A History of Britain
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Medieval Britain
Roman Britain
Social Change
Industrialization
Industrial Revolution
Rags to Riches
Power Struggle
Political Intrigue
Fish Out of Water
Historical Fiction
Cultural Assimilation
Heroic Sacrifice
Rebellion
David Vs. Goliath
Power of Education
Military Strategy
Romanization of Britain
Population Growth
Literacy
Prehistoric Britain
About this ebook
This highly illustrated, information-packed volume traces the history of the British Isles and its people from prehistory to the present day.
Arranged in eight self-contained sections, each dealing with a major historical period, A History of Britain explores both well-known historical events such as the Norman invasions and the execution of Charles I, and lesser-known details like the uprisings in Dark Age Wales and the birth of tabloid newspapers in Victorian Britain,
Find out how centuries of invasions and migrations shaped British society and culture; how four proud and fiercely independent territories finally came together to form the United Kingdom; how a small island nation rose to become a global power, controlling the largest empire the world had ever seen; and how that empire was lost and today's modern, multicultural Britain emerged.
Chapters include:
• Prehistoric Britain
• Roman Britain
• Invaders and Settlers
• Medieval Britain
• Early Modern Britain
• Georgian Britain
• Victorian Britain
• The Twentieth Century and Beyond
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A History of Britain - Richard Dargie
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PREHISTORIC BRITAIN
OUR EARLIEST ANCESTORS
c. 700,000–12,000 BC
When did the first human feet tread on the lands we call Britain? Recent finds suggest that hominids (the primate ancestors of humans) lived in what became our islands more than 700,000 years ago. The earliest human remains found so far are around half a million years old. Around 25,000 BC, northern Europe and most of modern Britain was plunged into a deep Ice Age that forced our ancestors to retreat southwards to warmer climes.
THE FIRST ‘BRITISH’ HOMINIDS
Sandwiched between the sea waves and crumbling cliffs, in April 2003 archaeologists at Pakefield on the Suffolk coast discovered the oldest evidence of human activity found in Britain. Thirty-two black worked flints were rescued from a site dating back approximately 700,000 years, proving that humans were active in northern Europe far earlier than previously believed. At this time, Britain was still joined to mainland Europe and species such as the mammoth, rhino and giant beaver roamed the East Anglian landscape.
THE BOXGROVE BONES
Half a million years ago, a water hole at Boxgrove in West Sussex attracted a wide variety of thirsty herbivores. An archaic human species took the opportunity to hunt and trap the beasts that congregated there. The discovery of prehistoric horse remains at Boxgrove has revealed the skill with which these early hominids dismembered their prey before using hammerstones to crush the bones and suck out the marrow. A neat semicircular hole in a horse shoulder blade suggests that sharpened hunting sticks were used as spears to bring down the animals. In the 1990s, a human shin-bone and two incisor teeth were discovered at the site, the oldest human remains yet found in Britain. They once belonged to a member of a species known as homo heidelbergensis, the ancestor of modern humans as well as the Neanderthals. The Boxgrove specimen was about 1.80 m (5 ft 10 inches) tall and around 80 kg (176 lbs) in weight. Sadly for ‘Boxgrove Man’, the shin-bone had been gnawed by a large carnivore, suggesting that he was himself prey for a lion or wolf or that his unburied corpse had been scavenged after death.
NEANDERTHAL BRITAIN
In the periods when Britain was habitable between 250,000 and 30,000 BC, the dominant human species in Britain was Neanderthal man, so called after remains discovered in the Neander valley in Germany. A skull from Swanscombe in Kent and teeth found at Pontnewydd Cave in Denbighshire have distinct Neanderthal features. The Neanderthals have had a poor press, often depicted as brutish and slow. In fact, this stocky, barrel-chested creature was well adapted to the prevailing cold climate, had tool-making skills and probably some capacity for speech. The trap excavated at La Cotte de St Brelade in Jersey has provided rich evidence of Neanderthal’s intelligence and success as a hunter. The pile of twenty mammoth and five rhino skulls, smashed open to get access to the nutritious brain tissues, have been described as ‘prehistoric overkill’ by some modern paleo-anthropologists.
ON THE EDGE
Although not always an island, for in periods of glaciation the bed of the North Sea dried up and reverted to plains, Britain was always on the extreme margin of the European mainland. Hominid numbers in Britain were never very large and for long periods they were probably concentrated in the southern and eastern areas which escaped the worst effects of the periodic ice ages. Humans retreated southwards to Europe in the last cold spell 27,000 years ago, but returned around 15,000 years ago at the first sign of a thaw. Hunters from that period, such as those who inhabited Creswell Crags in Derbyshire, lived right on the edge of the retreating glaciers. Another brief period of climatic deterioration cleared these pioneers out of Britain about 13,000 years ago. However, when the last ice age ended a thousand years or so later, humans quickly returned, following the herds of beasts that were moving north as the temperature rose. This last human re-occupation of Britain was to prove more permanent.
TIMELINE OF PALEOLITHIC BRITAIN
PREHISTORIC BRITAIN
SETTLING DOWN
c. 9,000–4,200 BC
The people who returned to Britain at the end of the last Ice Age were hunter-fisher folk. They followed the age-old custom of following their prey from place to place as the seasons unfolded. Over time however, they learned to till the land. As knowledge of farming spread after 4,000 BC, the early peoples of Britain began to settle down.
AN ISLAND AGAIN
After 8,500 BC, a warmer climate led to the growth of forests all over Britain. Thanks to higher sea levels, Ireland and Britain were now separate islands divided by the Irish Sea. The plains that formed a land bridge between Britain and Europe were gradually submerged by rising water, a process that has continued right up to modern times, as the Goodwin Sands testify. The folk and the fauna of Britain were now distanced from the mainland and a unique culture and environment would develop as a result.
A STONE AGE TIME CAPSULE
Over time, early settlements became more complex, none more so than the Neolithic village of Skara Brae in the Orkneys, occupied around 3,000 BC. Here, six dwellings with dry-stone walls, whalebone rafters and turf roofs were dug out of a midden (dunghill) left by earlier generations. Connected by passageways, these dark subterranean huts enjoyed some conveniences. The local flagstone was split to form box beds filled with heather and dressers with shelves. In the floors, stone and clay-lined tanks held shellfish in fresh water as handy snacks or ready-softened bait for fishing lines. Circular cubicles with drains may have been used as latrines. Despite these luxuries, the Skara Brae people deserted the settlement in a hurry. Scattered beads on the floor and uneaten food in a pot suggest that the inhabitants fled from an unexpected menace, perhaps a sandstorm or raiders.
TIMELINE OF MESOLITHIC AND NEOLITHIC BRITAIN
THE LAST NOMADS
The people that returned to Britain in the Mesolithic or Middle Stone Age were nomads. Temporary settlements at Mount Sandel in County Derry and at Greasby in the Wirral are amongst the earliest found, dating back to between 8,000 and 7,000 BC. At Mount Sandel, a tribe of about fifteen people lived in seven huts, made by bending saplings into a frame over which skins and hides were probably stretched. The Greasby tent had a rectangular floor of sandstone slabs and pebbles, perhaps a sign that the hunters returned there on a regular basis.
ANIMAL MAGIC
Star Carr in Yorkshire was probably a winter base for a group of about 25 to 30 people. The discovery of a wooden paddle there suggests that these nomads used canoes or coracles to travel and perhaps to fish. They hunted deer, elk and aurochs or giant wild oxen with spears and arrows, carefully culling the beasts that they depended on to maintain the strength and quality of the herd. Twenty-one deer skulls with antlers have been found at Star Carr. These had been hollowed out to lighten them and had holes bored through them so that they could be worn, perhaps as decoys in the hunt. They may also have played a part in magical ceremonies or been used to tell the story of great hunts in the history of the tribe.
FARMING FOLK
In the 4th millennium BC, the first farmers were at work in Britain. Archaeologists used to explain the change from hunting to farming as the work of new people with superior skills coming in to Britain. Migration probably played a part in spreading this new way of life, but the aboriginal people of Britain were doubtless quick to adapt to any new ideas that helped build up food reserves. The archaeological record suggests that this was the period when several amenable species – sheep, cattle, pigs and goats – were first bred in large numbers in Britain. Wheat in the south and barley in the north were the most successful farmed crops, cut by flint sickles and ground on flat stones.
A FARMED LANDSCAPE
The arrival of farming changed the British landscape forever. The dense forests that covered almost all of Britain apart from the highest peaks in North Wales and Scotland began to disappear, cleared by Neolithic farmers wielding polished axes. Reconstruction suggests that a skilled tree-feller could clear a hectare of forest in less than five weeks. Causewayed enclosures such as the 20-acre Windmill Hill in Wiltshire were built across lowland Britain. Protected by rings of ditches with earthen banks and stockades, these vast pens may have been used to control and butcher livestock. The discovery of human remains at these sites also suggests that they were used as fortifications or even had a religious function.
PREHISTORIC BRITAIN
THE CULTS OF THE DEAD
c. 4,200–2,300 BC
The early peoples of Britain took great care when disposing of their dead. As a result, hundreds of well-preserved funerary sites have been found throughout Britain. Different habits of burying, cremating or exposing the dead may be evidence of new peoples arriving and settling in Britain, or it may be a sign that our ancestors were willing to adopt new ideas and beliefs.
THE GREAT BURIAL CULT
From about 4,200 BC onwards, the peoples of Britain adopted the habit of collective burial, a custom that probably spread from western Europe. After death, corpses were left to rot and stored until the dry bones could be transferred to a burial chamber. These chambers were usually lined with stone slabs, although the five corpses excavated at Foulmire Fen in Cambridgeshire were laid to rest in a fine oak-lined mortuary. In southern and eastern Britain, these chambers were often located within massive earthen barrows or long mounds as at Giants’ Hills in Lincolnshire. The communal effort needed to raise these structures, and their prominent location in the landscape, suggest that they had great significance for the people who created them.
WHO WAS BURIED IN THE BARROWS?
Most barrows contain between five and fifty burials of both genders and all ages. The small numbers suggest that these people had enjoyed high status, perhaps as members of a dynasty of chieftains or an elite household that performed a ceremonial or religious function for their tribe. Most Neolithic Britons were not honoured with a long barrow burial. The jumbled collections of human remains found in the ditches of several causewayed enclosures suggest that most common folk met a less dignified end. They were probably left on ‘sacred’ ground or on wooden platforms and exposed to wildlife and the weather.
MEGALITHIC TOMBS
In northern and western Britain, the privileged dead were usually housed in megalithic tombs such as the portal dolmens found in Wales and Cornwall. These are stone chambers used for cremations and burials and roofed with a sloping capstone as at Dyffryn Ardudwy in Merioneth and Trethevy Quoit in Cornwall. Near the Severn estuary and in the Cotswolds, over 180 long stone tombs have been identified. These consist of an area for ritual and feasts and a separate chamber for the storage of human remains, often arranged by type, age or sex. In North Wales and parts of Ireland, the prestigious dead often ended up in passage graves such as Bryn Celli Ddu on Ynys Mon. Here, an opening in the circular earthen mound leads to an oval burial chamber. At Isbister on Orkney, a chamber containing over 340 dead was divided into stalls by stone slabs standing at intervals. The stones used in these megalithic tombs weigh up to 50 tons. Only a well-organized social group could have moved and raised slabs of this size.
A HARD LIFE
Medical research on these early remains reveal a population averaging between 160 and 170 cm (5ft 3ins to 5ft 7ins) in height and living for around thirty years. Osteoarthritis was common. Deformed shinbones suggest a life spent squatting uncomfortably. Dental remains indicate that diseased teeth and gums were another source of pain. Fractures were common but some skulls of this period bear evidence of trepanning or surgery performed in the hope of relieving pain or curing madness.
TIMELINE OF NEOLITHIC BURIALS
MAES HOWE
The most elaborate megalithic burial site in Britain is Maes Howe in Orkney. Here the grass mound hides a complex of passages and chambers built from carefully crafted slabs. The main chamber, a rough cube of 4.5 m² (5 yards square), is held up by a bracketed vault. At midwinter, the rays of the setting sun travel along the entrance passage, lighting up the chamber’s rear wall. Knowledge of the seasons and the skies must have been widespread around the British and Irish Isles in Neolithic times, for a similar event occurs at the winter solstice in the passage grave of New Grange in County Meath.
BEAKER BURIALS
A major change in British burial habits took place around 2,750 BC. Cremation, long practised in northern Britain, became more common in the south. At the same time, the tradition of collective burial in barrows was replaced by interments in single graves under small mounds. In Beaker burials, the corpse was usually laid to rest in a crouched, foetal position within a stone coffin that contained clay pottery and other grave goods.
PREHISTORIC BRITAIN
MONUMENTS AND METALS
c. 3,000–2,300 BC
In the years after 2,500 BC, social life in Britain became more complex. The demand for new resources such as metals prompted more technical skills and more ambitious patterns of trade. The population and economy of Britain strengthened to a point where vast amounts of time and energy could be spent on building large-scale monuments.
HENGE AND CIRCLE BUILDERS
Henges, circular areas enclosed by an earthen bank and ditch, were laid out across southern and eastern Britain, often near to water features. Human remains at henge sites, such as the cleft skull of a sacrificial infant found at Woodhenge in Wiltshire, suggest that they were religious locations. Other impressive monuments appeared across Britain. Over 150,000 tons of chalk were dug out to form the earthworks at Avebury that enclose an area 365 m (1,200 ft) in diameter. In northern and eastern Britain, stone circles proliferated, with over a hundred in Aberdeenshire alone. Building on this scale suggests that the communities of prehistoric Britain now possessed unprecedented skills of leadership and organization.
STONEHENGE
The most famous henge was begun around 2,800 BC. In its first phase it was a circular earth bank and ditch facing the gigantic Heel Stone. The characteristic trilithons, made from sarsen stones hauled from the Marlborough Downs 40 km (25 miles) away, were erected around 2,000 BC. The finely shaped lintel and upright stones were held together using mortice and tenon joints. Stonehenge’s builders even understood the importance of entasis – creating a slight outward curve in the upright stones to counteract the illusion of concave sagging that a straight stone would have given. The purpose of Stonehenge is unknown and may have changed during the twelve hundred years that it took for the henge to reach its final form. However, its alignment to the midsummer sunrise and midwinter sunset as well as to an eighteen-year lunar cycle has led many to suggest a religious or astro-calendrical function.
THE MYSTERIOUS BLUESTONES
In the last phase of building at Stonehenge around 1,540 BC, an inner circle of standing bluestones was erected. It was long believed that these stones had been hauled or rolled from the Preseli Mountains in Pembrokeshire over 320 km (200 miles) away. Recent research into the movement of glaciers in the last Ice Age has suggested that the bluestones were in fact brought to the area by natural action rather than human hand. Despite this convenient deposit, paleoeconomists have calculated that two million man-hours went into the construction of Britain’s most iconic prehistoric monument.
METAL MAKERS
The earliest metal objects in Britain were copper daggers first used around 2,700 BC. These may have come from Europe, but there are native sources of the metal in Wales, Derbyshire and the Isle of Man. Early copper was beaten into shape using rounded stone axes, but a wider range of objects were made once the skills of smelting and casting were mastered. Around 2,300 BC smiths in Britain began to add tin to copper to produce the alloy bronze, and so make tools and weapons that were harder and sharper still. The demand for bronze stimulated exchange between tin-rich Cornwall and the copper mines to the north. Cornish tin was also a lure for merchants from overseas.
BRONZE AGENTS
Although the ores needed for bronze were plentiful in Britain, scrap metal was valuable and it was recycled. Travelling merchants collected unwanted tools and weapons and for convenience, they stored this scrap in temporary hoards. Some of these hoards were never retrieved by their owners and now provide us with evidence of the wide range of bronze artefacts in everyday use 4,000 years ago. Other Bronze Age hoards may have been discarded intentionally. Many bronze weapons have been recovered from sites that were once bogs, wells or rivers, suggesting that these were offerings to water gods and spirits.
TRADE WITH EUROPE AND BEYOND
A series of remains found in ‘Wessex’ in southern England were buried in elaborate graves and are thought to have belonged to a powerful caste. Weapons, tools and treasure from these graves tell us that the early peoples of Britain had links to other peoples living far beyond their immediate locality. A grave at Bush Barrow near Stonehenge contained ornaments of gold that had probably been sourced, if not worked, in Ireland. The amber in the necklace found at Upton Lovell in Wiltshire was traded from the Baltic. The glazed faience beads prized by the Wessex elite were probably produced in the eastern Mediterranean.
TIMELINE
PREHISTORIC BRITAIN
IRON AGE WARRIORS
c. 650–100 BC
The first millennium BC was a period of marked change. In southern and eastern Britain the population rose sharply and the landscape filled with new settlements. Trade and the production of goods increased but so did competition for resources. Tribal rivalry intensified, prompting the building of hillforts and other fortifications in all parts of Britain.
POPULATION EXPLOSION
Estimating the population of ancient Britain is difficult, but many scholars accept that less than a million people lived in Bronze Age Britain. This figure rose sharply to around four million by 150 BC and probably rose again to about six million by 150 AD. The Roman general Julius Caesar remarked on the large number of settlements in southern Britain and its ‘countless’ population. Feeding these additional mouths had a huge impact on the British landscape, especially in southern areas such as Hampshire and Gloucestershire where the population pressure was greatest. Low-lying woods were cleared, more land was farmed and even less fertile upland areas were cleared for farming. However, despite the greater effort that went into food production and industry, the Iron Age in Britain was a time of increasing political and military tension.
MOUSA BROCH
Northern Britain was not as heavily populated as the south but defence was just as necessary. Mousa in Shetland is the best-preserved example of an Iron Age broch or round tower. Standing on the coast at over 13 m high (44 ft), it served as a lookout tower and a shelter from raiders. The only entrance to a broch was a short doorway and passage that forced incomers to stoop low, rendering them vulnerable to the defenders above. Mousa was one of over 570 brochs built throughout Scotland, suggesting that the instability of the late Iron Age was felt in all parts of Britain.
HILLFORTS, CRANNOGS AND DUNS
Thousands of fortified sites throughout Iron Age Britain affirm that this was an age of warriors. The consolidation of regional peoples into tribal groupings provided the manpower to build impressive earthwork hillforts such as Danebury in Hampshire. These were not always places of permanent residence, for in much of southern Britain the population increasingly lived in sprawling lowland oppida or stockaded settlements, only retreating to the hills in emergencies. However, the development of fortified homesteads such as Warden Hill in Northumberland reminds us that these were unsettled times. Cliff forts in Cornwall and North Wales made good use of coastal promontories, creating safe havens protected by the sea on three sides and banks of earth to landward. In the north and west of Britain, hillforts and duns were raised with stone defences. The walls were often vitrified – fired at a high temperature to produce a hard enamel coating – as at Tap o'Noth in north-east Scotland. The peoples of Scotland and Ireland often used water features for defence, building crannogs or artificial islands based on wooden piles as defensive refuges. A variant of the crannog was the island dun, a stone fort built in the middle of a small loch and reached by a causeway.
IRON AGE TIMELINE
THE CELTS
‘Celtic’ is a term loosely applied to the iron-based tribal cultures that spread from central to much of western Europe after 800 BC. Historians used to believe that Britain became part of the Celtic world after an invasion of Celtic peoples around 600 BC. However recent scholars have found little archaeological evidence of a mass movement into the British and Irish Isles at this time. Instead they argue that Iron Age Britain was populated by a diverse collection of similar cultures which were heavily influenced by ideas from Celtic Europe through trading and kinship links. These cultures shared important characteristics, such as a love of martial display and a common Druidic religion. Recent genetic studies seem to have confirmed that new ideas from overseas were absorbed by the existing inhabitants of Britain and Ireland, rather than imposed by waves of hostile invaders.
CONTACT WITH ROME
Iron Age Britons had many contacts with the Roman world before Caesar’s expedition in 55 BC. The large natural harbour at Hengistbury Head in Dorset was an important port of entry for Roman goods, but the trade was in both directions. The Greek geographer Strabo recorded that the British exported ‘grain, cattle, gold, silver, iron, hides, slaves and hunting dogs’. Early Roman wine amphorae dating to the 2nd century BC have been found in many sites across southern Britain. Such luxuries may have been paid for by the provision of British slaves for the Roman market.
ROMAN BRITAIN
THE COMING OF THE EAGLES
55–54 BC
In 55 BC, Julius Caesar resolved to invade the troublesome islands lying to the north-west of Gaul. The Britons were too ready to send help to their rebellious Celtic cousins in Europe. Britain was potentially rich in gold and tin, and for Caesar there was also the glorious prospect of subduing the semi-mythical lands on the edge of the known world.
BATTLE ON THE BEACH
When his fleet emerged from the Channel mists, Caesar glimpsed the cliffs of Dover lined with warriors. This was no place for a landing, as Caesar noted that ‘a spear could be thrown from the clifftops to the shore’. After gathering their ships, the Romans scouted northwards, anchoring on the shore near Deal. Here too the Britons were waiting, having followed the invasion fleet along the coast in their chariots. Caesar ordered his reluctant troops to attempt an amphibious landing, led by the eagle-bearer of the Tenth Legion, the first Roman to leap into British waters. Without cavalry however, the heavily armed legionaries struggled to win a foothold on the beach against the more