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HISTORY AND SOCIETY OF THE UNITED KINGDOM
PREHISTORY STONE AGE 5000 BC
BRONZE AGE 1900 BC
IRON AGE 700 BC
43 AD roman invasion
410 AD Britain no longer a Roman province BRITANNIA
MIDDLE OF THE 5TH CENTURY
Part 1 – Saxons, Angles and Jutes
Part 2 – Vikings DARK AGES
And William the Conqueror NORMAN ENGLAND
Henry
New dynasty. Emblem.
13th to 15th century
THE PLANTAGENETS
16th CENTURY
STUARTS
Unification 1707
HANNOVERS
Completely different dynasty 17TH AND 18TH CENTURY
VICTORIAN PERIOD 19TH CENTURY
ELIZABETHAN PERIOD
Poor living standards
Preoccupation with death
Debts
… BAD THINGS
THE VIRGIN QUEEN
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The Novel in English
Jane Eyre
By Charlotte Brönte
Introduction to the author
The author
Charlotte Brönte (21 April 1816 – 31 March 1855)
She is (more)
Introduction to the author
The author
Charlotte Brönte (21 April 1816 – 31 March 1855)
She is the eldest of the Brönte sisters.
Her most important novel is Jane Eyre written under the pen name Currer Bell. (less)
The main Characters Jane Eyre
Mr Rochester
The main settings 1. Gateshead - This is the house of Mrs. Reed where Jane lives until she is (more)
The main settings 1. Gateshead - This is the house of Mrs. Reed where Jane lives until she is about 10.
2. Lowood School - Jane attends this boarding school for eight years, six as a student and 2 as a teacher.
3. Thornfield - This is the house of Edward Rochester where Jane lives as a Governess to Adele (less)
The plot
Adaptations
Thanks for all your attention
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Oral Presentation
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The sixteenth century: The Elizabethan Period Airina Fontanet Clarissó
The Tudor Family 2
After Henry VIII, Before Elizabeth I During the reigns of Henry VIII and his three children, (more)
After Henry VIII, Before Elizabeth I During the reigns of Henry VIII and his three children, England underwent a religious revolution.
Mary I died childless in 1558.
Young Elizabeth was then declared Queen.
3 (less)
Elizabeth I (1558 – 1603) Religion:
Elizabeth was protestant.
She inherited a kingdom divided and (more)
Elizabeth I (1558 – 1603) Religion:
Elizabeth was protestant.
She inherited a kingdom divided and fearful of further religious persecution.
Catholic plots against her.
Within protestants she also had detractors: Puritans. 4 (less)
Elizabeth I (1558 – 1603) Mary Queen of Scots:
She was Elizabeth’s cousin.
She plotted the murder (more)
Elizabeth I (1558 – 1603) Mary Queen of Scots:
She was Elizabeth’s cousin.
She plotted the murder of her husband and she was forced to abdicate.
She escaped to England.
She was catholic and therefore a potential catholic leader if Elizabeth died.
She plotted against Elizabeth and finally was beheaded. 5 (less)
Elizabeth I (1558 – 1603) The Spanish Armada
After the execution of Mary Queen of Scots (catholic) (more)
Elizabeth I (1558 – 1603) The Spanish Armada
After the execution of Mary Queen of Scots (catholic) Philip of Spain decided to act against Europe’s strongest Protestant ruler.
The Spanish took for granted that they would defeat the English.
However, bad strategies and bad weather conditions made Spain fail.
The victory of the English secured the reputation of Elizabeth I. 6 (less)
Elizabeth I (1558 – 1603) The Virgin Queen
The Queen used that image (of a virgin Queen) as if she (more)
Elizabeth I (1558 – 1603) The Virgin Queen
The Queen used that image (of a virgin Queen) as if she was only dedicated to her people.
She presented herself as an icon that people would worship.
During her reign, there were sorts of parades to popularize and emphasize the power and image of the Queen. 7 (less)
Elizabethan England: A time of Contrasts It was the origins of England sea-power
Modern geography (more)
Elizabethan England: A time of Contrasts It was the origins of England sea-power
Modern geography began and colonial expansion.
Grammar schools
Prodigious literary flowering
London: a great commercial town but very disorganized. No sanitation. 8 (less)
Elizabethan England: A time of Contrasts Far from being a peaceful and prosperous reign:
More (more)
Elizabethan England: A time of Contrasts Far from being a peaceful and prosperous reign:
More religious deserters were executed than in her sister’s reign
Protracted wars ? Millions of pounds in debt
Wages reached their lower level
Increased crime, malnutrition and homelessness.
Spain retained mastery of the seas
The country was divided by deep religious differences
Corruption 9 (less)
Brief description about the War of Roses and it's consequences.
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Paula Alejandra Lora
University of Lleida
Academic English
2012 The War of Roses
REIGN:
31 August 1422 – 4 March 146
HOUSE OF THE PLANTAGENET HENRY VI OF ENGLAND
WHY WAR OF ROSES? The length was from 1455 to 1485
- WHO GOT THE VICTORY?- WHAT HAPPENED WITH EACH HOUSE?- THE TUDORS?
HISTORY Establishment of the House of Lancaster on 1399 by Henry IV.
Henry V mantained the family (more)
HISTORY Establishment of the House of Lancaster on 1399 by Henry IV.
Henry V mantained the family held to the crown.
Infant Henry VI inherit the trone, and for this, the Lancastrian claim the throne.
When the Black Prince's line failed, the crown should have passed by law of primogeniture to Edmund Mortimer, as the descendant of Lionel of Antwerp. But it did not; and this was the crucial issue in what became known as the Wars of the Roses.
Richard, Duke of York, challenged the throne to Henry VI (alliance with the Queen Margaret of Anjou (less)
WARS
1st open war 1455: First Battle of St Albans.
The Earl of Warwick, invaded England and (more)
WARS
1st open war 1455: First Battle of St Albans.
The Earl of Warwick, invaded England and captured Henry at the Battle of Northampt.
York and his son Edmund were killed at the Battle of Wakefield in 1460 (less)
THE OUTCOME
A period of peace followed.
King Edward died in 1483.
His surviving brother, (more)
THE OUTCOME
A period of peace followed.
King Edward died in 1483.
His surviving brother, Richard of Gloucester, seized the throne for himself, using the suspect legitimacy of Edward IV's marriage as pretext.
.
(less)
The Wars of Roses took place between the years 1455 and 1485, with a final victory that went to (more)
The Wars of Roses took place between the years 1455 and 1485, with a final victory that went to the Lancastrian claimant, Henry Tudor, who defeated the last Yorkist king Richard III and married Edward IV's daughter Elizabeth of York to unite the two houses. HENRY VII
Reign: 1485 – 1509 (less)
THANKS FOR YOUR ATTENTION!
The end






