chapter 1 of Britain. The first and last
sentences are provided.
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SECTION D Extension
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SECTION E Talking points
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02 History
SECTION A Quiz 9
1 What is Stonehenge?
A a royal castle
B a prehistoric monument
C a historic document
A a royal castle
B a prehistoric monument
C a historic document
A in London ^
B in Edinburgh
A the Cavaliers
B the Roundheads
C the Vikings
A the north-west
B the north-east
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C the south-west
A Birmingham
B Leeds
C Manchester
A the Anglo-Saxons
B the Normans
C the Romans
A the seventeenth
B the eighteenth
C the nineteenth
9. In which century did England and Scotland first have the same monarch?
A the seventeenth
B the eighteenth
C the nineteenth
D the twentieth
A the seventeenth
B the eighteenth
C the nineteenth
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D the twentieth
11. Which century saw the greatest extent of the British empire?
A the seventeenth
B the eighteenth
C the nineteenth
D the twentieth
12. In which century was the last battle to be fought on British soil?
A the seventeenth
B the eighteenth
C the nineteenth
D the twentieth
13. In the middle of the twentieth century, a joke history book was published. It
satirized the way history was taught in schools at that time, which typically
involved the memorizing of lots of dates. What do you think its title was?
A. 1066 And All That
B. 1328 And All That
C. 1492 And All That
14. In the 1980s, the BBC compiled a computer video
package o f very detailed information about every
A 1985
B 1986
C 1987
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SECTION B Quiz on British monarchs
1-F 5-E
2-C 6-G
3-A 7-D
4-H 8-B
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9-A
10-F
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SECTION C British words and phrases
Find the word or phrase in chapter 2 o f Britain which is used to mean or describe:
1 the record of all the people and things in his country compiled by William I (‘the
Conqueror’)
1 The Domesday Book
7 the phrase used by the poet Rudyard Kipling to describe the sense of moral
obligation among
8 women who campaigned for the right to vote in the early twentieth century
8 the Suffragettes
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10 the set of laws passed in the sixteenth century which took away the power o f
the Roman Catholic Church in England
10 the Reformation
SECTION D Extension
Put the following sentences into the correct order to complete the paragraph.
culture instead.
10 Take the story o f Britain, for instance, which can seem like one o f repeated
mass killings and mass migrations.
8 Around 700BC, we are told, Britain was invaded by the Celts, who displaced the
indigenous people.
1 Then, the Romans conquered it and stayed for nearly four centuries.
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6 In the next five centuries, first the Anglo-Saxons and then the Vikings arrived.
9 The story goes that, during this time o f Germanic invasions, the native Celts
were all either killed or driven north and west.
2 This is why in modern times we talk about England on the one hand and the
‘Celtic nations’ o f Scotland, Wales, and Ireland on the other.
4 In 1066, England was invaded again, this time by the Normans from France.
3 And yet all these successive invasions appear to have made little difference to the
modern gene pool.
7 Research has found, for example, that around 60% of all men in southern
England are directly descended from Celts.
5 Moreover, it turns out that the vast majority of people in Britain and Ireland have
maternal genes dating back at least 10,000 years.
The conclusion we must draw from these findings is that history is often less
bloody than we assume it to be and that earlier people in Britain were not all killed
or displaced. Instead, most o f them were assimilated into the newly dominant
culture.
1 In Britain, as in most countries, history and popular myth are mixed up together.
How many cases can you find in chapter 2 of Britain o f stories which are o f
doubtful historical truth?
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4 How would you describe the changing relations between religion and politics in
British history? Are the changes that have taken place similar to those in your
country?
5 Around the year 1500, about five million people used the English language - less
than the population of Britain at the time. Today, it is estimated that between 600
million and 1,000 million people use English in everyday life - at least ten times
the present population of Britain. Why has the use of English expanded so much in
the last 500 years?
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