England-Rachel Bladon
England-Rachel Bladon
England-Rachel Bladon
A Short History
The Romans had to fight for many years before they controlled all of
England. They made many changes in the country, such as building towns
and cities, and good roads. They brought a new language to England - Latin
- and made laws, so people knew what they could and could not do. The
religion of Christianity came to England in Roman times too.
For English people in towns and cities, life in Roman times was good.
Towns now had clean water and sewers (pipes taking away dirty water), and
there were strong walls around them, so people felt safe. People came to the
towns to buy and sell things, and food became more interesting and
enjoyable. To relax, people could go to special bath houses, where they met
their friends, kept clean and exercised.
But after AD 250, Roman soldiers began to leave England. They had
to fight in other parts of the world, and it was too expensive and difficult for
them to keep England safe. By AD 411, all the Roman soldiers had left
England. Then the Anglo-Saxons, from Germany, the Netherlands and
Denmark, began to arrive. The Anglo-Saxons had come to England several
times before, but the Romans had always defeated them. Now, with the
Romans gone, the English could not win battles against the Anglo-Saxons,
and many Anglo-Saxons came to live in England.
The Anglo-Saxons did not like the Romans' towns, so they did not use
them, and the towns stayed empty. The AngloSaxons built their own
villages near rivers or the sea and made wooden houses. In their villages,
they grew crops - plants they could use for food. They also kept pigs, sheep
and cows, and caught fish and other animals.
After Alfred the Great died, the Viking and Anglo-Saxon parts of
England came together, and England was now ruled as one country with
one king. The Vikings and the Anglo-Saxons continued to fight a lot, and
for a while England had Viking kings, but by 1042, the Anglo-Saxon King
Edward ruled England.
With Edward as the king, London became the most important city in
England. Edward had many nobles, and he let them become very powerful.
He had no children, so when he died, one of his nobles, Harold, became the
king. But Edward's cousin William, a Norman (from the north of France),
believed that he should be the king of England. In October 1066, William
brought a big Norman army from France to England. The Normans fought
against Harold and his soldiers at the Battle of Hastings. Harold was killed,
and William the Conqueror, as he was called, became the king of England.
The time from William the Conqueror's rule until the fifteenth century
in England is often called the Middle Ages. In the Middle Ages, most
people lived in villages. The people of the village had to work for the
nobles, and give them crops and animals. The nobles lived very well, in big
houses and with expensive food, but most people were very poor.
Religion was very important in the Middle Ages, and the Catholic
Church became very powerful. From 1095 to 1291, soldiers went to other
countries to fight religious battles. There was more fighting in the
fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, as France and England fought the
Hundred Years War, hoping to win land from each other. Many of the
battles of the Hundred Years War were fought by knights. As well as
fighting battles for nobles and for the king, knights also fought as a sport in
competitions called jousting tournaments. Young men who wanted to
become knights had to spend many years learning all the things that a
knight could do.
Some of the Tudor kings and queens are now very famous in
England's history. Henry the Eighth, who became the king in 1509, lived
some of the time at the Tower of London, but he had other beautiful palaces
in and around London, including the Palace of Westminster and Hampton
Court. He and the people around him lived very well. They wore the best
clothes and ate wonderful food, and at the palaces there was always
dancing, sport, poetry and music. Henry enjoyed life, and he drank and ate
too much. When he became the king, he was a sporty, good-looking young
man, but later he became so fat he could not walk!
Six years after Henry the Eighth died, his oldest daughter Mary - the
daughter he had with his first wife, Catherine of Aragon - became Queen
Mary the First of England. She was a Catholic and wanted England to be a
Catholic country again, but many people had left the Catholic Church and
had become Protestants. Mary executed hundreds of Protestants who
refused to become Catholic again.
But in 1558, Mary died, and her half-sister Elizabeth - the daughter
Henry had with his second wife Anne Boleyn - became the queen. Queen
Elizabeth the First was a Protestant, but she did not make Catholics follow
her religion, and she soon became one of the best loved of England's kings
and queens.
The second half of the sixteenth century, which was known as the
Elizabethan period, was a very important time for English literature. Many
people liked to go to the theatre, and William Shakespeare wrote a lot of
plays and poetry at this time. Ships also began to travel to other parts of the
world. Sir Walter Raleigh sailed to America, and Sir Francis Drake became
the first Englishman to sail around the world.
But life in England was also very difficult for many people in the
Elizabethan period. There was less work in farming now, and a lot of people
were very poor. There was a lot of crime, but no police, and when people
were caught for crimes, they were often executed.
Alter Queen Elizabeth the First died in 1603, kings and queens called
the Stuarts came to power in England. The Stuarts were from Scotland, and
for the first time, they ruled both England and Scotland. The second of the
Stuart kings was Charles the First. He argued with Parliament because he
spent a lot of money fighting wars in Europe, and in 1642, he started a civil
war. For seven years, the King's men and Parliaments men fought against
each other, and thousands died. But with Oliver Cromwell as leader,
Parliaments army became very strong and fought very well, and in 1649,
they won the war. Charles the First was executed, and for eleven years
England had no king or queen. The country was ruled by Cromwell and
Parliament. Cromwell was a Puritan - a Protestant who believed in a simple,
hard-working life - and when he ruled, there was no sport or dancing in
England, and theatres were closed.
When Cromwell died, England was ready to have a king again, and
the Stuarts came to power once more. There were some difficult times for
England in the second half of the seventeenth century. In 1665, another
terrible illness came to London and killed nearly seventy thousand people,
and a year later, large parts of London were burnt down in the Great Fire of
London.
There were many other changes at this time too. England now traded -
bought and sold things - with many other countries, so English people could
get different foods like tomatoes, chocolate, coffee and tea for the first time.
People continued to work on the land, but now there were other jobs, in
cloth-making or glass-making, and in the coal or iron industries. London
was rebuilt with wider roads and many beautiful new buildings, and
scientists like Sir Isaac Newton began to do important work and learn many
interesting things. England started its first colonies too. These were other
parts of the world, like America, which were ruled by England. For the first
time in the seventeenth century, people from England went to live and work
in these places.
In the early 1900s, the UK was one of the most powerful countries in
the world, with a big empire. The industrial revolution was changing many
peoples lives, and steamships and cars were widely used for the first time.
Rich people lived very well, with beautiful houses and servants, but
poor people had few clothes and little to eat, and their children were often
ill. Life was difficult for women in the UK at this time too. People expected
women to stay at home with their families, and they could not get well-paid
jobs. It was very difficult for women to go to university, and they could not
vote. In 1903, a group of women called the suffragettes, led by Emmeline
Pankhurst, organized meetings and marches, asking for Parliament to give
women the vote.
In 1914, the UK and its allies, France and Russia, went to war with
Germany and Austria-Hungary. Many young men chose to fight.
They believed the war would be very short, but it went on for four
years, and nearly three quarters of a million soldiers from the UK were
killed. While the men were fighting, women had to do the men's jobs at
home. Women soon showed that they could work in farming, factories and
even in the coal industry.
After helping their country to win the First World War, workers and
women in England wanted better lives. Men got their jobs at home back
from the women, so most women were no longer working, but in 1918,
women over thirty were given the vote for the first time. From 1929,
women, like men, could vote from the age of twenty-one. A new political
party for working people - the Labour Party - became important in politics
at this time, and in 1926, half a million workers went on strike to fight
against low pay and long working hours. But life became even more
difficult for workers in 1929, when the world went into an economic
depression. Prices fell, there was less trade, and many shops and factories
closed. By 1931, nearly three million people in the UK had lost their jobs.
The First World War was fought mainly in battles on fields in France,
but almost everyone in the UK had a difficult life because of the Second
World War (1939-45). Many children had to leave their homes and go to
live in the countryside. This was because at the end of 1940 and the
beginning of 1941, the Germans dropped many bombs on London and other
cities. This was called the Blitz. Many people lost their homes and their
families, and everyone had to live on rations - they could only buy fixed
amounts of many kinds of food.
'When we heard the air raid warning in the middle of the night,
everyone woke up and got into the shelters.
The Second World War ended in 1945, and big changes were made by
a new Labour government. Most importantly, the UK now had a National
Health Service, so anyone who was ill could see a doctor or go to hospital
without paying. The government also now gave money to help people who
were ill or old, or had lost their jobs. Because of the Education Act of 1944,
there were also free places in schools for children up to the age of fifteen.
Another change after the Second World War was that more women
went to work. They had shown that they could do men's jobs, and many of
them had done important war work. In some homes, nothing was different
for women, but over the next fifty years, women in the UK slowly saw
changes for themselves in education, work and at home. Their lives would
never be the same again.
After the Second World War, many of the UK's colonies wanted to
rule themselves. The south of Ireland had already become independent from
the UK in 1921, so the country had now become the United Kingdom of
Great Britain and Northern Ireland. People from the colonies had fought for
the UK during the war, and they felt they had won their freedom. In 1947,
India, once a very important part of the Empire, became independent. In the
next twenty years, most of the other colonies also did the same. They
became independent, but joined the Commonwealth, an organization of the
governments of the UK's old colonies.
The UK needed more workers to help rebuild the country after the
war, so the government invited other Europeans and people from the
colonies of the old Empire to move there. Hoping to find good new jobs,
many people came, mainly from Europe, India, Pakistan and the West
Indies. In 1945, there were only a few thousand non-white people in the
UK, but by 1970, there were 1.4 million. Sadly, there were often problems
in later years when some of the people born in the UK felt that immigrants
and their families were taking too many jobs. There is some racism - when
people do not like others because they have a different colour skin - in the
UK today. But most people do not like racism and want all people in the
UK to live together happily.
In 1952, Elizabeth the Second became the new queen of the UK, and
millions of people watched her coronation on TV. The first TVs were made
in the 1920s, but many English people bought TVs for the first time for the
coronation, and in the 1950s, TV started to become an important part of life
in England.
England today is a very different place than it was one hundred years
ago. Today, England is one of the most multicultural countries in the world,
and many people from the West Indies, Africa, India, China, South-East
Asia and eastern Europe live here. More than two hundred and fifty
different languages are spoken in London! Probably because of this, there
are also many religions in England. England is a Christian country, but
different religions are freely followed, and there are many Hindu, Jewish,
Muslim, Sikh and Buddhist people here.
Society has changed in England too. One hundred years ago, most
people married in their early twenties or younger and then had children, but
today many more people live alone, and most do not get married or have
children until they are in their thirties or older.
England's place in the world, as part of the UK, is also very different.
The UK does not have an empire now, but it is an important country in
Europe and became a member of the European Union (then called the EEC)
in 1973. The UK works very closely with the United States of America
(USA), and it also continues to be a member of the Commonwealth,
together with fifty-two other countries from around the world. Members of
the Commonwealth meet every two years to decide how they can best work
together.
CHAPTER THREE
Traditions
There are special days and festivals throughout the year in England,
but only a few are bank holidays - days when people do not have to work.
Christmas is one of the most important religious festivals in England.
Christmas Day, 25th December, and the next day, Boxing Day, are always
bank holidays, and most people spend this time with family or friends.
Traditionally, people eat turkey on Christmas Day, with Brussels sprouts
and cranberry sauce; and for dessert there is usually Christmas pudding, a
type of cake made with dried fruit.
Not long before Christmas, people decorate42 their houses and send
cards to people they know. On Christmas Day, there are presents from
friends and family, and, for the children, from Father Christmas (or Santa
Claus). Children believe that Father Christmas brings the presents on 24th
December, Christmas Eve, and leaves them to be opened on the morning of
Christmas Day.
After Lent comes Easter, another religious festival, and for people
who go to church, a very important time of year. Easter comes in the spring,
and many people give each other Easter eggs and Easter bunnies (little
rabbits) made from chocolate. For children, there are often Easter Egg
Hunts, when little eggs are hidden in the house or garden. People also eat
hot cross buns at Easter - warm sweet bread with dried fruit inside and a
cross on top.
May Day in England is on the first day of May, and there is a bank
holiday on or very near that day. This is usually the start of warmer weather
in England, and sometimes people celebrate with Maypole dancing -
dancing around a big pole with ribbons.
Now on 5th November every year, there are bonfires and fireworks all
over England on 'Guy Fawkes Night'.
On most days at Buckingham Palace, you can also see the 'Changing
of the Guard'. This is when one group of soldiers who were guarding the
Queen leave the palace, and another group arrives. The soldiers who guard
the Queen wear red coats and tall hats, made from real bearskin. They can
march in front of the palace, but when they are standing, they must not
move.
What is traditional English food and drink? Fish and chips are
probably England's most famous dish. Fish and chips first became popular
in the 1860s, when the railways opened and trains began to bring fish from
the east coast of England to the cities. Fish and chips are usually eaten as
takeaway food (food that is not eaten in a cafe or restaurant), with the fish
wrapped in paper, and the chips covered in salt and vinegar. Today, Indian
and Chinese takeaways are just as popular as fish and chips.
England is also famous for its breakfasts. Very few people eat a full
English breakfast every day, but you can usually get one in hotels or cafes.
The English breakfast is toast, eggs and sausages, often with tomatoes,
beans, hash browns (potato cakes) and mushrooms too!
The traditional Sunday lunch is a roast dinner, with roast beef, roast
potatoes and Yorkshire pudding (a cooked mixture of eggs, flour and milk).
However, many English people now eat fewer traditional dishes, and
English people now eat lots of different kinds of food from all around the
world. But some traditional English food continues to be very popular.
English farmers make wonderful cheeses like red leicester, cheddar and
Stilton, and at farmers' markets all around the country people can buy
fantastic meat, fish, fruit, vegetables and bread.
Tea, of course, is one of the most important drinks in England, and in
cafes and at home many people like to have afternoon tea, which is tea with
cakes and sandwiches.
English people also like to go to the pub to have a drink and perhaps
to eat. These are places where people come together to talk, play games, or
watch football or rugby matches.
CHAPTER FOUR
England has fifty cities and many smaller towns, and there are lots of
things to see and do there.
Whitehall and Westminster are the areas where you can see some of
London's most famous sights. Here, next to the River Thames, are Big Ben
and the Houses of Parliament. At one time, England's kings and queens
lived in these buildings, and they were called the Palace of Westminster, but
today Parliament meets here. Near the Houses of Parliament is Downing
Street, where the UK's prime minister - the leader - lives, and where the
government meets. Also near here is Westminster Abbey, a large and very
important church where England's kings and queens have had their
coronations since the time of William the Conqueror.
Following the Thames to the north, and then towards the east from
Whitehall and Westminster, you come to the West End. Here you can find
theatres, restaurants, cinemas and clubs. Covent Garden, where there was
once a big market, is now a great place to go shopping, or to have a coffee
and watch the street entertainers - actors, musicians, dancers and others who
do small shows outside.
Further east is a small area called the City of London, which was the
most important part of London in the Middle Ages. It is now one of the
great financial centers of the world - a place where money comes in and
out, and where England's big banks work from. Also here is St Paul's
Cathedral, which was built by the great architect Sir Christopher Wren, and
the Tower of London, a castle from the eleventh century.
London is also famous for its large and beautiful parks. Just minutes
from the West End, people can walk, exercise and relax in the large green
areas of Hyde Park, Green Park and St James's Park. Many people visit
London for its museums and art galleries, and most of these are free. The
Tate Modern is the worlds largest modern art gallery, and at the British
Museum, there are several kilometers of rooms, with more than seventy
thousand things to see.
Many visitors to London like to take a ride on the London Eye, the
largest Ferris wheel in Europe. From the top of the Eye, at one hundred and
thirty- five meters, you can see many of London's most famous buildings.
Not far from London, you can visit three interesting and important
royal places - Windsor Castle, which continues to be used by the royal
family today, Hampton Court Palace and Kew Gardens.
Two very exciting cities in the north of England are Liverpool and
Manchester. Liverpool, which is on the sea, became important in the
eighteenth century because of trade with America. Many immigrants from
the West Indies, China and Ireland arrived in Liverpool when they came to
England, so Liverpool was one of England's first multicultural cities. But by
the 1970s and 1980s, ships were no longer coming to Liverpool. The city's
old buildings stayed empty, and it became very poor. Since 2004, a lot of
money has been spent in Liverpool, and Albert Dock, where ships used to
arrive, is now an exciting new area with restaurants, museums, shops and
art galleries.
Liverpool was home to The Beatles, and many people come here to
do 'Beatles Tours' and to visit the clubs where the famous band played or
see the homes where John, Paul, George and Ringo lived. In Liverpool, you
can also see some wonderful art at the Walker Art Gallery or Tate
Liverpool, visit the two cathedrals, or take a boat across the River Mersey
and look back at the famous sights of this great city.
Just fifty kilometers east of Liverpool is another big city, Manchester.
Manchester has some of the most exciting modern buildings in England. Its
cafes, clubs and nightlife make it one of the best cities in the country for
many young people. But like Liverpool, Manchester had a difficult time in
the second half of the twentieth century. Once the most important city in the
world for cotton, Manchester's old industries were coming to an end by the
1950s, and many people lost their jobs. But new industries began to grow,
and at the start of the twenty-first century, parts of the city were rebuilt,
making Manchester an exciting city once more.
Some of the most interesting sights of England are in the far north of
the country. Durham Cathedral, almost nine hundred years old, is here, and
also the Angel of the North, the biggest sculpture in England. The sculpture
- of an angel with very wide wings - was built on an old coal mine by
Antony Gormley, the same artist who made Another Place (see the fact box
opposite). He wanted people to remember that for two hundred years,
mining was one of the biggest industries in this area.
Back in the south of England, and west of London, there are more
sights and interesting cities to see. Bath, so-called because of its famous
Roman baths, is a lovely little city. The old Roman baths are some of the
best-kept in Europe, and in the eighteenth century, many rich and important
people came here to 'take the waters'. Big, fine houses were built for them,
and so Bath has many Georgian streets and buildings, with pretty parks too.
Just a few kilometers further west from Bath, but very different, is the
big, busy city of Bristol. Bristol, once a very big port, now has a strong
electronics industry and is important in the creative media - film, TV, radio
and fashion. It is also the biggest cultural center in the area, with a busy
nightlife. As in many other cities in England, the old docks - the area where
the ships used to come in - have now been changed into an area for
restaurants, shops and museums. One of the most famous sights of Bristol is
the Clifton Suspension Bridge, which was made by the great engineer
Isambard Kingdom Brunei.
As you can see, there are lots of exciting places to visit in England!
CHAPTER FIVE
England has some exciting and beautiful cities, and many interesting
sights. But for a lot of people, the best thing about England is its
countryside. Mostly, England is a place of green hills, but it also has lakes,
rivers, a long coastline that is very different in different parts of the country
and, in the north, mountains. Because there are so many different kinds of
environments in England, there is a lot of wildlife too. Around the coast you
can see seals, sharks, dolphins and otters; and rabbits, foxes, squirrels and
deer are just some of the animals that move around the countryside freely.
Nearly two hundred and thirty different kinds of birds live in England, and
another two hundred visit for part of the year. There are also many different
kinds of trees, plants and wild flowers growing in the English countryside.
Another famous writer from the Lake District is Beatrix Potter, whose
children's books about Peter Rabbit and his friends are famous around the
world. Today, a lot of tourists visit the house near Hawkshead where she
wrote many of her books.
There are four other national parks in the north of England. The Peak
District, the Yorkshire Dales and the Northumberland National Park are all
part of the Pennines, an area of low mountains in the middle of the north of
England. The Pennine Way, a walking trail 429 kilometers long, goes along
these mountains, which make a kind of natural border between east and
west.
East of the Pennines is the north of England's other national park, the
North York Moors, between York in the south and Middlesbrough in the
north. In all these northern national parks, you can find deep valleys
covered with forests, high moorland and wonderful caves (natural holes in
the rock in the hillside), and they are great places for walking, cycling or
horse-riding.
People who have read Wuthering Heights, Jane Eyre, The Tenant of
Wildfell Hall or any of the other books by Charlotte, Emily and Anne
Bronte, probably feel that they already know the countryside of the
Pennines.
The history of the New Forest, about one hundred kilometers south-
west of London, begins more than nine hundred years ago.
William the Conqueror wanted this area to be kept for hunting, and he
and his nobles enjoyed looking for deer and other animals here. Parts of the
New Forest, which is now a national park, have probably not changed very
much since these times. Today, cows walk freely around this area, with its
ancient trees and open land covered with heather. Visitors here can also see
beautiful wild flowers, deer and big birds of prey. But most famous are the
ponies - about three thousand of them - that live in the New Forest, as they
have for many years. You can often see them walking around the villages of
the New Forest, and you must be ready to stop your car when one decides
to cross the road!
Devon is not only famous for Dartmoor and Exmoor. The counties of
Devon and Cornwall are very popular with tourists because of their lovely
countryside and because they get more hours of sunlight than anywhere else
in England. Away from the coast, the green fields are full of wild flowers in
the summer, and narrow little roads with tall hedges at the side go from one
pretty village to the next. By the sea, there are golden beaches and little
rocky coves, and on the north coast, the big waves in places like Newquay
make surfing a very popular sport. Off the coasts of Devon and Cornwall,
you can see basking sharks and porpoises, and on Lundy Island there are
puffins in April and May.
Another beautiful area to visit in this part of England are the Scilly
Isles, about one hundred small islands forty-five kilometers away from
Land's End, in England's far south-west corner. Each island is very
different, and people live on only five of them.
Along England's south coast, big white cliffs - large rocks next to the
sea - look out onto the English Channel. The rocks in the cliffs on part of
this coast, which is called the Jurassic Coast and goes from East Devon to
Dorset, are one hundred and eighty five million years old. Here you can
easily find wonderful fossils - rocks with the shape of animals and plants
from ancient times. You can see lots of fossils here because of erosion - the
rock is very soft, and every day the sea breaks bits of the rock away from
the cliffs. Erosion has made parts of this coast very beautiful: the perfect
little cove at Lulworth in Dorset and the famous arch of Durdle Door were
both made by erosion.
Most of the North Sea coast of England (on the east side of the
country) is very flat and sandy, with a lot of saltmarsh - wet, muddy areas
with grass growing on them. There are many sea birds here and also, at
Blakeney Point in Norfolk, several hundred seals. This is the best place in
England to see seals, and many people take special boat trips to visit them.
The national park of the Norfolk Broads is also in this area. Here,
three rivers go across flat land to the sea, and are so wide in places, they are
almost like lakes. Many people like to visit this area by boat or by bike,
enjoying the wonderful birdlife.
Daily Life
Most jobs in England today are in the service industry - in places like
hotels, restaurants, shops, computer companies and banks. Many English
people work very hard. The working day is usually from nine o'clock until
five o'clock, with an hour at lunchtime, five days a week, but often people
work much longer hours.
It can be very difficult for young people to find a job, even if they
have studied at university. Some do more training, learning how to do new
things. Others take unpaid work, so they can get experience.
Most people who live in cities have homes in the suburbs - the areas
around a city. Cities often also have big estates. These are places built
mainly for people to live in, with lots of houses or flats, and usually some
shops and a park. There are lots of different kinds of homes for people to
live in in England. Some houses are more than six hundred years old, others
are very modern; some people live in houses with several different rooms
and a garden, others live in small apartments called flats. In the past, people
in England used to buy their own homes, but houses and flats have now
become very expensive. For young people with little money, it is now very
difficult to buy a home, and more people now rent: they pay money to
someone to live in their house or flat.
Most English people usually eat at home because eating out - eating
in a restaurant or cafe - is expensive. Breakfast is often toast or cereal, and
while some people have a big meal at midday, others just have a sandwich
for lunch and then eat their main meal in the evening. This meal can be
called supper, dinner or tea. But for some families, 'tea is a cup of tea with a
biscuit or a piece of cake!
Many people now buy their food and all the other shopping they need
from big supermarkets, which are on the outside of almost every town and
city. These supermarkets are often open all day and in the evening, and
some now stay open all night too. Other shops usually open at nine o'clock
and close at half-past five or six, with shorter opening hours on Sundays.
Life in England is busier than ever today. Travel around any English
city at rush hour - when people are going to or from work - and it seems
that no one has time for anything. But over a morning coffee or the
important afternoon cup of tea, most English people can always find the
time to talk about sport or the weather, or think of something to laugh
about.
CHAPTER SEVEN
Sports
Many people believe that England's best ever footballer was Bobby
Charlton, who started playing for Manchester United in 1953 and scored
249 goals over the next twenty years. In 1958, Charlton was in an aeroplane
with the Manchester United team when it crashed, killing eight players.
Bobby Charlton was not killed in the crash, and he went on to play in the
1966 World Cup, which England won. It was the first and only time that
England has won the World Cup.
Cricket was first played in England in the sixteenth century, and by
the eighteenth century, it had become the country's national sport. Every
summer, teams from other countries play five-day Test matches against the
English national team. Cricket is also played on village greens - small fields
in villages - around the country in the summer months. Because cricket
matches are so long, a new kind of match called the Twenty20 was
introduced in 2003. Twenty20 matches are only three hours long, so people
can watch them in one day.
For two weeks around the end of Traditionally, when people June,
England becomes tennis-mad!
This is the time of the Wimbledon they eat strawberries and cream.
Championships, the most famous tennis tournament in the world. Few
people watch tennis on TV for the rest of the year, but during Wimbledon,
matches are shown on TV every afternoon and evening.
England's most famous tennis player was Fred Perry, who won the
Wimbledon Championship every year for three years, from 1934 to 1936.
Since that time, no English player has won the Men's Championship.
Golf is also a very popular sport for English people. There are many
golf courses in England, and every July the Open Championship, one of the
four biggest tournaments in the world, is held in England or Scotland.
English people love sport. For some time, they have not won many
big events in the sports that first came from their country many years
before. But sport continues to be a very important part of life in England.
CHAPTER EIGHT
Entertainment
England is famous around the world for its great culture and
entertainment. Some of the worlds greatest writers, best films, and most
famous actors and directors have come from England, and there are several
hundred theatres and concert halls showing wonderful plays, music and
dance.
The first half of the nineteenth century was famous for the Romantic
poetry of writers like Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley and Keats.
Jane Austen was another great writer of this time. In books like Emma,
Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion, Austen wrote about how women saw
society, marriage and happiness.
Another writer from around this time whose work is much-loved now
is Arthur Conan Doyle, who was Scottish. He wrote stories about Sherlock
Holmes, a London detective, between 1880 and 1907. Sherlock Holmes had
a brilliant mind and was able to find the answers to the strangest mysteries.
The stories of these mysteries were told to the reader by Sherlock Holmes's
great friend Dr Watson.
After the Second World War, two of England's most important writers
were George Orwell, who wrote Nineteen Eighty-Four and Animal Farm,
and Agatha Christie, who wrote sixty-six detective novels, including the
adventures of Miss Marple and Hercule Poirot. Modern fantasy literature -
writing about magic, monsters and other imaginary things - became popular
at this time too, when The Lord of the Rings, by JRR Tolkien, was
published in 1949.
Two of the most famous writers of the last fifty years are children's
writers. Roald Dahl, who was born in Wales to Norwegian parents, wrote
books such as Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and Matilda, many of
which also became great films and theatre shows. JK Rowling's Harry
Potter series - a group of seven fantasy books for children - has sold
hundreds of millions of copies, and people can now read them in sixty-
seven different languages.
Many of these works of literature have become famous plays, and for
many people an important part of any visit to England is a trip to the
theatre. There are several hundred theatres in England, around the country,
but the most famous are the theatres of the West End in London. In the West
End, there is a theatre on nearly every street, showing the latest plays and
musicals, and many of the best actors from all around the world come to
perform here. Some of the most famous shows in the West End have been
musicals, such as Cats and Phantom of the Opera by Andrew Lloyd
Webber, but in London and around the country, you can also see many
different kinds of shows, including more serious plays, new works and
comedy.
One of the oldest theatres in London is the Old Vic, which first began
to show plays in 1818. England also has the National Theatre, on London's
South Bank near the London Eye, which opened in 1976. Across the
Thames are the Royal Ballet and the Royal Opera House at Covent Garden,
and the English National Opera at the Coliseum, the largest theatre in
London.
But it is for its pop music that England is best known. Together with
the USA, the UK brought rock 'n' roll to the world in the 1950s, and The
Beatles, who became popular in the 1960s, is one of the most famous bands
in the world. During the 1960s, the Rolling Stones, Cliff Richard and The
Shadows, The Who, The Kinks, The Animals and many other bands
became important in England, and they started to become famous in the
USA too. For a while, the USA began to follow the UK in music and in
fashion.
In the 1970s, music changed. First there was glam rock from artists
like David Bowie and Elton John, who coloured their hair, and wore strange
and wonderful clothes and shoes. Then came punk rock - short, fast songs,
often with a political message, sung by bands like the Clash. In the 1980s,
world music, heavy metal (loud, hard music) and indie rock were popular,
and England's dance music culture also began. But in the late 1990s, some
artists turned against the many fashions in music of the '80s and early '90s,
and Britpop arrived - bands such as Blur, Oasis and Radiohead that
followed the British guitar music of the 1960s and '70s. Several of these
bands became famous around Europe and in the USA.
Today, you can see bands play in clubs in almost every big city, and
there are also music festivals around the country where people camp and
watch music in big fields. The most famous of these is at Glastonbury.
The film industry only really started in England in the 1930s, when
some famous films like The 39 Steps were made. But it was in the 1950s
and 1960s that British cinema became really important. At this time,
Hammer Horror films like The Curse of Frankenstein and Dracula were
made - and Ealing Comedies like Kind Hearts and Coronets and Whisky
Galore. The first Carry On film was made in 1958, and by 1992, there were
thirty-one. The Carry On films were comedies that made jokes about
English life. They were not thought of as important films, but were loved by
many English people.
The James Bond films were another series that became very famous
in England. The stories were adventures about James Bond, a secret service
agent - someone who worked secretly for the government, looking for
enemies of the country. The first Bond film, Dr No, was made in 1962, and
the films became famous for their music, Bond's cars and clever equipment,
and for James Bond himself - a character played by several different actors.
From the 1990s, romantic comedies like Four Weddings and a Funeral
and Notting Hill were made, and the Merchant Ivory films of classic novels
like Howard's End. Since then, some of England's most successful films
have been Love Actually, Slumdog Millionaire and the Harry Potter series.
English Heroes
Who are England's heroes - the important people who will never be
forgotten? One of the greatest must be William Shakespeare, who wrote
many beautiful poems and about thirty-seven plays, including A
Midsummer Night's Dream, Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet and Macbeth. The
people in his plays always seem very real, and he wrote about their feelings
and problems in words that continue to sound new and interesting today.
But England has scientific heroes as well as heroes from the world of
literature. One of the greatest of these was Sir Isaac Newton. Born in
Lincolnshire in 1643, Newton studied at the University of Cambridge. He
was able to understand and explain many things about the world around us
for the first time, and his book Mathematical Principles of Natural
Philosophy was very important in the history of science. Newton helped
people to understand about light and colour, and he was also the first person
to explain gravity - the force that pulls things towards the ground.
Charles Darwin also did scientific work in England. He was born into
a rich family, and in 1831 he left England to travel around the world.
Darwin studied the animals and plants that he saw on his trip, and was
interested in the differences between them. When he came home, he began
to work on a new idea: the theory of evolution. This was the idea that only
the strongest animals and plants lived and reproduced - had babies or grew
seeds. And so, Darwin believed, each kind of animal and plant was slowly
changing. In 1859, Darwin published his ideas in the book On the Origin of
Species.
One very real hero of England was Horatio Nelson, who was leader of
the Royal Navy from 1794 to 1805. Nelson, who lost one eye and one arm
in battle, was a great leader, and with him, Britain won many battles against
France during the Napoleonic Wars. At the Battle of Trafalgar, Nelson
helped to stop the French from invading Britain, but he was then killed. A
very large statue of him stands forty-six meters high in Trafalgar Square
and is one of London's best-loved sights.
Two other important English seamen were Sir Francis Drake and
Captain Cook. Sir Francis Drake helped to lead England against the Spanish
Armada in 1588, and Captain Cook was the first European to reach the east
coast of Australia, in 1770.
Winston Churchill, prime minister from 1940 until 1945, was another
English hero for many people during World War Two. Churchill was a
strong leader, and many people believe that the speeches and radio
broadcasts he made during the war helped the UK to win the war. He was
prime minister again from 1951 to 1955, and when he died in 1965, the
Queen gave him a state funeral - a special funeral that is normally only for
kings and queens.
Florence Nightingale was famous for helping people too - but she was
a real person. Florence Nightingale is thought of by many as the first real
nurse. In 1854, during the Crimean War, she went to work in a hospital for
soldiers. She thought that it was dirty and badly organized, so she quickly
started to make important changes. Because of her, the hospital became
cleaner, the soldiers were given good food and taken care of better, and
soon fewer people were dying. When she came back to England, Florence
Nightingale started the first proper nursing school at St Thomas' Hospital.
England also has heroes of the stage and screen. One of the first of
these was Charlie Chaplin, a comedy actor and director who was famous for
his many silent films in the years before films with sound were made.
Chaplin's best-known character was 'The Tramp', a funny little man with a
hat, a moustache and a stick. Before the end of the First World War, Chaplin
was the most famous film actor in the world.
But probably the greatest stage heroes of England are The Beatles.
John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr had their
first hit, Love Me Do, in 1962, and by 1964, they had become famous
around the world. There was international 'Beatlemania: people screamed
and shouted when the band came on stage, and the world watched
everything they did. The Beatles were the first English band to become
successful in the USA. They made more than two hundred songs and are
the best-selling band in history.
Princess Diana is also, for many people, an English hero. Diana was
the first wife of Charles, the Prince of Wales, and when they married in
1981, people believed that she would one day be the queen. But they were
not happy together, and in 1996 Charles and Diana ended their marriage. A
year later, Diana was killed in a car accident in Paris. Many people loved
her for her work with international charities and because she showed great
kindness to children, ill people and those with difficult lives. When she
died, thousands of people brought flowers to her London home, and two-
and-a-half billion people watched her funeral on TV.
CHAPTER TEN
Looking Forward
But the digital revolution is also bringing new problems. Many people
feel that modern technology makes life busier and sometimes more
difficult. We can work wherever we are now, so for some people there is
less time to think or to relax. Is it good for children to play computer games
and watch TV so much? And are we forgetting how to meet people and
make real friends because we talk to people through computers so much
now?
These are all difficult questions for England's future, and there are
other questions we are trying to answer now too. For a long time, we have
known that there are big environmental problems in the world. Factories,
cars, and burning coal, oil or gas for fuel all make our air dirty, giving us
global warming. So now we need to find ways to help the environment.
- THE END -