WHAT WAS THE EXTENT OF BRITAIN’S COOLONIES IN 18TH CENTURY?

Posted by maw2214 On Thursday, May 31, 2012 0 comments

Britain had started her collection of overseas colonies in the reign of Elizabeth I. by 1602,
both England and the Netherlands had founded an ‘East India Company’ on the Indian
coast to trade with the Far East. The first settlements in North America took root and
flourished in early Stuart times. In 1661, Britain gained her first African foothold, seizing
James Island on the Gambia River. By the middle of the 1700s, these scattered colonies
had begun to grow into a powerful and profitable empire. By the 1750s the British navy
ruled the waves. By 1763 Britain had won most of France’s territory in North America.
The map above shows the extend of the empire in 1821.
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WHAT WAS THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION?

Posted by maw2214 On Tuesday, May 29, 2012 0 comments

One of the biggest changes in the history of the world, the Industrial Revolution, started
in Britain was the first home of new machines, new types of materials and new ways of
making power. This was the age of coal and iron, of gas and electricity, of railways and
factories. These factories created millions of new jobs, so many people began to leave
the countryside to work in towns. Houses and factories had to be built for them, By 1850,
over 60 per cent of Britons lived, often working 14 hours a day, six days a week.
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WHAT WAS THE NEW WORLD?

Posted by maw2214 On Monday, May 28, 2012 0 comments

From 1492 onwards, European explores sailed across the Atlantic to what they called the
New World of North, Central and South America. There they discovered a treasure trove
of gold and silver. They also found foods that only grew in the New World, such as sweet
corn, potatoes and plants that could be made into medicines. The people that settled in the
New World were traders rather than soldiers. Their first contact with the people already
living there was friendly. The Native Americans showed the newcomers how to hunt, fish
and farm in a land of plenty. In return they were given objects such as knives, needles,
fish hooks and cloth.
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WHAT DO WE KNOW ABOUT THE EARLY HISTORY OF AFRICA?

Posted by maw2214 On Wednesday, May 23, 2012 0 comments

We know very little about the early history of Africa. There must have been great
civilizations there, but very few of them developed writing or left any records. Some
civilization built fine communities, such as the east coast port of Kilwa or the mysterious
stone complex of Great Zimbabwe. After about AD 700, Muslims from the Near East
began to take over many coastal regions and trade routes. One of the wealthiest of
the medieval African empires was Mali. Starting in 1240, its Islamic rulers built up a
kingdom stretching for around 1,600 km over West Africa. Much of the land was desert,
but Mali grew rich from gold.
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WHAT WAS THE BLACK DEATH?

Posted by maw2214 On Sunday, May 20, 2012 0 comments

The bubonic plague (or ‘Black Death’) was a disease which brought death to most parts
of Asia, North Africa and Europe. The first outbreak was recorded in 1331 in China. The
plague started as a bloody swelling in the armpit or groin and quickly invaded the whole
body. It was highly contagious and killed millions of people. The infection probably
began on the steppes, the grassy plains of Asia. IT was carried by fleas which lived in
the fur of the rat. The rats lived closed to humans and thus the disease spread rapidly.
Corpses were left out in the road for people to collect, thus causing the disease to spread
even further.

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WHAT WAS THE MAGNA CARTA?

Posted by maw2214 On 0 comments
 The youngest son of Henry II, John, inherited from his brother Richard the throne of
England, as well as the Plantagenet dominions of France, which he had lost to the French
by 1204. John’s failure to recapture these territories, his dispute with Rome over the
Pope’s choice of a new Archbishop of Canterbury, and a high level of taxation, had the
English nobility up in arms against him. In 1215 they forced the King to agree to the
Magna Carta, guaranteeing their rights in relation to those of the crown. It was intended
to protect the rights of nobles, and made sure that no-one was imprisoned without a fair
trial. Copies of this document, which tried to put an end to the king’s abuse of his power,
were distributed across the whole of England. This led to civil war, which only ended
with John’s death in 1216, Despite all these disasters, it is now known that John was
much better king than history has actually portrayed him.
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WHAT WERE THE CRUSADES?

Posted by maw2214 On Thursday, May 17, 2012 0 comments

The Byzantine emperor, a Christian monarch who lived in Constantinople, needed help.
He turned to the pope, who in 1095 called for all Christians to start a holy war against the
Suljuk Turks. Thousands rushed to join the Crusader armies. They crossed into Palentine
and recaptured the important cities of Nicaea and Antioch. Jerusalem fell in 1099 after a
desperate siege lasting six weeks, and the Crusaders took terrible revenge by slaughtering
thousands of Muslims. There were to be three more crusades: one in 1144, the second
in 1187 and finally the Children’s Crusade in 1212. Fifty thousand children set off from
France and Germany for the Holy Land. Many died on the journey, many more were
captured and sold as slaves in Africa.

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WHAT IS GLUE?

Posted by maw2214 On 0 comments

Traditionally, glue is made from boiling up the bones, skins and other parts of animals such as fish
or horses in order to extract the gelatin, which is then purified and concentrated to make a sticky
substance that will form a bond as it dries. There are now many different types of glues, made from
plant material or minerals such as petrol, as well as different kinds of synthetic glues. One of the
simplest glues is flour-and-water paste and traditional wallpaper paste is made with starch. Latex
adhesives were originally made from the latex extracted from rubber trees, but synthetic forms are
now also available. Another type of synthetic glue is epoxy resin, in which the user mixes an adhesive
substance with equal quantities of a hardener. The two substances react chemically together, causing
the adhesive to set rapidly. Glues are widely used in many industries, such as furniture-making and food-
packaging.

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WHAT MAKES STAMPS VALUABLES?

Posted by maw2214 On 0 comments

There are a few factors that govern how valuable a stamp is to stamp collectors: the most important
is how rare it is. Obviously, very old stamps are uncommon so these, such as the ‘Penney Black’ very
seldom come up for sale and so are unbelievably expensive. Other things that might make a stamp rare
might be where a mistake was made in the printing and the stamp was withdrawn after only a few had
been sold. Undamaged stamps are more valuable than similar ones that have been damaged.

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WHAT IS A CLOUD?

Posted by maw2214 On Tuesday, May 1, 2012 0 comments

A cloud is made up mainly of water. When hot air rises from the land or the sea, it carries water vapour
with it. Because the atmosphere usually gets colder with height, and cold air can hold less vapour
than warm air, the vapor eventually condenses in the form of water droplets or ice crystals around
particles of dust to form a cloud. If it continues to cool further, the cloud will become denser until the
atmosphere is no longer able to hold the moisture and rain, hail or snow will fall. The general rule is that
the deeper a cloud is relative to the deeper a cloud is relative to the height of its base above the sea or
ground, the more heavily it will rain, hail or snow, so thin, high clouds produce no rain, while thunder
storms produce a great deal.
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