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Period: 1066 to 1485
The Middle Ages
- Challenging authority
- Challenging feudalism
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Jun 15, 1215
Magna Carta
- King John was extremely unpopular with barons
- Over taxation (repeated levying of scutage 11 times between 1199-1214)
- Excommunicated in 1212 due to appointing Stephen Langton as Archbishop of Canterbury
- Repeated military failures (eg. Battle of Bouvines, 1214, failed at retaking Normandy)
- Barons held John at swordpoint and forced him to sign Charter
- Demands included
- Free men have right to fair trial (foundation of modern law)
- No scutage may be levied
- King John was extremely unpopular with barons
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1258
Provisions of Oxford
- Barons' demands
- Henry had to agree
- Council of 24 could make decisions without royal consent
- divisions appeared - radical vs moderate
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1264
Battle of Lewes
- Simon captures Henry III and his son, Edward, with the help of some barons
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1265
Simon de Montfort's Parliament
- Commons, including knights and burgesses, called to Parliament by de Montfort, this continued even after monarchy took back control in:
- August 1265, Royalists defeat Montfort in Battle of Evesham
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1350
Statute of Labourers
- Prevented wages from increasing (from pre-plague standards)
- Limited movement of workers
- Prevented wages from increasing (from pre-plague standards)
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1379
The Peasant's Revolt
- Black death - more demand for peasant workers
- Poll taxes
- Wat Tyler led rebels to London
- Talked with Richard at Mile End
- demands: abolition of serfdom, amnesty, handing over corrupt officials
- Richard agreed, but then changed his mind
- Armies killed rebels
- King back in control by end of June
- John Ball - excommunicated
- July - Hanged, Drawn, Quartered
- Struck fear in ruling class
- 1450 all villeins freed
- Black death - more demand for peasant workers
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1381
Poll Tax
- levied in 1377 and 1379 too, to pay for French invasion
- disproportionate burden on the poor, 4d per man
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Period: 1485 to
The Early Modern Period
- Challenging royal authority
- Developing Parliament
- Development of civil liberties
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1534
Church of England
- King Henry VIII proclaimed self head of church of England
- dissolved Catholic monasteries, removed feast days, etc.
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1536
Pilgrimage of Grace
- Causes - anger about religious change, monasteries, Advisors, economy
- Act of Suppression 1536, poor harvests, taxes
- Cromwell blamed for taxes + abolishment of feast days
- 30000 marched on York, Robert Aske - leader
- Henry VIII bought time by giving in to some demands - pardon + no more monasteries closed
- Aske spent Christmas with King
- revolt broke out on way home - king went back on word
- 216 executed, religous reform sped up
- reinforced absolute monarchy
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1536
Lincolnshire Uprising
- Lincoln Articles sent to king
- Grievances: Restoration of old ways of religion, removal of Cromwell
- over 1000 marched under the Pilgrim's Oath (Robert Aske)
- Rebels didn't have leaders
- Revolt ended quickly
- 57 death sentences carried out
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Period: to
Personal Rule
- Charles I dissolves Parliament and rules by himself
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English Civil War Causes
- Parliament vs King Charles I
- Parliament Protestant, 'radical', wanting more power
- CI introduced many unpopular ideas
- New Prayer Book, 1639
- Ship Money: Illegal taxation on ships, even in landlocked counties 1634-1638
- Rumoured Catholicism: Angered Puritans (Oliver Cromwell) and Protestants
- Parliaments demands became more radical
- Militia Bill: transferred control to army to Parl., 1640
- Triennial Bill ensured Parl. was called at least every 3 years, 1641
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Period: to
English Civil War
- Cavaliers (Royalists) vs Roundheads (Parliamentarians)
- Oliver Cromwell creates New Model Army (first standing army, where soldiers were conscripted based on ability not money), 1645
- Charles I executed in 1649
- Gave rise to groups like
- Diggers: believed property was theft, equality was growing crops on shared land
- Levellers: radical, John Lilburne, wanted votes and freedom
- Conservatives: Cromwell leading, would not give radical groups their wishes
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Lord Protector for Life
- Oliver Cromwell established title, apparently no legacy
- Established Commonwealth of England, introducing more taxes on restrictions, as he was a devout Puritan
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Glorious Revolution
- To prevent Cromwell's line resembling monarchy, Parliament restored Charles II (1661)
- CII was ambiguously Catholic but managed to keep power
- JII succeeds (1685), tolerated by Parliament although he was Catholic and had a son who would be raised Catholic, raising concerns for Parliament
- William of Orange (NED) invited to oust JIII and rule jointly with Mary by The Immortal Seven, 1688
- Bill of Rights signed at Parliament's request- shift from Absolute to Constitutional Monarchy, 1689
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Robert Walpole
- First Prime Minister
- Under rule of Hanover King George I
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American Revolution Causes
- Acts sparking anger in American colonies
- Navigation Acts preventing colonies from trading with countries except Britain
- Stamp Tax: On all documents including newspapers ('No taxation without representation!')
- Mercantile System: Colonists only allowed to buy British owned products to boost economy
- Declaratory Act (1766): reinforced British control/ validity
- Boston Tea Party (1773): Tea aboard East India Company clipper emptied off Boston Harbour, restitution paid eventually
- Acts sparking anger in American colonies
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Declaration of American Independence
- colonies publishing Declaration of Independence, similar to Magna Carta
- provoking British Association Movement petitions
- 1781, British officially defeated, as economy and taxes weakened due to recession, army preoccupied in Napoleonic Wars
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Zong Ship Trial
- 133 enslaved people thrown overboard to claim insurance, slaves seen as commodities
- Granville Sharp brought public attention to this case, publicity, propaganda
- Thomas Clarkson simultaneously producing drawings of horrible slave ship conditions and showing to public
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Period: to
Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade
- founded by Thomas Clarkson, Granville Sharp - campaigners
- over 100 petitions presented to Parliament in three months
- 20% of Manchester's population signed, 1792
- 1797, anti-slavery petition had more signatures than the Chartists
- 300,000 people boycotted sugar produced in West Indies, causing economic struggle
- 'Natural Rights' ideology starting to form, Presbyterians, Quakers against slavery
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Combination Act
- Government passed act preventing employers but MAINLY WORKERS from forming 'defensive combinations', after groups such as LUDDITES started breaking machinery in protest of loss of jobs
- Now only skilled workers could afford to pay subscriptions to less radical 'friendly societies'
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Period: to
Lord Shaftesbury
- MP in Woodstock
- introduced Ten Hours Bill
- 1840, Children's Employment Commission set up
- resulting in 1842 Mines and Collieries Act
- president of Ragged Schools Union in 1844
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Abolition of the Slave Trade Act
- William Wilberforce, MP, secured act in Parliament making it illegal to buy or trade enslaved people in the British Empire
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Robert Owen
- socialist manager of New Lanark mill
- introduced 8 hour day, recreational and educational facilities 1816, very successful town according to MPs, visited by royal family
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Corn Laws
- tariffs on imported corn, for protectionism
- price of bread rising immensely, bad for factory workers, good for British land owners
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St Peterloo's Massacre/ 6 Acts
- Rotten boroughs- unfair distribution, corrupt electoral system
- No Secret Ballot
- Increased taxes- increased poverty
- Henry Hunt's speech in St Peter's Fields- Peterloo Massacre- 11 people killed
- Government Introduced 6 Acts- Banned meetings of more than 50 people and asking for reform became an act of treason
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The Great Reform Act
- after third attempt, Lord Russel passed it
- middle class men can now vote
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Period: to
The Anti-Corn Law League
- trying to convince Whigs government that freetrade is better
- memorabilia, John Bright speaking to crowds on 5,000
- 'one issue' group
- 1845 Irish potato famine showing severity of corn law effects
- 1846, Sir Robert Peel repealed Corn Laws
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Tolpuddle Martyrs
- 200,000 protesting in Copenhagen
- 800,000 names on petition against harsh punishment after 6 agricultural labourers tried to form a union after wages cut to 7 shillings a week
- arrested for breaking 1797 Act Against Unlawful Oaths
- George Loveless was first to return in 1837 after government granted a free pardon, wrote pamphlet 'Victims of Whiggery', selling raised money for funding families
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Grand National Consolidated Trades Union
- claimed to have 500,000 members collectively from all trades
- failed in December due to clashing ideas and trouble with finances
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Period: to
The Chartist Movement
- key causes for concern: rotten boroughs, corruption, limited representation, public votes, limited franchise.
- Proposed solutions: vote for all men over 21, secret ballot, equal electoral districts, annual parliament, pay for MPs, no property qualification
- Used every method possible to demonstrate
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Third Chartist Petition
- Previously in 1839, 1942
- Over 5,000,000 signatures
- Conditions all granted eventually, nothing immediately
- Secret ballot granted 1872
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Trade Unions Congress
- many small scale trade unions co-ordinating with each other
- initially unbalanced, disproportionate representation
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Third Reform Act
- Prime Minister William Gladstone introducing third act
- Still no universal male suffrage
- 40% men without vote
- Women not even mentioned, none could vote
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Annie Besant & the match girls' strike
- took 50 fellow match girls to Parliament, had links with MPs, to demand a fairer wage, better working conditions
- employers gave in and granted demands after five weeks
- first time unorganised, unskilled women had gone on strike and been granted wishes
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London Gas Workers Union
- over 3,000 members within weeks
- London Docks workers inspired by this, demands included overtime pay, higher wage, minimum employment 4 hours
- August, dock at standstill, picketing, sympathy strikes from coal men, postmen, railway porters
- £30,000 gift from Australian trade unions
- employers agreed to most demands in September
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The National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies
- 17 suffrage groups around the country who had been petitioning for votes for women came together to form the NUWSS
- 1900, Millicent Fawcett made president
- Organised petitions, letter writing campaigns, published newspapers for advertising cause
- Conflict with WSPU, as worried their violent campaigning would lose support
- 1911, 26,000 members!
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The Women's Social and Political Union
- founded by Emmeline Pankhurst and two daughters
- wanted votes only for women with property qualifications, like men
- Labour party did not support, as they saw it as unfair to give vote to people based on property rather than age
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WSPU at Liberal Party Meeting
- publicity was their greatest success
- October, disrupted Liberal Party meeting, shouting over speakers
- Christabel Pankhurst, Annie Kenney, arrested by police, charged with assault
- Sent to prison, earning vast amounts of publicity
- Now called 'suffragettes' whilst more peaceful NUWSS people 'suffragists'
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NUWSS Rally
- male and female political speakers gave lectures on political issue of women without vote
- NUWSS funds used to pay for election campaigns, salaries for MPs who would help to get vote for women - eg, Bertrand Russel in Wimbledon
- 1910, manage to get 280,000 signatures with support of 36 MPs
- 1912, Labour Party first political party to support votes for women
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Hyde Park
- pilgrimage of 50,000 women to express support for women's votes
- although Asquith against votes for women, mainly against WSPU
- 1914 WWI, NUWSS got public sympathy as it gave up its campaign to support government in wartime industries
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Cat and Mouse Act
- WSPU getting increasingly violent, fire-bombing Prime Minister's country house 1913, throwing stones at 10 Downing Street 1908
- imprisoned suffragettes going on hunger strikes, making police look bad and lose support
- new act allowing ill prisoners to leave, recover and be rearrested
- gained sympathy and publicity for votes for women
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Franchise Extended
- franchise extended to women over the age of 30 who were related to the Local Government Register (employed there or married to a worker there)
- 8.4 million women given the vote
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General Strike
- strikes seen as treason during WWI
- 1925, miners' wages subsidised after cut by 13% and shifts increased from 7-8 hours
- many British industries struggled as government bought internationally, improving relations, reparations
- about 1.5 million strikers!
- 4th-13th May, TUC began negotiating with government and mine owners as it got increasingly violent and they lost control, return to work despite no concessions
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Trade Disputes Act
- sympathy strikes and picketing banned
- 500,000 left workers unions
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Jarrow Crusade
- 70% unemployment in town of Jarrow after Palmer's shipyard closed in previous year
- 200 men marched 300 miles from the North-East
- local MP Ellen Wilkinson presented petition
- although prime minister did not meet her demands, garnered public sympathy, eg, communists
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British Nationality Act
- Caribbeans and Asians from Commonwealth immigrating to Britain, to help rebuild country after war, remittance payments formed second largest contributor to Jamaican economy
- Example of ship is WINDRUSH
- Workers in NHS, London Transport services, causing 'white flight', segregation
- Teddy Boys, overcrowding in areas
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Notting Hill Riots
- London factory owners reluctant to employ migrant workers
- landlords exploiting tenants for money
- racism rising
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Commonwealth Immigrants Act
- work voucher needed to enter country
- immigration being reduced
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Rivers of Blood Speech
- Enoch Powell gave racist speech
- Voluntary repatriation, response to Kenyan Africanisation
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Race Relations Act
- racial profiling, 'sus' law
- Operation Swamp 81, 1000 black people stopped in 6 days
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Brixton Riots
- masses protesting against perceived police brutality and institutional racism
- 1000 policemen sent from London to Brixton
- 100 vehicles destroyed, 150 buildings damaged
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Scarman Report
- Government enquiry into institutional racism
- 'Sus law' repealed
- Police Complaints Authority established in 1985
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Miner Strike
- When Margaret Thatcher came to power in 1979, began stockpiling coal and closing unproductive mines
- After government announced closure plans, Arthur Scargill, leader of National Union of Mineworkers, strike 1884-1985
- TUC and Labour politicians trying to get an agreement
- women and sympathisers aiding strike
- Last coal mine closed in 2015