United Kingdom, constitutional monarchy in northwestern
Europe, officially the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
Great Britain is the largest island in the cluster of islands, or archipelago,
known as the British Isles. England is the largest and most populous division
of the island of Great Britain, making up the south and east. Wales is on the
west and Scotland is to the north. Northern Ireland is located in the northeast
corner of Ireland, the second largest island in the British Isles. The capital
of the United Kingdom is the city of London, situated near the southeastern tip
of England.
People often confuse the names for this country,
and frequently make mistakes in using them. United Kingdom, UK,
and Britain are all proper terms for the entire nation, although the
term Britain is also often used when talking about the island of Great
Britain. The use of the term Great Britain to refer to the entire nation
is now outdated; the term Great Britain, properly used, refers only to
the island of Great Britain, which does not include Northern Ireland. The term England
should never be used to describe Britain, because England is only one part of
the island. It is always correct to call people from England, Scotland, or
Wales British, although people from England may also properly be called English,
people from Scotland Scottish, and people from Wales Welsh.
The United Kingdom is a small nation in physical
size. At 244,110 sq km (94,251 sq mi), the United Kingdom is roughly the size
of Oregon or Colorado, or twice the size of New York State. It is located as
far north in latitude as Labrador in North America, but, like the rest of
northern Europe, it is warmed by the Gulf Stream flowing out of the North
Atlantic Ocean. The climate, in general, is mild, chilly, and often wet. Rain
or overcast skies can be expected for up to 300 days per year. These conditions
make Britain lush and green, with rolling plains in the south and east and
rough hills and mountains to the west and north.
Despite its relatively small size, Britain is highly
populated, with an estimated population density of 252 persons per sq km (653
per sq mi) in 2008. It is highly developed economically, preeminent in the arts
and sciences, sophisticated in technology, and highly prosperous and peaceful.
In general, British subjects belong to one of the more affluent states of
Europe and enjoy a high standard of living compared to the rest of the world.
Many nations around the world have been influenced
by British history and culture. With each passing year, English comes closer to
being a world language for all educated people, as Latin once was. The prominence
of English can be traced to the spread of the British Empire during the last
three centuries. In the early 20th century, a quarter of the world’s people and
a quarter of the world’s land surface were controlled in some way by Britain.
Some parts of the world received substantial numbers of British emigrants and
developed into what were called daughter nations. These colonies eventually
became self-governing areas called dominions. Canada, Australia, and New
Zealand fit this pattern. For a long time India was the most important colony
in the British Empire, but after a long anticolonial struggle with Britain,
independent India today is the world’s most populous democracy. The British
Empire once included substantial portions of southern, western, and eastern
Africa; important areas in Asia, such as Hong Kong; a few holdings in the
Americas; and a large number of islands in the Pacific. Today most of these are
independent nations, but many retain some British law, institutions, and
customs.
Even parts of the world never included in the
British Empire have adopted the British system of parliamentary government,
often referred to as the Westminster model. Originally a vehicle for royal
authority, this system gradually evolved into a representative government and
finally became a means through which democracy could be exercised. Today
legislative power comes from the lower house of Parliament, known as the House
of Commons. The freely elected members of the House of Commons select the
nation’s chief executive, the prime minister. He or she in turn appoints
members of the House of Commons to the Cabinet, a body of advisers. Because the
executive is not separated from the legislature, the government is efficient as
well as responsive to the electorate.
Britain was a pioneer in economic matters. The
first industrial revolution occurred in Britain in the 18th and early 19th
centuries and led to the development of the world’s first society dominated by
a middle class. Britain was the first nation to have more than half of its
population living in urban areas. Rapid economic development and worldwide
trade made Britain the richest nation in the world during the reign of Queen
Victoria in the 19th century. For a long time before and after the Industrial
Revolution, London was the center of world capitalism, and today is still one
of the world’s most important business and financial centers.
Britain has been important in the arts throughout
modern times. Plays, novels, stories and, most recently, screenplays from Britain
have been admired throughout the world. The output of English-language
literature from Britain has far surpassed its output in art and music, fields
dominated by other European nations. Nevertheless, Britain can claim several
20th-century artists and composers of note, including painter David Hockney and
composer Sir Edward Elgar.
II
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LAND AND RESOURCES OF THE UNITED KINGDOM
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A
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Geographical Components and Borders
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The United Kingdom is bordered on the south by the
English Channel, which separates it from the continent of Europe. It is
bordered on the east by the North Sea, and on the west by the Irish Sea and the
Atlantic Ocean. The United Kingdom’s only land border with another nation is
between Northern Ireland and Ireland.
England is the largest, most populous, and
wealthiest division of the United Kingdom. It makes up 130,410 sq km (50,352 sq
mi) of the United Kingdom’s total 244,110 sq km (94,251 sq mi). The area of
Scotland is 78,790 sq km (30,420 sq mi), the area of Wales is 20,760 sq km
(8,020 sq mi), and the area of Northern Ireland is 14,160 sq km (5,470 sq mi).
This means that England makes up 53.4 percent of the area of the United
Kingdom, Scotland 32.3 percent, Wales 8.5 percent, and Northern Ireland 5.8
percent.
The United Kingdom contains a number of small
islands. These include the Isle of Wight, which lies off of England’s southern
coast; Anglesey, off the northwest coast of Wales; the Isles of Scilly in the
English Channel; the Hebrides archipelago to the west of Scotland, consisting
of the Inner and the Outer Hebrides; the Orkney Islands to the northeast of
Scotland; and the Shetland Islands farther out into the North Sea from
Scotland.
Several dependencies and dependent territories are
associated with the United Kingdom. The dependencies, located close to Britain,
are the Isle of Man in the Irish Sea and the Channel Islands off the northern
coast of France. These dependencies, while not technically part of the United
Kingdom, maintain a special relationship with it. The Channel Islands were once
part of the Duchy of Normandy and retain much of their original French culture.
The Isle of Man, controlled by Norway during the Middle Ages, came under
English rule in the 14th century. Both dependencies are largely self-governing
and have their own legislative assemblies and systems of law. Britain is
responsible for their international relations and defense.
Britain’s dependent territories are scattered throughout
the world and are the remains of the former British Empire. They are generally
small in area and without many resources. Once considered colonies, they have
opted to remain under British control for a variety of reasons. Today Britain
assists the territories economically, with the understanding that they may
become independent when they wish. Most are locally self-governing, although
the queen appoints a governor for each territory who is responsible for
external affairs and internal security, including the police and public
service. The ultimate responsibility for their government rests with the
foreign and commonwealth secretary, a minister in the British Cabinet. The
United Kingdom has experienced difficulties with some of its
territories—Argentina has made claims to the Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas)
and Spain has made claims to Gibraltar. China’s claim to the former dependent
territory of Hong Kong was satisfied in July 1997 when Britain’s lease ran out
and China assumed control of the area.
B
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Natural Regions and Topography
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The island of Great Britain can be divided
into two major natural regions—the highland zone and the lowland zone. The
highland zone is an area of high hills and mountains in the north and west. The
lowland zone in the south and east consists mostly of rolling plains. The zones
are divided by an imaginary line running through England from the River Exe on
the southwest coast to the mouth of the River Tees on the northeast coast. The
lowland zone has a milder climate and better soils for farming. Historically,
most people in Britain have lived in the lowland zone rather than in the
harsher highland zone.
B1
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The Highland Zone
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The highland zone contains what is often called
rough country, consisting to a large extent of rugged hills, mountains, and
eroded areas frequently broken by valleys and plains. The highest elevations in
the British Isles are in the highland zone; the highest point is Ben Nevis at
1,343 m (4,406 ft), located in the Highlands of Scotland. The highland zone is
cooler than the lowland zone, and receives more rainfall and less sunlight. In
many places farming is impossible. Even where it is feasible, the soil is often
thin and stony, with a hard rock formation below. Rainwater often cannot escape
readily, so many areas tend to be waterlogged.
Wales, Scotland, and parts of England are located
in the highland zone. The parts of England in the highland zone include the
Pennine Chain of mountains, extending down into northern England and into the
southwestern peninsula. The Pennine Chain is sometimes called the backbone of
England. It is a massive upland area extending 260 km (160 mi) north to south,
starting at the Cheviot Hills on England’s border with Scotland and ending in
the Midlands of central England. It is made up of several broad, rolling,
windswept moorlands separated by deep river valleys. Many of England’s major
industrial areas lie on the flanks of the Pennine Chain, where there are many
coalfields. To the west of the northern Pennines are the Cumbrian Mountains, a
mountainous dome of ancient rocks deeply eroded by glaciers. This region
contains the Lake District, famous for its lakes and scenic beauty.
The part of the highland zone in England’s
southwest peninsula is often referred to as the West Country. This peninsula,
which juts out into the Atlantic Ocean, contains the counties of Devon and
Cornwall. It features hilly, rough areas, the moorland plateaus of Dartmoor and
Exmoor, and many picturesque valleys. Its sheltered areas are noted for their
mild climate.
North of the Cheviot Hills, in Scotland, are
the Southern Uplands, an area of rounded hills and broad valleys. The maximum
elevation here is 850 m (2,800 ft), and much of the area consists of moorlands
used for grazing sheep. North of the Uplands is a broad valley known variously
as the Central Lowlands, the Scottish Lowlands, or the Midland Valley. This
valley is sandwiched between two areas of uplands and contains most of
Scotland’s urban centers, industries, and mines.
Farther north are the Scottish Highlands, a rugged
area of mountain ranges, bleak moorlands, and deep, narrow valleys known as
glens. The Highlands contain sparsely populated areas of moors. These tracts of
wasteland are mostly covered with coarse, low, bushy plants, including varieties
of heath and heather, hardy evergreen shrubs most often found in cooler
climates. The Grampian Mountains are the chief range in the Highlands, reaching
as high as 1,343 m (4,406 ft) above sea level. The western portion of the
Highlands contains most of Scotland’s famous lochs, or large lakes.
Northern Ireland consists of hilly highlands similar to
those of Scotland. Most of Northern Ireland is situated in a large valley
formed from an old lava plateau. In the center of the valley is Lough Neagh,
the largest lake in the British Isles, which is 29 km (18 mi) long and 18 km
(11 mi) wide. The highest part of Northern Ireland is the Mourne Mountains in
the southeast, which reach a maximum elevation of 852 m (2,796 ft) above sea
level. The narrowest point between the islands of Britain and Ireland is a
distance of only 21 km (13 mi), between Tor on the coast of Northern Ireland to
Mull of Kintyre on the Scottish coast.
The peninsula of Wales is almost entirely covered
by mountains. The Cambrian Mountains extend roughly from northeast to southeast
across the peninsula, forming an area of high, craggy peaks and bleak
moorlands. They contain the highest peak in Wales, the huge mountain called
Snowdon (Yr Wyddfa Fawr in Welsh), which rises to 1,085 m (3,560 ft)
above sea level. In southern Wales lower and less rugged mountains, the Brecon
Beacons, extend in a roughly east-west direction. A thin ribbon of lowland rims
much of the Welsh coast, broadening out in the northwest to include the
offshore island of Anglesey. It also broadens out in the southwest and
southeast. Sometimes the lowland region of southeastern Wales is considered an
extension of the lowland zone of Britain. This region contains the largest
cities and industrial establishments in Wales. Coal mines in the mountains just
to the north of this southern lowland were of great importance to the Welsh
economy for many years. Hills running along the Welsh border with England
continue into parts of a few English counties.
B2
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The Lowland Zone
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In general the lowland zone is a great plain with a
gentle, undulating surface and extensive areas of almost-level ground. It
receives less rain and more sunshine than the highland zone and much of the
soil in the zone is fertile. Most of the lowland region is less than 150 m (500
ft) above sea level, and the hills rarely reach more than 300 m (1,000 ft)
above sea level. It has been extensively inhabited, farmed, and grazed for
thousands of years. Most of Britain’s population lives densely packed into the
lowland zone, which covers most of England. The metropolis of London and most
of Britain’s large cities are located in the lowland zone.
The flattest lands in the lowland zone are in the
east, particularly on the large, hump-shaped area called East Anglia. The inlet
called the Wash is located off East Anglia’s northern coast. The Wash was once
surrounded by the flat, swampy areas of the Fenlands, or the Fens, most of
which has now been drained. The broad, rolling Midland Plain is south of the
Pennine Chain. Northwest of this plain, on the western side of the Pennines, is
the Lancashire-Cheshire plain. Another plain extends from the eastern slope of
the Pennines to the sea. It is broken in the north by the Yorkshire Moors, a
high wasteland overgrown with coarse plants.
Several chains of low hills break up the lowland
plain. They are sometimes called scarplands or escarpments, meaning that they
tend to drop steeply on one side and slope gently downward on the other side.
One of these upland ridges, the South Downs, runs along the southern coast
eastward from the Salisbury Plain. Running parallel to this ridge, south of the
Thames valley, are the North Downs. In between the North Downs and the South
Downs is a region called The Weald, an area of scenic, gentle hills. Another
elevated chain is the Chiltern Hills, which stretch southwest from the central
part of the lowland plain. The Cotswold Hills lie to the west near Wales. The
Cotswolds and the plain’s northern hills have a limestone base, while the Downs
have a chalk base.
C
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Rivers and Lakes
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Since Britain has a moist climate with much
rainfall, rivers and lakes are numerous. Rivers in central and eastern Britain
tend to flow slowly and steadily all year long because they are fed by the
frequent rain. Many have been navigable, and from the earliest times they have
served peoples interested in either commerce or invasion. The Highlands act as
a divide and determine whether rivers flow west to the Irish Sea or east to the
North Sea. Rivers and streams moving westward down from the Highlands tend to
be swift and turbulent; rivers flowing eastward tend to be long, graceful, and
gentle, with slowly moving waters.
The Thames and the Severn are the longest
rivers in Britain and are almost equal in length. The Severn flows south out of
the mountains of central Wales to the Bristol Channel at Bristol. It is 354 km
(220 mi) long. The Thames, 338 km (210 mi) long, flows eastward out of the
Cotswold Hills and weaves through the metropolis of London. The Thames provides
water to the city of London and is used to carry commercial freight. Other
important rivers in England are the Mersey, which enters the Irish Sea at
Liverpool; the River Humber on the east coast, into which the Trent River and
several other rivers flow; and the Tyne River in northern England, which flows
past Newcastle upon Tyne to the North Sea.
In Scotland the important rivers are the Clyde and
the Forth, which are joined by a canal. The River Clyde flows northwest, past
Glasgow, and empties into the Atlantic at the Firth of Clyde. (Firth is the
Scottish name for an arm of the sea that serves as the broad estuary of a
river.) The River Forth flows eastward into the Firth of Forth, where Edinburgh
rises on its south bank. The most important rivers in Northern Ireland are the
Lagan, the Bann, and the Foyle.
Most of the large lakes in the United Kingdom
are located in the upland areas of Scotland and northern England, although
Lough Neagh in Northern Ireland is the largest lake in the United Kingdom. Loch
Lomond, on the southwestern edge of the Highlands of Scotland, is the largest
on the island of Great Britain, measuring 37 km (23 mi) long and from 1.6 to 8
km (1 to 5 mi) wide. Lake Windermere is the largest of the 15 major lakes in the
famous Lake District of northwestern England. It is about 1.6 km (1 mi) wide
and more than 16 km (10 mi) long.
D
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Coastline
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Great Britain’s coastline is highly irregular, with many
bays and inlets that provide harbors and shelters for ships and boats. Coastal
trade involving ships sailing along the coast has been carried on since ancient
times. The coastline is about 8,000 km (about 5,000 mi) long and affords some
of the best scenery in Britain. The western coast is characterized by cliffs and
rocky headlands, especially where the Highlands meet the sea in northwestern
Scotland. On the more gentle southern and eastern coasts there are many sand or
pebble beaches as well as tall limestone or chalk cliffs, the most famous of
which are the White Cliffs of Dover in the southeast.
A few islands lie just off of Britain’s coast.
The Hebrides, an archipelago of about 500 islands, cover a considerable area
along the coast of western Scotland; the isle of Anglesey lies just off the
coast of northwestern Wales; and the Isle of Wight is off England’s southern
coast. Northern Ireland has a beautiful and rugged coastline and is the
location of the famous and unique Giant’s Causeway, an expansive and curious
formation of rocks shaped like giant cylinders.
E
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Natural Resources
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E1
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Soils
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Britain’s soil quality varies greatly. In northern areas
the soils are thin, lying right above rock formations, while the south
possesses areas of rich loam and heavy clay soils. When handled carefully the
soils of eastern and south central England are very productive. While about
three-fourths of the land in Britain is suitable for agriculture, only 24
percent of this land is used to grow crops. Almost all of the rest is planted
with grass or used as grazing land.
E2
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Forests and Woodlands
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Trees grow well and quickly in the heavy soils
of England, and for a long time prehistoric settlers did not have tools strong
enough to cut down the heavy oak forests. Over the centuries the expanding
human population cut back the forests, so that today only 11.7 percent of the
United Kingdom is forested, roughly 3 million hectares (7 million acres). Only
7 percent of England is covered by forest, 15 percent of Scotland, 12 percent
of Wales, and 5 percent of Northern Ireland. Efforts have been made in Britain
to grow more trees and expand the managed forest areas. Local authorities have
the power to protect trees and woodlands. It is an offense to cut down trees
without permission, and when trees protected by the government die they must be
replaced.
E3
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Mineral Resources
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Britain’s mineral resources were historically important,
but today most of these resources are either exhausted or produced in small
quantities. Britain currently relies upon imports from larger, cheaper foreign
supplies. Before and during the Roman occupation, about 2,000 years ago,
Britain was noted for its tin mines, which were concentrated in Cornwall. The
tin was mixed with copper to produce bronze, an important material in ancient
times used for weapons and jewelry. Today nearly every tin mine in Britain has
been exhausted and shut down.
Britain’s small deposits of iron ore were critically
important to the Industrial Revolution of the 18th and 19th centuries,
particularly because iron ore deposits were located close to rich deposits of
coal. When iron ore and coal are heated together, they produce iron alloys,
such as wrought iron. When iron ore is heated at high temperatures with coke, a
derivative of coal, it produces pig iron, a cheaper, softer iron that is more
easily purified into the iron and steel essential for constructing machines and
railroads. During the Industrial Revolution towns and cities sprang up close to
these resources, and they remain among Britain’s leading urban areas. Today
Britain imports iron, along with most other minerals used for industrial
production.
Raw materials for construction, particularly
aggregates (minerals mechanically separated from ores), are still important,
and many quarries continue to operate profitably. Limestone, sand, gravel,
rock, sandstone, clay, chalk, salt, silica sands, gypsum, potash, and fluorspar
are all quarried.
E4
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Energy Resources
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Britain has the richest energy sources in the
European Union (EU), and its resources of oil and natural gas are of vital
importance to the British economy. Until the 1970s small amounts of oil were
produced from onshore wells, but this amount was far less than Britain needed.
In 1969 large supplies of oil and natural gas were discovered in the North Sea
off the eastern coast of Britain, particularly off the coast of Scotland. Oil
and natural gas production soared after supplies were brought ashore in 1975. Britain’s
production of crude oil peaked in 1999 and began to decline in the early 2000s.
However, Britain continues to export oil and natural gas.
For many years coal was mined extensively,
providing the primary source of energy in Britain. It was also exported. Coal
production reached its peak in 1913, when more than 300 million tons were
mined. Today production is less than a tenth of that figure and coal is far
less important to the British economy.
Britain also has a number of nuclear energy
facilities. Britain meets 23 percent of its energy needs through nuclear
energy. Recently much research has been devoted to developing biofuels—energy
from wastes, landfill gas, and crops—as well as to developing solar energy,
wind power, and waterpower.
F
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Plant and Animal Life
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F1
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Plant Life
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The mild climate, ample rain, and long growing
season in Britain support a great variety of plants, which grow exceptionally
well. Sometimes plant growth is compared to the lush areas of the well-watered
and mild coasts of the states of Washington and Oregon. Most of Britain was
once covered with thick, deciduous forests in which oak trees predominated.
(Deciduous trees are those that lose their leaves every year.) The impact of
centuries of dense human population has massively altered the flora of Britain,
and only tiny remnants of these forests remain today. Although 11.7 percent of
Britain is still forested, most of this area consists of commercially planted,
fast-growing coniferous forests in Wales and northeastern Scotland. (Coniferous
trees are evergreen trees that have cones.)
Before they were affected by centuries of clearing
and human use, the great oak forests spread over the best soils in Britain.
Forests were unable to establish themselves in the poorer soils of the
mountains, wetlands, heath, and moorlands. The plants common to these wilder
areas are heather, gorse, peat moss, rowan, and bilberry. These regions have
been altered by heavy grazing of livestock and by controlled burning.
Controlled burning creates environments suitable for game birds, which feed on
the shoots of the new plants that spring up after the older plants are burned
away. Some wetland areas have been subjected to massive draining efforts for
hundreds of years and are now covered by towns and farmland. The marginal
wetlands that remain continue to be threatened by reclamation for farms and
homes, and some wetland plant species now grow only in conservation areas.
F2
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Animal Life
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An estimated 30,000 animal species live in Britain,
although many have limited distribution and are on the endangered list. Britain
has many smaller mammals, and the larger ones tend to be gentle. The only
surviving large mammals are red deer, which live in the Scottish Highlands and
in Exmoor in southwestern England, and roe deer, found in the woodlands of
Scotland and southern England. Semiwild ponies also inhabit Exmoor (see Exmoor
Pony) and the Shetland Islands. At one time wild boars and wolves roamed
Britain, but they were hunted to extinction.
Many smaller mammals inhabit Britain, including
badgers, foxes, otters, red squirrels, and wildcats. Wildcats are found only in
parts of Scotland. Otters are found mainly in southwestern England and in the
Shetland and Orkney islands. The red squirrel, driven out of most of its range
by the imported gray squirrel, is now limited mainly to the Isle of Wight and
Scotland. Other species introduced from elsewhere include rabbits, black rats,
muntjac deer, wallabies, and mink. Britain has five species of frogs and toads
and three species of snakes, of which only the adder is venomous. Northern
Ireland has no snakes.
Birdwatching is a popular national pastime. Britain
is home to a large variety of birds, due in large measure to its position as a
focal point of a migratory network. About 200 species are regularly seen in
Britain. The most common are birds that remain year-round, such as blackbirds,
chaffinches, sparrows, and starlings. Other well-known resident birds include
crows, kingfishers, robins, wrens, woodpeckers, and various tits. Cuckoos,
swallows, and swifts are the best-known summer visitors, and in the winter many
species of duck, geese, and other waterbirds reside in British estuaries and
wetlands. Human population pressures have adversely affected the habitats of
many species. One of the worst dangers for birds is the popularity of ordinary
housecats, which prey upon many bird species.
Saltwater fish were once important to Britain’s
economy. Cod, haddock, whiting, herring, plaice, sole, and mackerel are still
caught off the coasts of Britain, although grave concerns about the depletion
of stocks caused by overfishing have led to the imposition of quotas. Lobster,
crab, and other shellfish are caught along inshore waters. Freshwater fish in
Britain include game fish, salmon, and trout, while so-called coarse fish
include perch, pike, and roach. Freshwater fishing is almost entirely
recreational, rather than commercial, except for fish farms, which concentrate
on Atlantic salmon and rainbow trout. Shellfish farming specializes in mollusks
such as clams, mussels, oysters, and scallops.
G
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Climate
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The Atlantic Ocean has a significant effect on
Britain’s climate. Although the British Isles are as far north in latitude as
Labrador in Canada, they have a mild climate throughout the year. This is due
to the Gulf Stream, a current of warm water that flows up from the Caribbean
past Britain. Prevailing southwesterly winds moving across this warmer water
bring moisture and moderating temperatures to the British Isles. The
surrounding waters moderate temperatures year-round, making the UK warmer in
winter and cooler in summer than other areas at the same latitude. Great
Britain’s western coast tends to be warmer than the eastern coast, and the
southern regions tend to be warmer than the northern regions. The mean annual
temperature in the far north of Scotland is 6°C (43°F), and in warmer
southwestern England it is 11°C (52°F). In general, temperatures are ordinarily
around 15°C (60°F) in the summer and around 5°C (40°F) in the winter.
Temperatures rarely ever exceed 32°C (90°F) or drop below -10°C (14°F) anywhere
in the British Isles. In many areas, frosts, when the temperature dips below
0°C (32°F), are rare.
Winds blowing off the Atlantic Ocean bring clouds
and large amounts of moisture to the British Isles. Average annual
precipitation is more than 1,000 mm (40 in), varying from the extremes of 5,000
mm (196 in) in the western Highlands of Scotland to less than 500 mm (20 in) in
the driest parts of East Anglia in England. The western part of Britain
receives much more moisture than the eastern areas. It rains year-round, and in
the winter the rain may change to snow, particularly in the north. It snows
infrequently in the south, and when it does it is likely to be wet, slushy, and
short-lived.
The climate has affected settlement and development
in Britain for thousands of years. The mild, wet climate ensured that thick
forests rich in game, as well as rivers and streams abundant with fish, were
available to prehistoric hunters and gatherers. Britain was regarded as a cold,
remote, and distant part of the ancient Roman Empire in the first few centuries
ad, so relatively few Romans were
motivated to move there for trade, administrative, or military reasons.
Preindustrial settlements clustered in southern England, where the climate was
milder, the growing season longer, and the rich soil and steady rainfall
produced bountiful harvests. Successive waves of invaders made the plains of
southern England their primary objective. After the Industrial Revolution began
in the 18th century, populations grew enormously in areas with rich resources
beneath the ground, particularly coal, even though these resources were
sometimes located in the colder, harsher northern regions of England or the
western Lowlands of Scotland.
H
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Environmental Issues
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Environmental protection is an important issue in the United
Kingdom because as a highly populated and technologically advanced nation grows
the environment suffers. Compared to many other industrialized nations, the
country has a relatively good record of protecting the environment. Much
environmental activity involves ordinary citizens at the local level, while the
national government provides leadership, goals, and direction, particularly
through the secretary of state for the environment. The United Kingdom, along
with other prospering nations, has contributed funds and expertise toward
global efforts to preserve the environment. In 2007, 12.7 percent of the United
Kingdom was protected by national parks, regional parks, and smaller protected
areas.
As the world’s first industrialized society,
Britain has a long history of dealing with environmental problems.
Contamination from sewerage, impure water supplies, and filthy streets from
massive horse traffic were all problems handled with success before World War I
broke out in 1914. Air pollution from smoke remained a major problem until the
Clean Air Act was passed in 1955, a measure that reduced industrial pollution
by three-quarters. The increased substitution of gas and electricity for coal
as a source of energy further reduced air pollution, both from industry and
homes. In recent decades, however, the large increase in the number of motor
vehicles has erased many of the gains achieved by the Clean Air Act. River
pollution has been more difficult to deal with. This is partly because local
sewerage authorities, which were among the worst polluters, were represented on
the boards regulating pollution in the rivers. In 1989 a National Rivers
Authority was created that has no connection with potential polluters, and
Britain’s rivers are slowly improving.
Since the 1940s one of the most serious
environmental problems has been disposal of radioactive waste, including the
dismantling of nuclear power stations after they become obsolete. The country’s
early nuclear industry disposed of radioactive waste by ocean dumping, leaving
a legacy of contamination, particularly in the Irish Sea. Another serious
environmental issue is the pressure to develop more land. To maintain
productive agricultural land and viable agricultural communities, Britain has
severely restricted urban and suburban development in some areas. As a result,
land prices are extremely high.
III
|
PEOPLE AND SOCIETY OF THE UNITED KINGDOM
|
Britain has a diverse population that includes
people with connections to every continent of the world. The ethnic origins of
this population have been complicated by immigration, intermarriage, and the
constant relocation of people in this highly developed industrial and
technological society. Nevertheless, a few particulars about the historical
formation of the population are noteworthy.
A
|
Early Ethnic Groups
|
Britain’s predominant historical stock is called Anglo-Saxon.
Germanic peoples from Europe—the Angles, the Saxons, and the Jutes—arrived in
Britain in massive numbers between the 5th and 7th centuries ad (see Ancient Britain).These
people tended to be tall, blond, and blue-eyed. Their language became the
foundation of the basic, short, everyday words in modern English. These groups
invaded and overwhelmed Roman Britain, choosing to settle on the plains of
England because of the mild climate and good soils. Native Britons fought the
great flood of Germanic peoples, and many Britons who survived fled west to the
hill country. These refugees and native Britons were Celts who had absorbed the
earliest peoples on the island, the prehistoric people known as Iberians. Celts
tended to be shorter than Anglo-Saxons and have rounder heads. Most had darker
hair, but a strikingly high percentage of Celts had red hair.
After the Anglo-Saxon conquest, the Celts remained in
Wales, Scotland, Ireland, and the West Country (the southwestern peninsula of
Britain), where Celtic languages are still used to some extent and Celtic
culture is still celebrated. This geographic separation between the Germanic
Anglo-Saxons and the Celts has broken down over the centuries as people have
migrated and intermarried.
A substantial number of Scandinavians raided and
settled in Great Britain and Ireland during the 9th century. By then the
Anglo-Saxons had established agricultural and Christian communities, and
eventually they succeeded in subduing and integrating the Scandinavians into
their kingdoms. In 1066 the Normans, French-speaking invaders of Norse origin,
conquered England, adding yet another ethnic component. Although the Normans
were the last major group to add their stock to the British population, waves
of other foreigners and refugees have immigrated to Britain for religious,
political, and economic reasons. Protestant French (see Huguenots)
sought refuge in the 17th century, sailors of African ancestry came in the 18th
century, and Jews from central and eastern Europe immigrated in the late 19th
century and during the 1930s and late 1940s.
B
|
Immigration After World War II
|
Most British people attribute their origins to the
early invaders, calling themselves English, Scottish, Irish, Welsh, or
Ulsterites. The Ulsterites are an ethnically controversial group—some claim
they are Scottish and others identify themselves as Protestant Irish. The
remaining share of the population consists of minorities who arrived, for the
most part, in the decades following the end of World War II in 1945.
These minorities—Chinese, Asian Indians, Pakistanis, Africans,
and Caribbean people of African ancestry—came to Britain in substantial numbers
after 1945. Immigration from the South Asian subcontinent (India and Pakistan)
stabilized in the 1990s, but immigration from African countries continued to
rise. By the late 1990s more than half of the people in these categories had
been born in the United Kingdom. These newer ethnic groups tend to live in the
more urban and industrial areas of England, especially in London, Birmingham,
and Leeds. In 2004 the right to work in Britain was opened to people in central
Europe and the Baltic countries, and they began to form the latest group of
immigrants.
Although population censuses have been taken in the
United Kingdom every decade since 1801, the 1991 census was the first to include
a question on ethnic origin. In the 2001 census just over 92 percent of the
population was described as white. Asian Indians made up 1.8 percent of the
British population; Pakistanis, 1.3 percent; Caribbeans, 1 percent; Africans,
0.8 percent; Bangladeshis, 0.5 percent; and Chinese, 0.4 percent.
The United Kingdom is generally a prosperous,
well-educated, and tolerant society, and ethnic differences have sparked
relatively little violence and hostility. Local and national government
programs exist to seek fairness and justice for ethnic minorities. Educational
programs and the law bolster equal opportunity. The Race Relations Act of 1976
makes it illegal to discriminate against any person because of race, color,
nationality, or origin, and it is a criminal offense to incite racial hatred.
However, class tensions and racial unrest—especially conflict between white
police forces and nonwhite immigrants—have flared from time to time in crowded
and impoverished urban neighborhoods. In addition, high unemployment rates have
made it difficult for immigrants to find jobs. Tensions heightened in July 2005
after four young British Muslims were implicated in the suicide bombings of
three underground trains and a bus in London. Although the bombings were linked
to Britain’s participation in the U.S.-Iraq War, some politicians sought to
tighten British immigration policy in the aftermath of the bombings.
In late 2007 the government unveiled
substantial reforms to the entry criteria for people wishing to work, train, or
study in the United Kingdom. The new criteria utilized a points-based system,
which set a threshold for points needed for entry and awarded points according
to the skills and earning potential of applicants. The new system replaced work
permits and other entry schemes. In addition, all low-skilled workers from
countries outside the European Union (EU) were to be denied entry. Workers from
within the EU were not required to obtain permission prior to entry.
C
|
Demographic Trends
|
From the 18th century until well into the 19th
century, Britain’s population soared as the death rate dropped and the birth
rate remained high. During this period the total population increased from
approximately 6 million in the 1760s to 26 million in the 1870s. Toward the end
of the 19th century and into the 20th century the birth rate stabilized and the
death rate remained low. The population took on the characteristics of a
modern, developed, and prosperous state. Family size decreased and the median age
of the population rose. Compared to the rest of the world, the UK has a smaller
percentage of younger people and a higher percentage of older people, with more
than 20 percent over the age of 60; those under the age of 15 years make up
only 13 percent of the population. Life expectancy in 2008 was 76 years for men
and 81.5 years for women. Britain’s population has been growing slowly, slower
than the average for countries in the European Union.
D
|
Population Statistics
|
The United Kingdom has a population of 60,943,912
(2008 estimate), with an average population density of 252 persons per sq km
(653 per sq mi). The population density of the United Kingdom is one of the
highest in Europe, exceeded by Netherlands and Belgium. England is the most
populated part of the United Kingdom, with 50,094,000 people (2004), which
means nearly four-fifths of the United Kingdom’s population resides in England.
It is also the most densely populated portion of the United Kingdom, with a population
density of 384 persons per sq km (995 per sq mi). Scotland possesses 5,078,000
people, and a population density of 64 persons per sq km (167 per sq mi). Wales
has 2,952,000 people, with a population density of 142 persons per sq km (368
per sq mi). Northern Ireland’s population is 1,710,000, and it has 121 persons
per sq km (313 per sq mi).
Britain’s population is overwhelmingly urban, with 89
percent living in urban areas and 11 percent living in rural areas. The
Industrial Revolution built up major urban areas, and most of Britain’s people
live in and around them to this day. England’s population is densest in the
London area, around Birmingham and Coventry in the Midlands, and in northern
England near the old industrial centers of Leeds, Sheffield, Manchester,
Liverpool, and Newcastle upon Tyne. In the 1980s and 1990s southern England,
particularly the southeast, became a center of population growth, due in large
part to the growth of the high-tech and service sectors of the economy.
In Wales two-thirds of the people live in the
industrial southern valleys. In Scotland three-quarters of the people live in
the central lowlands, around Glasgow to the west and Edinburgh to the east.
About half of the people living in Northern Ireland reside in the eastern
portion, in Belfast and along the coast.
The population of Greater London is about 7.2
million (2001 census), making it by far the most populous city in the United
Kingdom. It is the seat of government, center of business, and the heart of
arts and culture. Birmingham is the second largest city, with 976,400 people.
Other large cities in the United Kingdom include Leeds with 715,500, Glasgow
with 578,700, and Sheffield with 513,100. Edinburgh, the capital of Scotland,
has a population of about 449,000; Cardiff, the capital of Wales, has 305,200
people; and Belfast, the capital of Northern Ireland, has a population of
277,200.
E
|
Language
|
English is the official language of the United
Kingdom and is the first language of the vast majority of its citizens. The use
of language was extremely important to Britain’s class structure for much of
the 20th century. Some educated English people, regardless of their class
origin, strove to free themselves of regional or local accents in order to
sound like educated English-speaking people. Others, including people from East
London and people in northern England, enjoyed their particular way of
speaking, regarding it as warmer and friendlier than standard English. Many
regional and local speech patterns and accents remained in use, and in recent
decades they have become far more acceptable in all social circles. BBC
broadcasters today have Scottish, Welsh, and Northern Irish regional accents.
The Celtic language, an ancient tongue, continues
to be spoken in Scotland by some people, usually those in the more remote
fringes of the country, especially in the Hebrides Islands. Approximately
80,000 Scots speak Scottish Gaelic, a type of Celtic language. English is the
predominant language in Northern Ireland, although at least some of the Roman
Catholic minority speak Irish, another Gaelic dialect, as a second language.
The ancient Celtic language of Wales is strongly
tied to the cultural nationalism of the region. At the time of the 2001 census,
about 21 percent of the Welsh population could speak Welsh. Welsh is spoken in
northern and western Wales much more than in southern Wales, where many English
people have relocated. Many schools in Wales offer bilingual education, and
there is a Welsh-language television channel. In 1993, after long and
considerable agitation by Welsh nationalists, the government made Welsh a joint
official language with English in Wales for use in the courts, the civil service,
and other aspects of the public sector.
F
|
Religion
|
The United Kingdom guarantees its citizens
religious freedom without interference from the state or the community, and
most of the world’s religions have followers in Britain. As in many European
countries today, the majority of the population in Britain does not regularly
attend religious services, yet nearly all faiths have devoted congregations of
active members. An increasing percentage of the population professes no
religious faith and some organizations represent secular outlooks. Estimating
membership is difficult because congregations count their members differently,
and government figures rely upon the numbers provided by the different groups.
In the past religion was often deeply entwined
with politics. The only place this is still true in the United Kingdom is in
Northern Ireland, where two communities use religious designations to express
different, and hostile, political agendas. Many Protestants, largely
descendants of Scottish and English settlers, are interested in maintaining
their union with Britain, while some Roman Catholics campaign strongly for
union with Ireland. (see Northern Ireland: History.)
F1
|
The Established Churches
|
The United Kingdom has two established churches:
the Church of England and the Church of Scotland. An established church is the
legally recognized official church of the state. The Church of England, also
called the Anglican Church, is a Protestant Episcopal church. It is the parent
body of churches belonging to the Anglican Communion, which includes the
Episcopal Church of the United States. The Church in Wales and the Church of
Ireland, once members of the Church of England, belong to the Anglican
Communion but are not the official churches of their states.
The Church of England claims to be an apostolic
church, meaning it traces a direct line of bishops back to the 12 apostles of
Jesus. Anglicans also speak of themselves as a catholic, or universal, church,
with a lowercase c, meaning that their beliefs are intended for
humankind as a whole. Since its inception in the 16th century, the Church of
England has debated how close its practices should be to those of the Roman Catholic
Church. The history of the Church of England is marked by the division between
High Church, with practices that favor Roman Catholicism, and Low Church, with
practices that are more Protestant. In the last quarter of the 20th century,
the Anglican Church was involved in a serious controversy over the ordination
of women, which it finally allowed in 1992, and in 1994 the first women were
ordained as priests in the Anglican Church. This action caused some Anglican
clerics and lay people to convert to Roman Catholicism. Further controversy
erupted in the early 2000s over the ordination of gay clergy.
The British monarch, who must be a member of the
Anglican Church, holds the titles of Supreme Governor of the Church of England
and Defender of the Faith. The monarch appoints archbishops and bishops upon
the advice of the prime minister, who consults a commission that includes both
lay people and clergy. Two archbishops and 24 senior bishops sit in the House
of Lords. The archbishop of Canterbury holds the title of Primate of All
England; another archbishop presides at York. Changes in church ritual can only
be made with the consent of Parliament.
About 47 percent of the British population is
Anglican. A third of the marriages in Britain are performed in the Anglican
Church. Many members are merely baptized, married, and buried in the church,
but do not otherwise attend services. More than a million people attend the
Church of England on an average Sunday.
The established church in Scotland is the Church of Scotland,
which is Presbyterian (see Presbyterianism). The Presbyterian Church is
governed by courts composed of ministers and elders. The Church of Scotland is
not subject to state control. It is the principal religious group in Scotland
and has about 600,000 members. A number of independent Scottish Presbyterian
churches exist; these are largely descended from groups that broke away from
the Church of Scotland.
F2
|
Other Religious Groups
|
The Roman Catholic Church has an extensive formal
structure in Britain made up of provinces, dioceses, and local parishes. The
Catholic Church has many orders—groups of ordained men and women who follow
special religious rules—and maintains an extensive school system out of public
funds. About 16 percent of the population identifies itself as Roman Catholic.
A number of Protestant denominations are called
Free Churches; in the past they were called Nonconformist or Dissenting
churches. The Methodist Church is the largest of these (see Methodism).
Others include the Baptist Union of Great Britain, along with Baptist Unions in
Scotland, Wales, and Ireland; Free Presbyterian churches in England, Wales, and
Scotland; and the United Reformed Church.
Other Christian religious groups include Unitarians,
Pentecostals, Quakers, Christian Brethren, Eastern Orthodox, Lutherans,
Jehovah’s Witnesses, Seventh-day Adventists, Christian Scientists, and Mormons.
The fast-growing Muslim community numbered 1.6 million,
or more than 2 percent of the total population. Britain has the second largest
Jewish community in Western Europe, with some 275,000 people. There are also
about 580,000 Hindus, 340,000 Sikhs, and thousands of Jains and Buddhists.
Newer religious movements and sects have also flourished in Britain, including
the Church of Scientology and the Unification Church.
G
|
Education
|
G1
|
Historical Importance of Education
|
Education is a vital concern throughout
Britain because a highly developed nation depends upon educated professionals
and a skilled workforce. The literacy rate in Britain is one of the highest in
the world at over 99 percent. Education is compulsory for all children between
the ages of 5 and 16.
Britain’s first education act, in 1870, was inspired by
the pioneering example of mass compulsory education in Germany and provided for
state-financed primary education. Another major education act, passed in 1902,
established local education authorities (LEAs) that were responsible for providing
schools and education in their areas. The act also authorized LEAs to use
public funds for church-affiliated schools. This policy was severely criticized
by people whose children attended state schools because their taxes were used
to support church schools. The 1902 act also established scholarships for
secondary education. An education act passed in 1944 and administered by the
newly created Ministry of Education established free and compulsory secondary
education up to age 15; this was increased to age 16 in 1973. An education
reform act in 1988 allowed individual schools to control their own affairs and
budgets, free from LEAs, and to receive grants directly from the government. It
also established a controversial national curriculum, which was simplified in
1994 after complaints about its complexity. Legislation pertaining to education
is laden with controversies because of education’s importance in Britain.
G2
|
Contrasts with American Education
|
Compared to the United States, fewer people go on
to higher education in Britain, and there is more emphasis on segregating
pupils at the lower levels on the basis of ability. Most British schools are
funded by the central government, with local governments providing supplemental
funding. England and Wales have a national curriculum of core courses for
students 5 to 16 years old, and schools are inspected by the Office for
Standards in Education. National tests at the ages of 7, 11, and 14 assess
students’ progress. Schools must provide religious education and daily
collective worship for all pupils, although parents can withdraw their children
from these. Full-time school begins at age 5 in Great Britain and at age 4 in
Northern Ireland. In addition, many 3- and 4-year-olds are enrolled in specialized
nursery schools or in nursery classes at primary schools.
In Britain, the term form is used to
designate grade; old boys and old girls refer to people who have
graduated from a school. Private schools or independent schools are called public
schools, a term that means just the opposite in the United States. What are
called public schools in the United States are called state schools in
Britain. When a person is sent down from school, it means he or she has
been thrown out. Grammar schools are university preparatory schools, most of
which have been replaced by comprehensive schools catering to students of all
academic abilities. Secondary modern schools provide vocational education
rather preparation for university entrance.
G3
|
Types of Schools in Britain
|
The most famous schools in Britain are private
boarding schools, such as Eton College, Harrow School, Rugby School, and
Winchester School. These famous private schools, founded during the Middle
Ages, are theoretically open to the public, but in reality are attended by
those who can afford the fees. Many of Britain’s leaders have attended these
private schools, which cater to the wealthy and influential but also offer some
scholarships to gifted poorer children. Local authorities and the central
authority also provide assistance to some families who are unable to pay the
fees. Only a small percentage of the population can attend these ancient and
highly prestigious schools. A variety of other schools are also private,
including kindergartens, day schools, and newer boarding schools. Private
schools that take pupils from the age of 7 to the age of 11, 12, or 13 are
called preparatory schools. Private schools that take older pupils from the age
of 11, 12, or 13 to 18 or 19 are often referred to as public schools. Only 7
percent of British students attend private school.
In England, Wales, and Northern Ireland, the
education systems are similar. The majority of the students attend schools
wholly or partly supported with public funds. These include state schools owned
and funded by LEAs; voluntary schools established and funded mostly by
religious denominations; self-governing or grant-maintained (GM) schools that
receive funds directly from the government rather than local authorities; and
specialist schools that are connected to a private backer. Most pupils attend
LEA schools.
In Scotland, educational authorities are largely
independent of those in the rest of the United Kingdom, although reforms, such
as raising the age at which students may leave school, are similar. Nearly all
Scottish schools are comprehensive, meaning they serve students of all
abilities, and school boards involve parents and professionals. Recent reforms
introduced local management of schools and allow state schools to become
self-governing if voters approve the change in an election. The school then
receives funds directly from the central government instead of from the local
authority.
In 1997 Scotland elected to form its own
legislature, separate from the Parliament in London. Through its parliament,
Scotland can address its own educational issues and create its own educational
authorities. These authorities have the responsibilities once handled by the secretary
of state for Scotland and other non-Scottish educational organizations. Wales
also elected its own governing body, the Welsh Assembly, with the power to make
similar decisions regarding the Welsh education system.
In Northern Ireland most schools are segregated by
religious affiliation. Local educational authorities provide for schools, but
many secondary students in Northern Ireland attend schools maintained by either
the Catholic or the Protestant church. Many Protestant schools that are not
maintained by the church reserve a place on the school board for a church
representative. In an attempt to break down religious segregation and provide
integrated education, the state established a number of integrated schools.
G4
|
Education Beyond Age 16
|
At the age of 16, prior to leaving
school, students are tested in various subjects to earn a General Certificate
of Secondary Education (GCSE). If they wish to go on to higher education at a
university, they take Advanced Level examinations, commonly known as “A”
Levels. Scotland has comparable qualifications. About a third of British
students leave school as soon as possible after turning 16, usually taking
lower-level jobs in the workforce. Those who stay in school past the age of 16
may pursue either further education or higher education. Further education is
largely vocational, as is adult education. Students may also stay in school
until age 18 to prepare for higher education.
The percentage of young people entering
universities in Britain is far lower than in the United States, where more than
half attend. In Britain the proportion of students entering university rose
from one in six in 1989 to almost one in three in 1996. In 2001–2002 there were
over 2.2 million students enrolled in full- or part-time higher education in
Great Britain, compared with just under 850,000 a decade earlier. By 1995 over
47 percent of 16- to 24-year olds were undertaking some form of higher
education in the United Kingdom, and by 2001 more than 18 percent of the
population had achieved a degree-level (or equivalent) educational
qualification.
Britain has about 90 universities. British
universities can be divided into several categories. The foremost universities
are the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge, both founded in
the Middle Ages. The term Oxbridge is used to refer to both schools as a
single entity, much as Americans would use the term Ivy League in
reference to the group of prestigious East Coast universities. Scotland has
equivalent ancient institutions at Edinburgh, Glasgow, and St. Andrews. Another
type of university is the so-called redbrick variety—old and solid schools
built in the 19th century when bricks were the standard building material. The
large number of ultramodern universities that sprouted up in the last half of
the 20th century are often called cement block and plateglass universities.
London has its own great schools, the enormous University of London and its
world-famous college, the London School of Economics.
Students interested in advanced education can also
attend polytechnics, which are schools dedicated to the sciences and applied
technology. An education act in 1992 changed the status of these colleges to
universities. Higher education can also be obtained through the Open University,
founded in 1969, which offers extension courses taught through correspondence,
television and radio programs, and videocassettes. It also sponsors local study
centers and residential summer schools. The purpose of the Open University is
to reach people who may not ordinarily be qualified for university study.
H
|
Social Structure
|
H1
|
Historical Background
|
Britain’s social structure developed much like the
social structure in other European nations. In the past, most people inherited
their class because there was limited social mobility until modern times. Those
with incomes from rents and property payments were considered in the upper
class; those who dealt with paper, either in business or in a profession, were
middle class; and those who did manual labor, such as carpentry and factory
work, were in the working class.
Upper, landed classes that controlled most of the
agricultural land and wealth emerged during the Middle Ages. Families from
these upper classes became the nobility, or aristocracy, and played key
political roles on the monarch’s councils, in the House of Lords in Parliament,
and in local government. Often members of the House of Lords from the nobility
had politically conservative views. England’s upper-class social structure
differed from that of the rest of Europe in three important ways. In addition
to a landowning nobility with the right to sit in the House of Lords, a lower
upper class developed that, while still landed, didn’t have the same privileges
as the nobility. Secondly, the aristocracy did not lose its status during
Britain’s revolutions of the 17th and 18th centuries as the Continental
aristocracy did during revolutions in Europe in the 18th and 19th centuries.
Lastly, inheritance arrangements based on primogeniture, a system in which the
first-born son is the prime inheritor, encouraged a degree of social mobility.
The lower upper class has been called knights,
squires, gentry, or country gentlemen. Members of this class were elected to
the House of Commons and played a major role in asserting control over monarchs
through their positions in Parliament during the revolutions of the 17th
century. Many present-day members of the House of Commons are still drawn from
this class, and they continue to play significant roles in local politics and
as leaders in society.
Because Britain was spared the wave of revolutions
that began in France in 1789, its noble families did not have their estates or
wealth confiscated. These families increased their wealth during the Industrial
Revolution, because they owned much of the land from which natural resources
were taken. Several families can trace their enormous wealth and significant
involvement in politics at the highest levels back hundreds of years. In recent
centuries steep inheritance taxes have accomplished what revolutions failed to
do earlier. Nevertheless, most of Britain’s nobles have found ways to retain
their land and resources and, in most cases, their prestige.
The principle of primogeniture has had significant
consequences for social structure in Britain. In noble families the first-born
son, as the prime inheritor, gains the title while his siblings have only
courtesy titles. These siblings were likely to do something off of the estate,
such as governing a colony, serving as a general in the army, or playing a part
in politics. The younger sons could not sit in the House of Lords, but they
could have political careers in the House of Commons. Many younger sons of
aristocrats also followed religious careers, becoming bishops and archbishops.
For the gentry, or lower upper classes, primogeniture usually meant the
first-born son inherited the estate and the younger sons sought other
occupations, perhaps as doctors, lawyers, or writers. Many went into
professions in which they studied and worked with members of the middle class.
This made for an element of social mobility in the class structure, although
for the gentry it could mean downward social mobility.
Marriages were extremely important to the nobility, as
they could provide alliances with other families to increase a family’s
prestige or influence. Families usually took a strong hand in arranging
marriages. Women were expected to marry within their rank, but a woman with a
large dowry could often marry someone with a higher social status—an eligible
young nobleman or a gentleman—whose income fell far short of his expenditures.
By the 17th century, a “middling order”
existed that included farmers, merchants, clergy, and military officers. The
middle class evolved rapidly during the 18th century as more and more people
became involved in businesses and professions and became wealthier. As towns
and cities grew, particularly with the sudden and massive growth experienced
during the Industrial Revolution, this class expanded further—people in the
middle class ranged from humble clerks to bankers and factory owners. The
middle classes placed great emphasis on education, social advancement, economic
gain, and accumulating material wealth.
Until the Industrial Revolution, the working class
included predominantly agricultural laborers. The general population increased
during the 18th and 19th centuries, prompting the need for new ways to survive.
As jobs became plentiful in new industries, the working class shifted from
agriculture to mining and factory jobs. Thereafter most workers labored in
industrial production and mining. In recent decades the number of working-class
employees in service industries has risen dramatically. See also Thematic
Essay: British Political and Social Thought
H2
|
Current Trends
|
Many class distinctions have become blurred in Britain.
Today only a small number of people are considered upper class, and their
former influence in conservative politics has been largely taken over by
wealthy people in the middle class. Liberal and left-wing politics have
middle-class leadership as well. Because the British economy has created many
semiprofessional and technical jobs, it is no longer easy to tell which jobs
are middle class and which are working class. Moreover, growing national
affluence has brought greater social mobility between the working class and the
middle class. As technological advances have expanded the ranks of affluent
professionals, managers, administrators, and technical experts, part of the
working population has shifted into these positions and now identifies itself
as middle class. Although prosperity may move working-class people into the
middle class, no amount of wealth will guarantee upper-class status, which is
determined by land and family.
The increasingly widespread distribution of capital has
also blurred class lines, as more money in the form of stocks, bonds, property,
and bank accounts is in more hands. Many middle-class employees and workers have
become owners of capital. Much of the 20th century saw a decreasing inequality
in wealth, due in part to the spread of home ownership and the creation of
government programs to promote equal access to health services and education.
Inequality in income began to increase during the 1980s.
Family structure has changed as well. Married
couples have an average of two children, a figure that has not changed since
World War II. However, marriage rates fell in the 1980s, and there has been a
significant shift from formal marriage to stable cohabitation. By 1993
one-third of births were to parents who were not formally married; by the early
2000s, this number had surpassed two-fifths (42 percent).
H3
|
Current Social Problems
|
Perhaps the worst feature of the current class
situation in Britain is the existence of a permanent underclass. These people
are on the dole, that is, on welfare, permanently. They subsist in poor
surroundings with little hope that they or their children, who usually drop out
of school, will break out of the cycle of poverty. This segment of the
population lives in the run-down neighborhoods of cities such as Glasgow,
Liverpool, and Leeds. In the mid-1990s it was estimated that about 23 percent
of the population lived in poverty, one of the highest poverty rates in Europe.
Another social problem, somewhat related to this
underclass, has been the rise in crime and violence. Vandalism and rowdiness by
youths are problems in British society, and the brutality of British football
(soccer) fans has gained international notoriety. These outbursts stand out in
a society where civility and politeness are prominent characteristics. Yet
overall the rate of violent crime, and crime in general, remains far below that
of the United States. In 1996 about 92 percent of the offenses recorded by the
police in England and Wales were directed against property; only 7 percent
involved violence.
The degree to which racism is a problem in
Britain is a source of debate. Some say it is a hidden tradition and others
believe that decency and fair play prevail. Expressions of racism include not
only those based on color but also those based on culture. Poverty, poor
housing, and unemployment were some of the causes behind inner-city disturbances
of the 1980s. Black people and some groups of Asians in Britain suffer from
higher unemployment than whites, and have had comparatively little mobility
within the employment market. These groups also have tended to have inferior
housing, education, and health care. The situation is improving among the
generations born in Britain.
As the percentage of women in Britain’s
workforce has risen, women have struggled for equal pay for equal work. The
state passed an Equal Pay Act in 1970 that has been aggressively applied to
civil service, teaching, and local government jobs. The Sex Discrimination Act
of 1975 made discrimination between men and women unlawful in employment,
education, training, housing, facilities, and services. In 1987 another Sex
Discrimination bill sought to bring the 1975 measure within guidelines
established by the European Economic Community (now the European Union). In the
early 2000s about one-fifth of the members of the House of Commons were women.
I
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Social Services
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I1
|
National Health Care
|
The British government administers an extensive health
and welfare system that the Labour government established between 1945 and
1951. The National Health Service Act of 1946 established the socialized
health-care system that went into effect in 1948 (see National Health
Insurance). Because citizens were deemed to have a right to free health care,
it provided free medical care for all British people regardless of income. The
system covered physician and dental services, prescription drugs, hospital
care, eyeglasses, and dentures. It provided better health care than most people
could previously afford, but the program cost more than anticipated. Therefore,
some charges were introduced for prescriptions, dentures, and eyeglasses.
Nevertheless, costs for the government remained high due to expensive new
technologies, as well as the growing demand for services, especially by the
increasing number of elderly people.
General taxation pays for most of the system’s cost, and
the national insurance payment—money that employers and employees
contribute—takes care of the remainder. Treatment fees for items such as
prescriptions and eyewear have risen for patients in recent decades. Certain
patients—including children, pregnant women, the unemployed, those disabled in
the armed forces, men over 65, and women over 60—are exempt from payments or
fees. Hospital care remains free. Most doctors, dentists, nurses, and
health-care professionals are members of the National Health Service (NHS),
although some see fee-paying private patients outside of the system.
The controversial NHS and Community Care Act of 1990
sought to make health care more efficient and less costly by encouraging
competition within the health-care industry. The act allowed hospitals and
other health-care professionals to become trusts that directly control the
funds they receive from the government. They now could determine their own
staffing needs, salaries, and service fees, things previously determined by
local health authorities, who controlled their funds. Under the 1990 act, local
health authorities, which are responsible for providing health care to the
public with government money, would “purchase” health care for patients from
these trusts. In addition, general practitioners (GPs), or ordinary family
doctors, were encouraged to become fundholders or directly manage the NHS funds
allotted for their patients. The new health-care arrangements were designed to
bring competitive market forces to bear upon health care, with the trusts
competing to become the facility chosen by local health authorities and GPs to
provide health care to patients.
In order to improve service and guarantee
higher levels of patient care, Patient’s Charters were started in 1992. The
charters list the rights and service standards patients can expect. In
particular, they pledge to provide treatment within a specific time span, since
long delays for treatment and elective surgery were among the chief complaints
about the system. Since 1992 separate charters have been created for the
various kinds of health services, such as for dental, mental health, and
maternity care. In contrast, emergency care has always gained high approval.
The system established in 1990 has been criticized.
Patients of doctors who were not fundholders complained they were not receiving
hospital treatment as quickly as patients whose doctors managed their funds.
The new hospital trusts are criticized for their admissions policies, including
sending patients to other hospitals, and for not being sufficiently accountable
for spending. While NHS hospitals have long waiting lists, private hospitals
have empty beds because fewer people can afford them. The Labour government
increased funding for the NHS and instituted reforms of the payment system and
administrative structure. Despite the reforms and increased funding, the NHS
was running huge deficits in the early 2000s and services had not improved.
I2
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Welfare
|
Welfare services in Britain are supported by
taxpayers and are meant to act as a safety net for the entire society from
birth to death. The needs of those in difficulty are met by local authorities,
who draw upon funds provided by the central government. Revenue for the system
also comes from compulsory weekly contributions by employees and employers.
Those in need receive weekly cash benefits. There are also special services for
the disabled.
The National Insurance Act of 1946 consolidated earlier
welfare legislation, expanded coverage, and increased benefits for a number of
programs, including unemployment insurance, industrial injuries, retiree
pensions, sickness insurance, maternity and widows’ benefits, and death grants.
Today there are family allowances for children up to the age of 16 (18 if the
child is still in school full time), as well as allowances for guardians and
widows. Pensions for the elderly, or retirement benefits, begin for men at the
age of 65 and for women at the age of 60. The pension age for women was set to
rise to age 65 between 2010 and 2020.
IV
|
CULTURE AND THE ARTS OF THE UNITED KINGDOM
|
Britain’s rich cultural heritage and traditions are the
main reasons why it has millions of overseas visitors each year. The
attractions include the many theaters, museums, art galleries, and historical
buildings to be found in all parts of the United Kingdom, as well as the
numerous annual arts festivals and the pageantry associated with the British
royal family. The expansion of tourism, combined with the collapse of many
traditional economic activities, has helped encourage the growth since the
1980s of the so-called heritage industry, seen in the explosion of “living”
museums illustrating Britain’s rural and industrial past.
A
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Historical Context of the Arts
|
The United Kingdom has a long history of excellence
in the arts. British contributions to literature are remarkable in their richness,
variety, and consistency. For many centuries in Britain and elsewhere, art and
music were the domain of the nobility, who patronized the arts and set the tone
and style into the Victorian era. Britain’s artistic output was focused on
literature in the 16th and 17th centuries, and the country came late to
Renaissance influences in art and architecture that had been prevalent on the
Continent since the 15th century. As a Protestant nation, Britain did not
experience the full flowering of the baroque era that followed the Renaissance
in Roman Catholic countries, such as Italy and Spain, during the 17th and 18th
centuries (see Baroque Art and Architecture). English style during the
late 18th century was more reminiscent of the classical world of the Greeks and
Romans. In the 19th century, a movement called romanticism sought to make art
more emotional. Exotic places, the beauty of nature, and fascination with the
Middle Ages were themes that became the hallmarks of romantic artists and
writers.
During the Victorian era Britain became the world’s
first urban, industrialized society, and a vast middle class developed. More
people had the time, education, and inclination to appreciate the arts, and the
middle class developed an interest in literature, art, and music. A close
relationship evolved between this large audience and the creators of art and
literature because authors wrote about and painters depicted characters,
situations, and scenes either familiar or interesting to large numbers of middle-class
people. Although some of the works created were trite and ordinary, such as
sweet paintings of dogs and children, many others were not.
The time and money spent on the arts continued
to increase during the 20th century, particularly after World War II ended in
1945. Popular music and film have had the widest audiences, although classical
music and ballet still attract significant numbers of people. In the postwar
era, serious musical compositions came from modern composers such as Peter
Maxwell Davies and Harrison Birtwistle. Britain attained prominence in modern
sculpture through the work of Sir Jacob Epstein, Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth,
and others.
B
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Cultural Traditions Today
|
London has the greatest concentration of theaters,
orchestras, and galleries, and is also the main home of the print and broadcast
media, and of the fashion, recording, motion picture, and publishing
industries—as such, it often seems to dominate modern British culture. However,
Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, and the regions of England all have vigorous
cultural traditions that have contributed to and still enrich all aspects of
British life. The traditions and abilities of the various ethnic minorities are
also reflected in modern British culture, notably in music and literature, and
are celebrated in events like the annual Notting Hill Carnival in west London.
The traditional music, song, and dance of Scotland, much
of it derived from the country’s Gaelic heritage, thrives in the ceilidh, the
(bag)pipe band, and the Highland games. In the contemporary arts, Scotland has
noted museums, galleries, and orchestras, and national ballet and opera
companies. It also hosts the world’s premier arts festival, the annual
Edinburgh International Festival; Britain’s second-largest arts festival, the
Mayfest, is held in Glasgow. The choral and bardic traditions of Wales are seen
most notably in the country’s male-voice choirs and in the eisteddfod. These
annual festivals celebrating Welsh music, poetry, and customs are held
throughout Wales, culminating in the Royal National Eisteddfod, which has
developed into an international festival of the arts. Cardiff is home to the
Welsh National Opera, one of Britain’s leading symphony orchestras, and several
museums. In Northern Ireland, the ancient Celtic traditions of the whole island
coexist with those of the descendants of the English and Scottish settlers.
Opera Northern Ireland, the Ulster Symphony Orchestra, and the national Ulster
Museum are based in Belfast.
In England, ancient folk traditions are maintained
in all parts of the country. Many are unique to particular areas; some, like
the morris dance, are more widespread. All English cities and many towns have
art galleries and museums. Many contain notable collections.
British society is overwhelmingly urban, but it has
retained distinct links with its rural past. These links are reflected in the
popularity of gardening, and in the working-class tradition of growing
vegetables on allotments. Sport is important in Britain, and the British
originated or developed the modern forms and rules of a number of
sports—notably soccer (known as football in Britain), rugby, cricket, tennis,
polo, horse racing, field hockey, and croquet. Angling (fishing) is the most
popular British sport or pastime, attracting more active participants than
soccer.
C
|
Literature
|
By the end of the 20th century, English
had become a true world language, and English literature is taught today in secondary
schools and universities everywhere. Famous English poets, playwrights, and
novelists are quoted, translated, and loved throughout the world. Welsh,
Scottish, and Irish writers who write in English rather than in their native
Celtic tongues are customarily included as contributors to English literature.
For the development of literature in the British Isles, see Cornish
Literature, English Literature, Gaelic Literature, Irish Literature, Scottish
Literature, and Welsh Literature.
The earliest celebrated example of English literature is
the bloody Anglo-Saxon epic Beowulf, written sometime between the 8th
century and the late 10th century. After the Norman conquest in 1066, French
was the language of the ruling elite, but native Britons still spoke English.
The greatest English writer of the Middle Ages was Geoffrey Chaucer, who wrote The
Canterbury Tales in the late 14th century. This work displayed not only the
vigor and vitality of the English language, but also shaped the future of the
language for centuries to come.
A great flowering of English writing took
place in the late 16th century, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. The
themes of Englishness, love, violence, and the turmoil of human emotions were
explored from a nonreligious standpoint. Poetry was considered the most
polished form of literary expression. The Faerie Queene (Books I-III,
1590; Books IV-VI, 1596), an epic poem in six books by Edmund Spenser,
is one of the masterpieces of the century. The sonnet, a poetry style that uses
a formal rhyme scheme, was used by Sir Philip Sidney and William Shakespeare,
who excelled at this form.
A shift to spiritual themes began in the early
17th century, as seen in the writings of John Donne, who is famous not only for
his religious sermons but also for his love poetry. Donne’s complex and
dramatic style made him one of the founders of metaphysical poetry. Amid the
religious and civil turmoil of the English Revolution in the mid-17th century,
Ben Jonson, a contemporary of Donne, wrote plays and poetry in a formal style
that rejected the floweriness of 16th-century writing. This more classical
style inspired a group of writers who became known as Cavalier Poets. The prose
of John Milton also shared this classical style. His works, mostly pamphlets,
supported the Puritan side of the revolution by stressing civil and religious
liberty. Milton’s later works, the poems Paradise Lost (1667) and Paradise
Regained (1671), were written in blank verse. This unrhymed poetry focused
on such religious themes as the fall of Adam and human redemption. John Bunyan
wrote the popular work The Pilgrim's Progress (published in two parts,
1678 and 1684), which depicts Christian salvation as a journey.
This classical writing style continued from the
restoration of the monarchy in 1660 to the middle of the 18th century, a
century often called the Age of Enlightenment. It was during this time that the
modern novel emerged as a popular form of expression. The modern novel
encompassed stories about people and their relation to society, whether they
lived within society’s confines or not. Journalist Daniel Defoe wrote Robinson
Crusoe (1719) and a number of other popular adventure novels. Anglo-Irish
satirist Jonathan Swift authored Gulliver's Travels (1726), a charming
and biting social commentary. Bawdy and wild aspects of 18th-century life are
reflected in the novel Tom Jones (1749), by writer and lawyer Henry
Fielding. It was also during the 18th century that writer and literary critic
Samuel Johnson compiled his Dictionary of the English Language (1755).
Toward the end of the 18th century, a reaction
against reason, rationalism, and the physical world developed. This movement
(romanticism) pervaded many aspects of society. The romantic movement in
literature idealized nature and was characterized by a highly imaginative and
subjective approach. Emotions and exotic places, both present and past, became
central to countless lengthy novels and torrents of poetry. Poet William
Wordsworth found his inspiration in nature, while Samuel Taylor Coleridge and
William Blake were inspired by mysticism. Lord Byron, Percy Bysshe Shelley, and
John Keats wrote romantic poetry. Scottish author Sir Walter Scott, whose most
famous work is Ivanhoe (1819), wrote more than 20 historical novels, many
of them set in the Middle Ages.
Women also made their mark as writers during the
romantic period. Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley is noted for the Gothic novel Frankenstein
(1818), which took the romantic interest in emotions to the point of terror.
Jane Austen wrote clever, elegant novels such as Sense and Sensibility
(1811) and Pride and Prejudice (1813). Her down-to-earth main characters
were reactions against the emotionalism of romantic writers.
During the last two-thirds of the 19th century, the
Victorian era produced an amazing number of popular novelists and poets. This
time period saw the rise of an increasingly urbanized, middle-class, and
educated society that included a much larger reading audience. Many authors
wrote about characters and situations well-known or easily comprehensible to
their audience and became universally popular and in touch with their vast
readership to a degree not matched in the 20th century. Perhaps the most famous
author of this time was Charles Dickens, who portrayed the hardships of the
working class while criticizing middle-class life. Writers prominent during the
heart of the Victorian period include George Eliot, who, despite being a critic
of Christianity, was known for her intense, moral novels; William Makepeace Thackeray,
who wrote humorous portrayals of middle- and upper-class life; the Brontë
sisters—Charlotte, Emily, and Anne—whose novels tended to be autobiographical;
Anthony Trollope, a keen observer of politics and upper Victorian society; and
Robert Louis Stevenson, who wrote children’s books, adventure stories, and
poetry. The most popular of the many Victorian poets was Alfred, Lord Tennyson.
Other famous poets include Matthew Arnold, Christina Rossetti, and Robert
Browning and his wife, Elizabeth Barrett Browning.
As the late Victorian era gave way to early modern
times at the turn of the 20th century, the focus shifted away from stories of
everyday Victorian life. The novels of Thomas Hardy, H. G. Wells, and Joseph
Conrad possess a certain pessimism and uncertainty about life. In the early
20th century the dark, psychological novels of D. H. Lawrence were censored for
their explicit language; his novel Lady Chatterley's Lover (1928) was
banned as pornographic. The poetry of T. S. Eliot, especially The Waste Land
(1922), expresses disillusionment with modern civilization, as do the popular
novels of Aldous Huxley, who wrote Brave New World (1932). Exotic and
foreign places are the settings of works by Rudyard Kipling and E. M. Forster.
Forster’s novels became popular in the 1980s and 1990s as films, including A
Room with a View (1908) and A Passage to India (1924). Irish writer
James Joyce and English novelist Virginia Woolf were instrumental in forging
the new stream-of-consciousness writing style. The rich and memorable poetry of
Dylan Thomas made him the greatest Welsh poet of the 20th century.
During the 1920s and 1930s, Evelyn Waugh and
P. G. Wodehouse wrote novels satirizing British upper-class life. In the
mid-20th century the works of George Orwell, such as Animal Farm (1945)
and Nineteen Eighty-four (1949), focused on his fears about society.
William Golding also expressed fears about the breakdown of society in his
novel Lord of the Flies (1954). Works of fantasy were written during
this period in response to the horrors of World War II. J. R. R. Tolkien is
famous for his fantasy novels, particularly The Hobbit (1937) and its
sequel, the trilogy Lord of the Rings (1954-1955). British writers whose
work won attention in the late 20th century included novelists Iris Murdoch,
Muriel Spark, and Ian McEwan; poets Ted Hughes and Seamus Heaney; and
dramatists Harold Pinter, Tom Stoppard, and Michael Frayn.
D
|
Visual Arts
|
The earliest visual arts in Britain were most
likely ornamentations on ordinary objects. Scandinavian wood carvings date from
the 8th century, after Scandinavians came to Britain in considerable numbers.
Decorative arts were particularly notable in early Christian Ireland,
especially from the 6th to the 9th century. Irish missionaries, who were
preaching Catholicism in Europe during this time period, brought Celtic
metalworking techniques and stone carvings to Britain. Huge stone crosses,
exquisitely decorated, still stand in northern Britain and Ireland. Painting
was confined to illuminated manuscripts—bright and exactingly detailed
miniature paintings in prayer books that were produced by monks. This art
continued through the Middle Ages because books were still illustrated by hand,
even after printing was invented in the mid-15th century. During the Middle
Ages, the Catholic Church was the chief patron of artists and sculptors, who
were hired to decorate the massive cathedrals as well as local churches.
In early modern times portrait painting became
important, particularly for monarchs interested in marriage opportunities
abroad, and paintings of prospective spouses were often sent before making
marital arrangements. Noted artists who produced paintings in early modern
England were foreigners, such as German artist Hans Holbein the Younger in the
16th century and Flemish painter Sir Anthony van Dyck in the 17th century.
English artists came to excel at miniature painting in the 17th century.
By the 18th century a distinctive British
style began to emerge that tended to be brighter and livelier than the darker
European canvases. British artists also stayed within the confines of
neoclassical rationalism; that is, their art exhibited the values of order,
logic, and proportion (see Neoclassical Art and Architecture). The
etchings and paintings of William Hogarth show satirical scenes from ordinary
life and were enormously popular. Sir Joshua Reynolds, Thomas Gainsborough, and
George Romney became famous for their polished and elegant portraits. Gainsborough
and others painted natural landscapes and seascapes. The artworks of Gavin
Hamilton and John Flaxman depict Greek and Roman themes.
In the late 18th and early 19th centuries
romantic painters appeared who emphasized the beauties and forces of nature (see
Romanticism). This is seen in the landscapes of John Constable and J. M. W.
Turner, whose paintings directly influenced French impressionism. Noted poet
William Blake was also a painter, and he illustrated his poems and stories with
imaginative drawings.
Scores of artists in the Victorian era painted
specifically for middle-class tastes. Sir Edwin Henry Landseer was noted for
paintings that often feature animals, such as dogs or wildlife. Frederick Leighton
painted mythological and historical subjects and illustrated popular magazines.
William Powell Frith painted large, busy canvases in the popular style known as
genre painting, which realistically depicted scenes from everyday life. Sophie
Anderson painted sweet children.
In reaction to Victorian art styles and
middle-class materialism, with its concern for worldly objects, several
painters came together in 1848 and founded a movement called the Pre-Raphaelite
Brotherhood. They sought to return to an earlier, simpler time, and their works
exhibited the brightness, color, and purity of medieval and Renaissance
painting done before the time of Italian artist Raphael. These painters
included William Holman Hunt, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Sir Edward Burne-Jones,
and Sir John Everett Millais. This return to earlier traditions affected other
aspects of the arts as well. Artist and poet William Morris sought to return to
medieval traditions in craftsmanship. He is credited with founding the Arts and
Crafts movement, which became influential in furniture, decorative items, and
textile designs.
Toward the end of the Victorian era, art
nouveau (literally, “new art”) developed out of the Arts and Crafts movement.
Art nouveau is a decorative style with strong elements of fantasy. It borrowed
motifs from sources as varied as Japanese prints, Gothic architecture, and the
symbolic paintings of William Blake. This style, which became popular in
Europe, influenced many art forms as well as architecture and interior design.
The art nouveau illustrations of Aubrey Beardsley, in particular, are still
popular. Artists and architects from the Glasgow School, notably Charles Rennie
Mackintosh, were noted for their work in both the Arts and Crafts and art
nouveau styles.
Britain has produced many artists in the 20th
century. They include sculptors Jacob Epstein, Barbara Hepworth, Henry Moore,
and Anthony Caro. Painters include Paul Nash, a war artist who painted scenes
of landscapes and battles during both world wars; Sir Stanley Spencer, whose
works often used biblical themes; and Graham Sutherland, who developed a unique
style of landscape painting. Noted painters after World War II include Francis
Bacon, whose paintings are steeped in the horrific; David Hockney, who also designed
opera sets; and portrait painter Lucian Freud.
E
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Architecture
|
Some of the oldest examples of British
architecture include a few small, squarish Anglo-Saxon buildings. After the Norman
Conquest in 1066, Norman architecture became prevalent in the British Isles.
The Normans built monumental castles and churches with enormous arches and huge
columns. Their style was called Romanesque on the Continent. The greatest
structures built by the Normans are the White Tower, which is part of the Tower
of London, and the castle, cathedral, and monastery complex at Durham. From the
12th to the 15th century gracefully soaring spires and arches marked the
development of the great Gothic cathedrals; two of these, Westminster Abbey in
London and Lincoln Cathedral, still dominate the skylines of their cities.
Between 1485 and 1625, the English started to incorporate some classic Roman
and ornate elements of the Italian Renaissance into Tudor, Elizabethan, and
Jacobean styles. During the Tudor era, brick became a popular building material
for English country houses.
The architecture of the late Italian Renaissance
was introduced in England by Inigo Jones in the 17th century. Jones was the
first of the great British architects to be influenced by the ideas of Italian
architects. Jones in turn influenced Sir Christopher Wren, Britain’s greatest
architect, who studied the baroque style popular in Europe in the mid-17th
century. After the devastating Great Fire of London in 1666, Wren helped in the
rebuilding of the city. As the premier architect of the time, he designed 52
new churches in London. Many of his churches still stand. The grandest of them,
Saint Paul’s Cathedral in London, is an example of Wren’s distinctively
graceful and monumental British style.
In the 18th century few English buildings
followed the ornate patterns of the baroque and rococo architectures used in
Europe. Rather, a more restrained, neoclassical style was introduced in Britain
by Scottish architect Robert Adam. This style was based on the ancient ruins of
Greece and Rome and incorporated such elements as colonnades and stone domes.
English furniture and ceramics also became renowned in the 18th century. Thomas
Chippendale and Thomas Sheraton were noted for their elegant furniture styles,
and the ceramic designs produced by Josiah Wedgwood are still made.
Victorian architecture borrowed from a variety of styles,
including classical, Gothic, and Renaissance, and was characterized by ornate
decoration. The most famous Victorian neo-Gothic building is Parliament, built
between 1840 and 1870. The only truly original building of the Victorian era
was the Crystal Palace, which housed the Great Exhibition of 1851. It was made
of metal and glass, materials architects would come to use in constructing
office buildings in the 20th century.
In the early 20th century, Scottish architect
Charles Rennie Mackintosh rejected elaborate Victorian architecture styles for
a more modern, functional design. His work influenced 20th-century architects
and interior designers. After World War II many new buildings were needed to
replace the ones destroyed during the war. Because London’s subsoil is not
suitable as a foundation for tall skyscrapers, many of the new buildings
erected were big and boxy with geometric designs. One of the largest examples
of this style is the National Theatre in London. These cold and impersonal
buildings have been criticized because they clash with the graceful London
architecture that survived the war. In the late 20th and early 21st centuries
architects Norman Foster and Richard Rogers designed buildings in a high-tech
style, with their construction and functional aspects fully exposed. The most
notable building in this style is Rogers’s Lloyd’s Building in London.
F
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Performing Arts
|
F1
|
History of Performing Arts
|
Throughout the world the name Shakespeare is
associated with the greatest achievements of England in the performing arts.
William Shakespeare emerged in the colorful Elizabethan era of the 16th
century, and his works are still played and quoted throughout the world. The
16th century was a time of immense creativity, when it was said that the full
flower of the Renaissance had finally come to England. It was during this era
that commercial theater began. The most famous was the Globe Theatre in London.
Destroyed by Puritans in the mid-17th century, the Globe was replaced in the
1990s with an authentic replica. Dozens of other playwrights, including
Christopher Marlowe and Ben Jonson, had their works staged at the Globe and at
other theaters built during this time. Marlowe was noted for writing tragedies
in a period when comedies were more common, and his most famous work is The
Tragical History of Dr. Faustus (1604?). Jonson was a gifted satirist who
wrote for both the royal court and commercial theaters. The words to the famous
song “Drink to Me Only with Thine Eyes” are from a play he published in 1616.
The foundations of choral music, which became an
important musical tradition in England, were laid during the Elizabethan era.
Its development was encouraged at this time by the Protestant Reformation in
England, which changed the language used in church services and music from
Latin to English. Thomas Tallis and his student William Byrd are noted
composers who worked in the royal chapel of Queen Elizabeth I. There were also
many secular composers in Britain. The English madrigal, a song for two or more
voices, developed during the Elizabethan era as well.
The Puritans banned theater as immoral when they
controlled England in the mid-17th century. Theater was revived, along with the
monarchy, in the Restoration of 1660. Restoration theater featured witty and often
acerbic comedies about social manners, a contrast to the great dramatic themes
of Shakespeare’s era. William Wycherley and William Congreve were noted
Restoration dramatists. England’s first operas were written in the late 17th
century, and Henry Purcell is a noted British composer of the era.
George Frideric Handel, a German who settled in London,
wrote many operas and oratorios in the early 18th century. He is most famous
for his Messiah oratorio, first sung in 1742. During the 18th century
the number of theaters grew and the plays performed became more satirical.
Oliver Goldsmith, born in Ireland, wrote comedies as well as novels, poems, and
essays. Another noted comic playwright was Richard Brinsley Sheridan.
The 19th century saw the development of a
uniquely British form of amusement, the music hall, which is related to
early-20th-century vaudeville. Music halls provided variety shows with comic
acts and songs, many of them risqué. The pantomime also emerged in the
Victorian era as elaborately costumed retellings of fairy tales, staged during
the Christmas season. Pantomime performances involved song, dance, slapstick
comedy, and audience participation. The comic operas of Sir William Gilbert and
Sir Arthur Sullivan were also an important part of Victorian music; the works
of Gilbert and Sullivan are still produced around the world.
F2
|
Performing Arts in the 20th Century
|
In the 20th century, Britain remained one of
the world’s greatest centers for drama. Britain’s many theaters attract crowds
from all over the world. This is due in large measure to the high caliber of
20th-century British actors, including Sir Laurence Olivier, Sir Michael
Redgrave, Sir John Gielgud, Sir Alec Guinness, Sir Rex Harrison, Richard
Burton, Glenda Jackson, Vanessa Redgrave, Dame Maggie Smith, Ian McKellen, Dame
Judi Dench, and Emma Thompson. The quality of the plays is another important
factor. In the early 20th century, noted playwrights included John Galsworthy
and Noel Coward. Post-World War II Britain saw a renaissance of drama with the
avant-garde works of Irish-born Samuel Beckett and the plays and screenplays of
Harold Pinter, Alan Bennett, and Tom Stoppard. Playwright and screenwriter John
Osborne presented stark social realism in his play Look Back in Anger
(1956), which was made into a film in 1959. Caryl Churchill continued the
tradition of stark realism, while Alan Ayckbourn provided witty, complex
comedies.
Britain has several hundred professional theaters
and about as many professional theater companies. Some companies are associated
with specific theaters and some are touring companies. The world-famous Royal
Shakespeare Company performs in London and in Stratford-upon-Avon. Famous
theaters in London also include the Royal National Theatre, the Old Vic
Theatre, and the Royal Court Theatre. Countless amateur theatrical groups also
perform throughout Britain.
Music was enormously important in Britain in the
20th century, and London is regarded as one of the great music capitals of the
world. Appreciation of music is extremely widespread, and the kinds of music
regularly performed are diverse, ranging from early music to modern. Britain
boasts thousands of amateur opera societies, choirs, and musical groups,
including orchestras; dance, brass, and steel bands; and rock and jazz groups.
Important composers in the early 20th century included
Sir Edward Elgar, who wrote choral and orchestral music, and Frederick Delius,
who composed the opera A Village Romeo and Juliet (1900-1901).
Later in the century, Ralph Vaughan Williams established himself as Britain’s
foremost composer, and Sir William Walton composed many important classical
works, including the opera Troilus and Cressida (1954). In opera,
Benjamin Britten and Sir Michael Tippett created several important works.
Britten adapted Henry James’s story “The Turn of the Screw” and Shakespeare’s
play A Midsummer Night’s Dream into operas in 1954 and 1960,
respectively. Tippett combined classical music with popular music—his Fourth
Symphony (1977) contained elements of jazz. Thomas Adès was a rising
star in the early 2000s, with operas such as The Tempest (2004),
commissioned by the Royal Opera House. Andrew Lloyd Webber has composed
musicals for the theater since the 1970s, producing such smash hits as Jesus
Christ Superstar (1971), Phantom of the Opera (1986), and Bombay
Dreams (2002).
Britain has many professional orchestras, the most
famous of which are the London Philharmonic and the London Symphony. The BBC
maintains six orchestras and since 1927 has sponsored the popular annual
Promenade Concerts at the Royal Albert Hall. Britain has several major opera
companies, the best known of which are the Royal Opera at Covent Garden and the
English National Opera in London, and the Glyndebourne Opera in southeastern
England. Glyndebourne presents an annual summer opera season that later tours
the country.
Britain’s worldwide impact in music in the second half
of the 20th century, especially in the realm of popular music, was enormous.
The Beatles appeared in the 1960s and were followed by other successful rock
groups and singers, including names such as The Rolling Stones, The Who, Elton
John, Sting, and the Spice Girls. A high-spirited kind of rock music known as
Britpop became popular in the 1990s. Pop and rock music remain the most popular
kinds of music in Britain, although jazz also has a large following.
Britain also has famous dance companies that rank
among the world’s leading troupes. These include the Royal Ballet and the
English National Ballet, located in London; the Birmingham Royal Ballet, a
division of the Royal Ballet; and the Northern Ballet Theatre, a touring
company based in Leeds. The leading contemporary groups are the Rambert Dance
Company and the Siobhan Davies Dance Company. London hosts two contemporary
dance festivals every year. Also popular are traditional dances of the British
Isles, including English morris dancing and the Scottish Highland fling, and
social gatherings featuring Celtic music and dancing that are known as céilidhs
(pronounced kay-lees).
Britain hosts more than 600 professional arts
festivals each year, attracting more than 4 million visitors. The two largest
arts festivals in Britain are held in Scotland: The Edinburgh International
Festival is a mixture of six arts festivals that takes place every August and
September, and the Mayfest is held every May in Glasgow. Festivals focusing on
music include the Three Choirs Festival, so-called because it takes place in
three separate English cities; the Cheltenham Festival; and the Aldeburgh
Festival, founded in the 1940s by composer Benjamin Britten and English tenor
Sir Peter Pears.
G
|
Films
|
The British film industry has a long history and is
noted for many critically acclaimed productions and actors. In recent decades
it has become largely international. The great pull of the American box office
has always lured British actors, directors, and producers to Hollywood, and
conversely, British studios and locations have been used in international
productions.
The film industry in Britain developed during
the 1930s after the government established a quota requiring that a certain
percentage of films shown in British cinemas be made in Britain. Hungarian-born
director and producer Alexander Korda came to Britain during this time and was
instrumental in the production and international distribution of many British
films. The industry received another boost from the influx of German writers,
producers, and directors escaping the Nazi government in the 1930s. During
World War II, many people working in the British film industry immigrated to
the United States. One of these was London-born director Alfred Hitchcock, who
moved to the United States in 1939 and continued to produce popular films.
British film output after World War II tended to be
literary, drawing upon classics from Charles Dickens and William Shakespeare. A
number of witty comedies that appealed to the more educated and culturally
conservative segment of society appeared in the late 1940s and early 1950s.
These included such films as Genevieve (1953) and The Belles of St.
Trinian’s (1954). By the mid-1950s the Free Cinema Movement had begun,
shooting low-budget films that illuminated the problems of contemporary life.
Simultaneously, so-called new cinema films began to present antiestablishment
and anti-middle class views with social realism using working-class themes and
characters. Notable examples of new cinema films include Look Back in Anger
(1959), based on the John Osborne play; Karel Reisz’s Saturday Night and
Sunday Morning (1960); and The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner
(1962). Director David Lean, who had produced many popular films in the 1940s,
became noted for big, lavish epics during the 1950s, particularly The Bridge
on the River Kwai (1957) and Lawrence of Arabia (1959), both of
which won Academy Awards.
For a brief time London became the film
production capital of the world when a number of important films were made
there. These included Tom Jones (1963), with an award-winning screenplay
by John Osborne, and 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) and A Clockwork
Orange (1971), directed by Stanley Kubrick. Richard Attenborough gained
fame not only for his acting but also for directing such biographical films as Gandhi
(1982), which won multiple Academy Awards; Chaplin (1992), about English
actor and director Charlie Chaplin; and Shadowlands (1993), about
British author C. S. Lewis. Anthony Minghella adapted and directed the 1996
film version of Michael Ondaatje’s novel The English Patient and the
2003 film of Charles Frazer’s novel Cold Mountain. Mike Leigh became
known for his collaborations with actors on films such as High Hopes
(1988) and Vera Drake (2004).
H
|
Museums, Galleries, and Libraries
|
Britain is world famous for its outstanding
libraries and museums, most of which are located in London. The British Museum,
one of the most spectacular museums in the world, is renowned for its extensive
and diverse collections, from Egyptian mummies to important historical
documents. The National Gallery houses a vast collection of British and
European paintings dating from the 13th century to modern times. Next door to
the National Gallery is the National Portrait Gallery with about 10,000
portraits of famous figures from British history, some dating from the 14th
century. The Tate Gallery houses a vast collection of British art, as well as
European works from the past two centuries. The Victoria and Albert Museum
features one of the world’s largest collections of fine and applied arts, from
jewelry, clocks, and pottery to fabrics, furniture, and musical instruments.
The National Museum of Science and Industry contains five floors of exhibits on
medicine, photography, engineering, transportation, and communications. Plant,
animal, and mineral specimens from all over the world are part of the
collection at the Natural History Museum, London. The Imperial War Museum
features exhibits on the wars of the 20th century, and the modern Museum of
London illustrates the history of the capital from its earliest times.
Particularly popular with tourists is Madame Tussaud’s Waxworks (see Marie
Tussaud), a unique collection of lifelike wax figures of famous people, both
living and dead.
Several museums and galleries of note are located
outside London. The Ashmolean Museum of Art and Archaeology at Oxford
University contains a diverse collection of rare art and relics, as does the
Fitzwilliam Museum at Cambridge University. One of the world’s finest
collections of Pre-Raphaelite art is at the Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery.
The National Gallery of Scotland in Edinburgh houses a collection of fine
European paintings dating from the Renaissance, including many Scottish
paintings. The Glasgow Art Gallery and Museum has an excellent collection that
ranges from ancient weapons and objects to 17th-century Dutch paintings and
works by French masters. The National Museum of Wales in Cardiff focuses on
Welsh life, history, and culture. In Belfast, Northern Ireland, the Ulster
Museum has a diverse collection that mixes the arts, history, and sciences. The
Ulster Folk and Transport Museum in Holywood concentrates on the traditional
life of Northern Ireland’s people.
Britain has several specialized museums, including
the National Railway Museum in York, with its large collection of locomotives,
many from the 19th century. In recent years some museums have taken on the
lively aspects of theme parks. Examples are the Jorvik Viking Centre in York,
which recreates a Viking village, and the exhibits at Warwick Castle, which
include wax figures, collections of weapons and torture devices, and jousting
reenactments.
Britain’s premier library, the British Library in
London, contains a copy of nearly all significant works published in English.
It was housed in the British Museum until 1997, when it moved to a new
building. The famous Bodleian Library at Oxford University also contains one of
the most extensive collections of English publications in the country.
I
|
Science and Technology
|
Britain has been a world leader in science and
technology, and since the Industrial Revolution the nation has been a pioneer
in the use of machinery. The profession of modern engineering emerged from the
work of the skilled craftsmen of the 18th and 19th centuries. The British have
appreciated and encouraged inventors and scientists, and in pure science, the
country has produced a steady stream of solid research. More than 70 British
citizens have been awarded the Nobel Prize in science, second only to the
United States.
Modern science owes much to 16th-century
philosopher and statesman Francis Bacon, whose theories of inductive reasoning
and experimentation laid the foundation of the scientific method. Sir Isaac
Newton, a scientific genius in physics and mathematics, formulated the laws of
motion and gravity that were not surpassed until Albert Einstein’s theories in
the early 20th century. Michael Faraday, another outstanding figure in British
science during the 19th century, made important discoveries in chemistry and
electricity, specifically electromagnetic induction. His work led to the
creation of the electric generator. Biologist Charles Darwin, who developed the
theory of evolution through natural selection, radically influenced modern
science and thought.
British scientists have also made striking contributions
to the field of medicine. Surgeon Joseph Lister introduced antiseptic surgery
in the 1860s, and in 1928 Sir Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin, the
first of the antibiotic medicines. In physics, several British scientists
carried on atomic research, most notably Ernest Rutherford, Sir Joseph John
Thomson, and Sir John Douglas Cockcroft.
The technology of the Industrial Revolution was not
developed by scientists but by practical craftsmen—locksmiths, carpenters, and
blacksmiths who pioneered innovations on the earliest machines. A key invention
was a practical steam engine, which Scottish inventor James Watt was pivotal in
developing in the late 18th century. Steam power was then used to run various
other machines, including the spinning jenny, invented by James Hargreaves in
the 1760s; the spinning frame, invented by Sir Richard Arkwright; the spinning
mule of Samuel Crompton, which combined the best of the jenny and water frame;
and the power loom invented by Edmund Cartwright. All of these early inventions
of the Industrial Revolution were first used in the textile industry, where the
mass production of cotton cloth by machine was revolutionary.
In the 20th century, British science and
technology continued on the cutting edge. British technology pioneered in the
development of radar and jet engines. British scientists contributed to the
1953 discovery of the molecular structure of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) as
well as subsequent breakthroughs in medicine and genetics, including DNA
fingerprinting, gene therapy, in vitro fertilization, and cloning. Other
contributions include the discovery of cholesterol and vitamin D. In chemistry,
British scientists have developed a biodegradable plastic and are working on
substitutes for chlorofluorocarbons, which destroy the Earth’s ozone layer.
British scientists in Antarctica first discovered a hole in the ozone layer in
1985. British scientists have also made advances in the fields of astrophysics
and superconductivity. They also are at the forefront in developing
semiconductors and fiber-optic cables.
One contemporary British scientist has gained worldwide
attention not only for his accomplishments but because he has surmounted severe
disabilities. Stephen Hawking, a theoretical physicist, suffers from an
incurable disease of the nervous system. He regained his power of speech only
through a computerized voice synthesizer. Hawking has made major contributions
to the study of the origin of the universe and black holes, and his work has
supported the big bang theory of the creation of the universe. As a professor
of mathematics at Cambridge, Hawking wrote A Brief History of Time
(1988).
V
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ECONOMY OF THE UNITED KINGDOM
|
A
|
Overview
|
In the 19th century, Britain had the world’s
leading economy: Its overseas trade thrived, its standard of living rose
steadily, and its citizens pioneered industrial innovations. With the growth of
the economies of other nations in the 20th century, the British economy
remained relatively strong. It has continued to grow, and Britain remains a
major producer of industrial goods and provider of services, as well as a
center of world trade and finance. During the 20th century, Britons saw their
per capita disposable income triple, an accomplishment all the more remarkable
considering Britain’s size and limited natural resources. The skills and
ingenuity of Britain’s highly trained workers, managers, and entrepreneurs have
enabled the British economy to function well and provide for its large
population.
Although Britain’s economy was strong in the 20th
century, it faced a number of persistent problems. The balance of trade was
one. Britain has had to import more than a tenth of its food and much of its
raw materials, as well as many manufactured goods, and it has to export
sufficient products and services to balance the cost of its imports. Another
problem has been industrial inefficiency, which was particularly evident in
older industries such as coal mining, shipbuilding, and textiles, which
produced more products than they could sell. Some industries that had been
nationalized (taken over by the state) after 1945, such as British Oil
Corporation, British Airways, and British Telecommunications, were unprofitable
and operated at a considerable cost to taxpayers. In addition, trade unions
sometimes required companies to hire more workers than were needed, and time
was lost due to strikes as workers pressed for higher wages. These trade union
problems increased the cost of goods, which helped cause inflation. Inflation
occurs when the demand for products is higher than the supply, which leads to
an increase in the value and price of products. At the same time, unemployment
remained high—11 percent of the workforce in the early 1980s—and efforts to
lower it were not successful. These problems were particularly evident during
the 1970s, when high oil prices triggered a worldwide recession.
Since the mid-1970s, Britain has benefited from a
worldwide economic upswing as well as internal improvements. The government has
taken a number of steps to encourage economic growth. It curtailed the power of
unions and sold some nationalized industries, including British Airways and
British Telecommunications, to private companies (called privatization). The
government sought to encourage business and private investment by lowering
taxes and easing restrictions, such as deregulating the stock exchange and
lifting restrictions on certain business agreements. Simultaneously, it sought
to curb its spending and services. Newer, more profitable high-tech industries
absorbed more workers and managers, while many older, less-efficient firms
folded. Britain’s economy received a boost with the discovery and exploitation
of abundant oil reserves in the North Sea. Because of this oil, Britain no
longer depended on imports of foreign petroleum products and also profited from
exports of petroleum products. During the 1990s and early 2000s, Britain’s
economy grew at an average annual rate of 2.2 percent.
B
|
The Government’s Role in the Economy
|
Like many modern developed countries, the United
Kingdom has a mixed economy. This means that some sectors of the economy are
operated by the government and some are operated by private businesses. Since
World War II (1939-1945), Britain has worked to balance the mix of private and
public enterprises in order to maximize the country’s economy and ensure the
economic well-being of its citizens. Historically, Britain’s Conservative Party
has sought a stronger private component in the mix while the Labour Party has
sought to strengthen the public component. Both parties are committed to a
healthy mix of both elements, however.
The public component consists of the welfare
system, which includes socialized medicine, known as the National Health
Service, plus government controls over business, banking, and the money supply.
The welfare system provides support from before birth to the grave. The
government is a major employer: Public officials, the judiciary, the military,
police departments, fire departments, educators, and health professionals are,
for the most part, employed by the state. The government is also a major
purchaser of goods, particularly military equipment.
After World War II the government
nationalized, or took over, a number of large and troubled industries. These
included coal, electricity, transport, gas, oil, steel, certain car and truck
manufacturing, shipbuilding, and aircraft building. Since the 1950s, the
government has privatized a number of these industries, selling them to private
firms. The first sales were the steel and road transportation industries. The
Conservative governments between 1979 and 1996 denationalized oil companies,
telecommunications, car and truck production, gas, airlines and aircraft
building, electricity, water, railways, and nuclear power. By privatizing these
industries, the government hoped they would become more efficient, due to pressure
by stockholders demanding profits. Nevertheless, the government continues to
regulate these newly privatized industries by controlling prices and monitoring
performance. The government also seeks to encourage competition in the economy
and increase productivity by sponsoring and subsidizing training and
educational programs.
As in many modern states, the British
government seeks to fine-tune the economy in order to keep economic booms from
becoming too inflationary and recessions from becoming too deep. In carrying
out fine-tuning, the government uses a combination of monetary policies and
fiscal policies. Monetary policies involve the attempt to control the supply
and demand for money through the Treasury and the central bank, the Bank of
England. Fiscal policy is concerned with the level and distribution of
government spending and taxation. The government often opts to manage demand,
intervening when demand for goods and services is high enough to threaten
inflation. In such cases the government tries to reduce demand by raising
interest rates and taxes. In economic emergencies the government can control
prices and incomes to a considerable extent, but this is only done in extreme
circumstances, such as in times of war or runaway inflation. In the early 2000s
Britain’s levels of inflation and unemployment remained among the lowest in the
European Union.
C
|
Labor
|
The total British labor force in 2006 was
30,810,893 million people. The structure of employment has undergone
significant changes in the past 50 years. There has been a significant increase
in self-employment and a corresponding growth in the number of small
businesses. More than three-quarters of employees in the early 2000s worked in
the services sector, compared with about one-third in 1955. Manufacturing was
once the largest employer. It employed 42 percent of workers in 1955, but
accounted for only about 13 percent of employees in the early 2000s.
The trade union movement has a long and important
history in Britain, but since 1980 the influence of trade unions has declined
dramatically. Trade union membership has fallen because of changes in the
structure of employment, including privatization, the shift away from
manufacturing, the rise in smaller firms, the increase in part-time employment,
and the contracting out of work. Membership decreased to slightly over a
quarter of the workforce in the early 2000s. The Conservative government, in
power from 1979 to 1997, restricted unions’ ability to launch strikes and made
unions legally responsible for the actions of strikers; this considerably
reduced union power and substantially decreased the number of strikes, called
stoppages. In 1986 there were more than a thousand work stoppages; in 1996
there were less than 250. Still, the Trades Union Congress (TUC), an
independent association of trade unions, had an affiliated membership of 67
trade unions in the early 2000s, representing nearly 6.5 million trade union
members in Britain.
D
|
Agriculture
|
Britain’s land surface is minimal compared to many other
nations, but British agriculture is very intensive and highly productive.
During the 20th century output rose steadily, although the increase slowed
toward the end of the century, and agricultural labor became more productive.
The improvement was due to innovations in farm machinery, biological
engineering of seeds and plants, and the increased use of fertilizers,
pesticides, and herbicides. Consequently, imports of food, feed, and beverages
dropped from 36 percent of total imports in 1955 to 11 percent in 1985, and to
10 percent by 1994. Compared to other nations in the European Union, Britain’s
agricultural sector is much smaller in terms of employment and contribution to
the GDP. In the early 2000s agriculture employed approximately 1.4 percent of
the workforce and contributed 1.0 percent of the GDP.
D1
|
Livestock Farming
|
Many of Britain’s full-time farms are devoted to
livestock farming—raising cattle for dairy products or beef, or raising sheep
for wool and meat. The treatment of farm animals became a growing concern in
Britain in the late 20th century. Factory farming of chickens produced
protests, as did the practice of raising calves in confined spaces. Concerns
over animal welfare have led some British citizens to become vegetarians.
Grave concern arose in the 1980s over cattle
infected with bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), popularly known as mad
cow disease. Human beings who eat infected beef may develop Creutzfeldt-Jakob
disease (CJD). BSE was first discovered in Britain in 1986, and the British
government took steps to eradicate the disease and compensate farmers for lost
cattle. Consumer confidence in British beef declined, and in 1996 the European
Union banned Britain from exporting any beef or beef by-products. After
considerable action by the government to halt the spread of the disease, the EU
lifted the ban in 1999.
Livestock farmers in Britain faced another crisis
in 2001, when several cases of foot-and-mouth disease were detected in a
British slaughterhouse. The highly infectious viral disease, which rarely
infects humans, can quickly cripple cattle, sheep, pigs, and other animals with
cloven hooves. The dangers of foot-and-mouth disease are largely economic, since
infected animals often lose weight or stop producing milk. As the outbreak
spread across the British countryside, the British government ordered the
slaughter of more than 1 million animals to contain the virus. Cases of the
disease were also detected in Belgium, France, and Ireland, leading to the
destruction of herds in those countries.
D2
|
Crop Farming
|
Most crop farming in Britain takes place in
eastern and south central England and in eastern Scotland. The leading crops in
the early 2000s were wheat, sugar beets, potatoes, barley, and rapeseed. As
concern has grown about the use of fertilizers, pesticides, and biologically
engineered seeds and their effect on the environment, some farmers have turned
to organic farming, with support from the government.
D3
|
Agricultural Policy
|
The British government began subsidizing the prices paid
for agricultural products after World War II as a way to make farming
profitable. In 1973 Britain joined the European Economic Community (EEC, now
the European Union), and since then agricultural policy has been determined
primarily by the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy (CAP). This policy seeks to
keep the agricultural market stable, ensure that farmers earn a fair living,
and provide consumers with affordable food supplies. As a result of EU
policies, products coming into Britain from non-EU countries are taxed, surplus
products are bought and stored for later sale, and the cost of exports is
subsidized if prices are low.
The British have criticized CAP, primarily because
the British farming sector is smaller than the farming sectors of most EU
nations. British farmers receive less monetary support from the EU than British
taxpayers and consumers pay into CAP, and some British taxpayers and consumers
feel they are supporting inefficient European farmers.
Criticism has increased as greater agricultural yields
around the world have led to more CAP subsidies for European agriculture. CAP
implemented various reforms in 1992 to reduce costs, subsidies, and stockpiles
of foodstuffs, such as the surpluses of butter and wine in the 1970s and 1980s.
Farmers have been encouraged to take land out of production, to adopt
environmentally sound farming methods even though this may decrease production,
and to place production quotas on certain products in an effort to reduce the
amount of subsidy money they receive. Even so, CAP policies designed to protect
small farms, particularly in France and Germany, continue to anger British
taxpayers.
E
|
Forestry
|
Britain was once covered with thick forests, but
over the centuries the expanding human population steadily deforested nearly
the entire country, felling trees for fuel and building materials. Despite the
fact that trees grow quickly in the cool, moist climate of the United Kingdom,
only remnants of the great oak forests remained at the end of the 20th century.
In 1919 only 5 percent of the United Kingdom
was forested; as of 2005 this had increased to 11.7 percent. Most of the
forested area consists of commercially planted, fast-growing coniferous trees
in Wales and northeastern Scotland. Britain has made efforts to increase the
managed forest areas. Imports of wood and wood products are substantial because
Britain produces only a small proportion of the wood it needs.
F
|
Fishing
|
At one time the fishing industry not only
provided a cheap source of protein for Britons, but it was also the training
ground for the Royal Navy. Today fishing is a far less vital economic activity.
Fish and fish products are both imported into and exported from Britain.
In recent decades overfishing and conservation
restrictions imposed by the European Union have caused a decline in the
deep-sea industry. As with agriculture, fisheries policy in Britain is largely
determined by the EU through the Common Fisheries Policy (CFP). It aims to
protect the remaining fish stocks in European waters so that they can recover
from severe overfishing. There are strict quotas on the kinds and amounts of
fish that may be caught, and regulations detail the appropriate equipment to
use. The CFP has caused some hardship to the British fishing fleet, especially
through restrictions on the number of days that ships are permitted to fish.
G
|
Mining
|
Mining has been enormously important in British
economic history. Salt mining dates from prehistoric times, and in ancient
times traders from the Mediterranean shipped tin from the mines of Cornwall.
These tin mines are exhausted today, and the last tin mine in Britain closed in
1998. Britain’s abundant coal resources were critical during the Industrial
Revolution, especially because the coal was sometimes conveniently located near
iron and could be used in iron and steel manufacture. These mined resources were
so important to the Industrial Revolution that entire populations moved to work
at coal and iron sites in the north and Midlands of England. Today the iron is
exhausted, and the high-quality coal is depleted.
Raw materials for construction form the bulk of
mineral production, including limestone, dolomite, sand, gravel, sandstone,
common clay, and shale. Some coal is still mined, but petroleum and natural gas
are far more important. Mining and quarrying, including oil and gas extraction,
accounted for 2.6 percent of the GDP in the early 2000s and employed less than
1 percent of the labor force.
H
|
Manufacturing
|
The history of manufacturing in Britain is unique
because of Britain’s role as the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution.
During the Middle Ages the production of woolen textiles was a key industry in
Britain. In the 16th and 17th centuries, new industries developed. These
included silk weaving, garment making, and the manufacturing of hats, pottery,
and cutlery. All of these operations were generally conducted in small craft
shops and were labor-intensive.
In the 18th century a number of changes in
British society prepared the way for the Industrial Revolution. Colonial and
commercial expansion created markets in North America, Africa, and parts of
Asia. Coal and iron mining developed as Britain’s dwindling forests created the
need for another energy source, and new smelting techniques made iron
implements cheaper to produce. An agricultural revolution in the 18th century
introduced new crops and crop rotation techniques, better breeding methods, and
mechanical devices for cultivation. This coincided with a rapid increase in
population, in part due to better hygiene and diets, providing both consumers
and workers for the new manufacturing operations.
During the Industrial Revolution new methods of
manufacturing products were developed. Instead of being made by hand, many
products were made by machine. Production moved from small craft shops to
factories, and population shifted to urban areas where these factories were
located. Cotton textile factories using newly developed steam-powered machines
produced more goods at a lower cost per item. Textiles, shipbuilding, iron, and
steel emerged as important industries, and coal remained the most important
industrial fuel. The Industrial Revolution dramatically raised the overall
standard of living.
The structure of British industry changed
substantially in the last half of the 20th century. The coal mining and cotton
textile industries declined sharply. As coal production declined, oil
production replaced it as a major industry. Motor vehicle production became a
significant part of the industrial base but was subject to severe foreign
competition. As incomes increased, consumer demand rose for durable goods such
as cars and kitchen appliances. British industrial production also expanded
into communications equipment, including fiber optics, computers,
computer-controlled machine tools, and robots. Growing industries in recent
decades include paper products and publishing; chemicals, such as
pharmaceuticals; rubber and plastics; and electronic and optical equipment.
Scotland is also a major producer of
computers. The so-called Silicon Glen between Glasgow and Edinburgh employs
thousands of people in the electronics industry and is the site of many
overseas computer firms. Scotland and Northern Ireland are still noted for
their production of whiskey and textiles, especially linen from Northern
Ireland and tweed from Scotland.
Britain remains an important manufacturing country,
although it imports large quantities of manufactured goods from overseas,
particularly vehicles and electronic equipment. The automobile manufacturing
industry had declined during the 20th century until Japanese manufacturers
opened plants in Britain in the 1990s. About 12 percent of the workforce was
engaged in manufacturing in the early 2000s, and manufacturing accounted for
about 16 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP).
I
|
The Service Sector
|
One sign of a highly developed nation is
a large and sophisticated service sector. When a nation’s economy matures, its
service sector grows rapidly while its manufacturing sector stabilizes or
diminishes. This was the case with Britain. In the early 2000s Britain’s
service sector accounted for nearly three-fourths of the GDP and employed
almost fourth-fifths of the workforce. The service industries include finance,
retailing, wholesaling, tourism, business services, transport, insurance,
investment, advertising, public relations, market research, education,
administration, and government and professional services.
Britain developed sophisticated banking, financial,
insurance, and shipping operations as early as the 17th century to support its
expanding international ocean trade. Lloyd’s of London, an early insurance
house, began when a number of people willing to underwrite, or insure, the
success of voyages gathered regularly at Lloyd’s Coffee House in London to
share shipping news. Lloyd’s now insures approximately half of the world’s
shipping and cargoes as well as much of the aircraft industry.
Banking and financial services have always played an
important part in London’s economy, and levels of specialization and expertise
have been high. This has attracted ever-larger amounts of business from an
increasingly global economy. Today, London has the largest concentration of
international banks in the world and is the world’s leading center for currency
trading. Leeds, Manchester, Cardiff, Liverpool, Edinburgh, and Glasgow have
developed as financial centers in recent decades. London is also the world’s
leading center for insurance and handles 20 percent of the world’s insurance
business. The financial services sector expanded especially rapidly after the deregulation
of the stock exchange in 1986. By the early 2000s financial and other business
services, including real estate, accounted for more than one-quarter of
Britain’s GDP and employed nearly one-fifth of the workforce.
Several significant developments in the service sector
took place toward the end of the 20th century. Telecommunications became a
dynamic growth industry, and independent retailing declined sharply.
The leisure industry grew dynamically, commanding
an increasing proportion of consumer spending. Organizations catering to
international conferences and exhibitions also have been a growth area. These
organizations have been particularly successful because Britain is one of the
world’s top locations for business meetings and trade shows.
Tourism has become an increasingly important
economic sector in Britain, employing at least 7 percent of the workforce.
Britain is one of the world’s top tourist destinations, annually attracting
about 25 million overseas visitors in the early 2000s—more than a 50 percent
increase over the early 1980s. Under the Development of Tourism Act of 1969, a
government organization, the British Tourist Authority, was set up to attract
overseas visitors and to improve tourist accommodation and travel conditions.
J
|
Energy
|
Britain has more energy resources than any other
country in the European Union, chiefly in the form of oil and natural gas.
Other energy sources include coal and nuclear power. Scotland has some hydroelectric
power stations. Alternative energy sources, notably wind farms, are being
developed in various parts of Britain.
J1
|
Oil and Natural Gas
|
Oil was discovered in the North Sea in 1969. By the
1980s it was adding significantly to the British economy as oil exports
increased during a period of high oil prices. British taxpayers also benefited
from the taxes and royalties paid by the oil and gas companies, which are
licensed by the crown to search for and produce oil and gas. However, oil production
peaked during the 1990s and has since declined.
Gas has been used since the 19th century in
London and other places, but it was manufactured from coal. Since the 1960s,
when offshore gas fields were discovered, natural gas has been used. In the
early 2000s natural gas accounted for more than two-fifths of the fuel
consumption in Britain.
J2
|
Coal
|
Coal was Britain’s traditional source of energy for
about 300 years. It was the main source of fuel during the Industrial
Revolution, when it was mined, used, and exported in large quantities. Peak
production occurred in 1913, when more than 300 million tons were mined. Coal
has become far less important to the British economy. In the past 20 years
cutbacks in coal production have been severe, particularly since the end of a
bitter miners’ strike in 1984. Production in 2003 was 28 million tons. Coal
supplies an ever-smaller proportion of Britain’s total energy needs.
J3
|
Nuclear Power
|
Britain was a pioneer in the development of nuclear
power plants (see Nuclear Energy), opening the world’s first
commercial-scale power station in northwestern England in 1956. By 2003 nuclear
power provided 23 percent of the electricity produced in Britain. Modern
nuclear power stations built after 1975 were privatized in 1996, while the
government maintained ownership of six older power plants built between the
1950s and the 1970s because they were nearing the end of their useful life.
Decommissioning nuclear power stations when they cease being productive has
proven costly, and radioactive waste has been the most serious contributor to
pollution since the 1940s.
K
|
Transportation
|
Britain has historically been an innovator and world
leader in many forms of transportation, from shipping to rail systems to
aviation.
K1
|
Shipping
|
Because Britain is an island, shipping has been
important for centuries. The irregular coastlines of the British Isles provide
many natural harbors, and Britain’s gentle, navigable rivers have always been
conducive to shipping. Seafaring skills were directly connected to Britain’s
growth as a naval power. As early as the 16th century Britain defeated Spain,
its greatest rival at sea. In the 17th and 18th centuries France was defeated,
then Germany in the early 20th century. Prior to World War II, Britain had the
largest merchant fleet in the world, a fleet that sailed throughout the vast
British Empire and was protected by the Royal Navy. Britain continued to be the
world leader in shipping until World War II, when submarine attacks by Germany
sank many British vessels and the tremendous output of the American
shipbuilding industry made the United States the world leader.
Today many British shipping firms operate under
foreign flags to avoid the more stringent British shipping regulations,
including higher wages for crews. Most British passenger shipping involves
ferry trips to the continent of Europe or to Ireland. Tankers carrying oil and
dry bulk cargo make up the majority of oceanic shipping. British ports were
nationalized in the late 1940s, and in recent years most have moved into the
private sector or are governed by independent trusts. The most important port
in the United Kingdom is London; other important commercial ports are at Forth
in Scotland, Grimsby and Immingham in eastern England, Liverpool in western
England, and Southampton and Dover in southern England.
K2
|
Canals
|
Canals were built in Britain to link rivers,
and most of Britain’s canals were built as part of the transportation
revolution that took place between 1750 and 1840. Canals were built by gangs of
laborers known as navigators, a name that came from their task of creating
channels of inland navigation. This term was soon shortened to “navvies.” The
canals were important during the Industrial Revolution for transporting goods,
but by the 1830s they had to compete with the new railways, which quickly
surpassed them. Thereafter, canals were used to carry extremely bulky
materials.
Today Britain has about 3,200 km (about 2,000 mi)
of canals and navigable rivers, of which about 620 km (about 390 mi) are
commercial waterways. The most important of these are the Manchester Ship
Canal, which is the largest canal in Britain; the Thames; and the Caledonian
Canal across northern Scotland, which provides a navigable waterway linking the
North Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. The rest of the rivers and canals are used
for recreation and form part of Britain’s historical heritage.
K3
|
Railways
|
The Victorian era was also known as the Railway
Age. The railroad can be considered the child of the British coal mines because
carts on tracks were used to haul coal. These precursors of the railroad were
then combined with steam engines, which led to further technological
innovations. An added advantage in the development of railroads in Britain was
that the most populated parts of the country, where this mode of transportation
was needed, were relatively flat.
The world’s first public railway was the Stockton
and Darlington, which opened in 1825. A period of hectic railway building
followed for the next quarter century as different companies competed to lay
track. It was a massive undertaking that employed vast armies of laborers and
altered the British landscape by digging through hills and constructing bridges
and tunnels. In a short time the basic grid of Britain’s railways was in place.
Over the ensuing century smaller railway companies
were absorbed or merged into a few large companies. In 1948 the government
nationalized the four remaining companies, and in the 1960s they became the
British Railways Board. In 1955 a modernization program began to replace steam
trains with diesel and electric ones. The last steam locomotive was withdrawn
in 1968. Around this time intense competition from road transport made it
necessary to cut costs, and many unprofitable branch railway lines closed.
Railroads were part of the wave of privatization
that took place in the early 1990s. The complicated procedure was based on the
Railway Act of 1993. The infrastructure, including tracks and train operations,
was put into the hands of Railtrack, a government-owned company that was
privatized by selling stock to private investors. Passenger operations were
split into 25 operating units, each franchised to a private firm given the
right to provide passenger service to a particular region of Britain. In 1995
freight operations in Britain were divided among private companies based in
different parts of the country. The government appoints a rail regulator and a
franchising director to ensure that rail arrangements are fair to companies and
passengers. The moves to fully privatize BR were highly contentious and
generated considerable criticism within Britain.
The fractured nature of rail organization was
forcefully brought home in the late 1990s and early 2000s with a series of
high-profile rail accidents. The accidents were blamed in part on the
separation of ownership of rail and rolling stock and on the needs of
privatized companies to provide shareholder income at the perceived expense of
passenger safety. After a crash in 2000 in Hertfordshire caused by faulty
rails, the entire railway network was examined and track replaced, leading to
severe delays to rail journeys for months. Railtrack was replaced in 2003 by
Network Rail, a not-for-profit company.
A railway tunnel beneath the English Channel was
completed in 1993, connecting England and the European continent. The main
Channel Tunnel, which is 50.4 km (32 mi) long, runs from Folkestone, England,
to Calais, France. Trains carry both passengers and freight through the tunnel.
Motorists can drive their cars on and off the train. The trip through the
tunnel takes about 35 minutes.
K4
|
The London Underground
|
The London Underground operated 408 km (254 mi) of
railway in the early 2000s, of which about 42 percent is under the ground.
Known as the tube, the system serves 275 stations, with more than 500 trains
running during peak periods. Expansion of the system has continued; the Jubilee
Line, connecting the southeast and east to central London, was completed in
1999. Much of the system is old, however, and breakdowns are a recurring
problem. Despite its problems, the Underground provides reliable public
transportation for an impressive number of commuters across a large
metropolitan area. There are also urban rail systems in Glasgow, Liverpool,
Tyne and Wear, Manchester, and Sheffield.
K5
|
Air Travel
|
Along with other industries, Britain’s airlines
were nationalized after World War II and then were privatized in the late
1980s. British Airways is one of the world’s leading airlines and has one of
the largest fleets in Europe. It was formed in 1974 by combining the two
state-run airlines, British Overseas Airways Company (BOAC) and British
European Airways (BEA). Together with Air France, British Airways in 1976
introduced the first supersonic passenger service, using the Concorde aircraft.
Concorde service was discontinued in 2003. Britain has numerous independent
airlines, as well.
London’s main airports, Heathrow and Gatwick, are among
the world’s busiest centers for international travel. Heathrow handles more
than 67 million passengers a year, and is the world’s busiest airport for
international travel. There are nearly 150 other licensed civil airfields in
Britain.
In 1970 Britain joined Airbus Industrie, a European
consortium of aircraft manufacturers. In 2001 Airbus became a single integrated
company, owned 80 percent by the European Aeronautic Defense and Space Company
(formed from the merger of the French, German, and Spanish partners in the
Airbus consortium) and 20 percent by BAE Systems PLC, formerly known as British
Aerospace.
K6
|
Roads
|
About 90 percent of all passenger travel in
Britain is by road, and primarily by private car rather than public transportation.
The unstoppable growth in passenger cars during the 20th century was paralleled
by rising public concern about the environmental effects of increased traffic
and especially concern about air pollution. In 1994 the government slowed its
road-building program. The move was in part a response to research findings
that tended to confirm environmentalists’ claims that the main effect of
building new roads and motorways had been to encourage extra traffic and not,
as intended, to improve the flow of existing traffic. Road building began to
pick up again in the early 2000s. The Transport Act of 2000 gave local
authorities the power to charge drivers for use of the roads in an effort to
reduce congestion. In 2003 London motorists began to pay for the privilege of
driving into the center of the city.
L
|
Communications
|
L1
|
The Post Office
|
The Post Office was founded in 1635 and is
noted in history for issuing the famous Penny Black, the world’s first adhesive
stamp, in 1840. In 1969 the Post Office was reorganized as a public
corporation. Today, its operations are divided into three major brands: the
Royal Mail, Parcelforce Worldwide, and the Post Office. The Royal Mail handles
the collection and delivery of mail, Parcelforce handles parcel delivery, and
the Post Office handles retail services to the public. The Post Office also
handles the payment of government pensions and welfare benefits, issues
licenses, collects utility company bills, and offers banking services for
certain banks. It also issues foreign currency and traveler’s checks, sells
travel insurance, and acts as the agent for Western Union’s money transfer
service. The Post Office directly operates only about 500 sites; the other post
offices in the United Kingdom are franchises.
The Royal Mail monopoly ended in 2006. Other
licensed operators are now able to collect mail from businesses and from their
own collection boxes, and to transport and deliver mail to business and residential
customers. The Royal Mail is still required to provide a universal collection
and delivery service, delivering mail at a uniform price to all UK addresses.
L2
|
Telecommunications
|
Britain has one of the world’s largest and
most technologically advanced telecommunications systems. Telecommunications
were officially the responsibility of the Post Office until 1981, when British
Telecom was founded to take over telecommunications management. British Telecom
was privatized in 1984 and in 1991 changed its name to BT. BT agreed to a
merger with the U.S. telecommunications company MCI in 1997 to form Concert,
one of the biggest companies of its kind in the world. A number of other
companies offer telecommunications services such as mobile communications,
overseas wireless and cable, and cable television. The National Grid, the
privatized electricity transmission company, has used its pylon network to set
up a fiber-optic telecommunications system, and cable television companies also
offer telephone services.
L3
|
The Media: Radio, Television, and the BBC
|
Historically, broadcasting in Britain has been treated as a
public service responsible to the people through Parliament. In recent decades
broadcasting has been opened up to market competition. The British Broadcasting
Corporation (BBC), set up in 1922, is a large public television and radio
service that is primarily supported by license fees paid annually by each
household. In 1955 Independent Television (ITV) stations were permitted and
began to present some competition to the BBC. The government licenses and
regulates broadcasting through the Independent Television Commission (ITC) and
the Radio Authority. Today Britain has 5 terrestrial television channels and
almost 200 radio stations. There are numerous satellite companies based in
Britain, and an increasing number of cable companies.
BBC 1 and BBC 2 are complementary
national television networks—one provides a range of programs meant to have a
wide-ranging appeal, while the other broadcasts more innovative shows geared
toward specific groups. The BBC carries no advertising and regularly transmits
educational broadcasts. The proceedings of Parliament are freely broadcast on
both radio and television. Britain also has three ITV channels that are
licensed out to private television companies in 14 designated television
regions. These private companies support themselves with advertising and
sponsors, but are regulated by the ITC. Wales presents public broadcasts on a
Welsh-speaking channel. These broadcasters face competition from digital
satellite and cable television stations.
The BBC has five radio networks that broadcast
throughout Britain. There are also three independent national radio services
(classical music, rock music, and talk radio), and about 250 independent local
radio services. These independent radio services are awarded licenses by the
Radio Authority. BBC World Service Radio broadcasts around the world in English
and 45 other languages, carrying extensive programs and high-quality news
broadcasts.
In 1990 the Broadcasting Act was passed in an
attempt to guarantee standards of decency, accuracy in news coverage, and
balanced presentations of controversial topics, while encouraging more
competition in television and radio. The Broadcasting Act passed in 1996
addressed the new digital technologies in broadcasting that would allow for
more radio and television services to be made available to the public. To
handle this increased broadcasting capability, the government allowed the
licensing of at least 18 more national television channels and at least 12 more
radio services. The Broadcasting Standards Commission was set up in 1997 to set
standards for radio and television broadcasts, to monitor violent and sexual
content, and to respond to complaints about broadcasts.
L4
|
The Press
|
Britain has one of the largest publishing
industries in the world. There are ten morning daily newspapers and nine Sunday
papers published nationally. In addition, hundreds of regional and local
newspapers and some 7,000 periodicals, mainly weeklies and monthlies, are
published in the United Kingdom. Noted weeklies include the Economist,
the New Scientist, the New Statesman, the Spectator, and
the Times Literary Supplement.
Britain is home to some of the oldest
newspapers in the world. The Observer and the Times have both
been published since the late 18th century. In the past newspaper publishing
was concentrated in Fleet Street in London, but the national papers have moved
their editorial and printing facilities away from Fleet Street or out of
London. British newspapers range from “quality” papers that focus on the news
to “popular” papers that emphasize entertainment. Quality newspapers, such as
the Financial Times and the Guardian, include the most respected
newspapers. The popular papers—the Sun, the Daily Mirror, and the
Daily Star—are referred to as tabloids and are characterized by
sensationalist stories, gossip, and lavishly illustrated stories. Other papers,
such as the Daily Mail and Express, offer a middle ground between
news and entertainment stories.
M
|
Foreign Trade
|
Foreign trade has been vital to Britain for
hundreds of years. Britain’s prominent position in world trade during the 18th
and 19th centuries resulted largely from its geographical isolation from the
wars and political troubles that afflicted the centers of trade on the European
Continent. The development of trading companies, such as the East India Company
and Hudson’s Bay Company; colonial expansion; and naval control of the seas
also contributed to Britain’s preeminence.
Britain remained one of the world’s leading trading
nations in the 21st century. It generally ran a large trade deficit, with
imports exceeding exports. Visible exports, or trade in merchandise, account
for only about half of Britain’s overall trade. Trade in services—including sea
transport, civil aviation, travel, government services, investment income,
transfers, and financial services—accounts for the other half. Much of
Britain’s trade is with the European Union, especially Germany, France, and
Netherlands. The United States is another major trading partner.
N
|
Banking and Financial Services
|
Britain is one of the world’s leading
financial centers. Banking, finance, insurance, and other business services
accounted for about more than a quarter percent of Britain’s output in the
early 2000s and more than 5 million people were employed in this sector.
The Bank of England, chartered in 1694, was
nationalized in 1946 and is the only bank that issues banknotes in England and
Wales. Several banks in Scotland and Northern Ireland issue currencies in
limited amounts. After the Labour government was elected in 1997 the Bank of
England was given operational independence in monetary policy. This means it
can set interest rates independent of the government in power, much as the
Federal Reserve does in the United States. There are more than a dozen major
commercial banks in Britain, including Lloyds TSB, Barclays, National
Westminster, and HSBC. The postal system, savings banks, and cooperative and
building societies also provide some banking services.
Historically, the financial services industry has been
based in the City of London in an area called the Square Mile. The City is a
small part of the Greater London metropolitan area that surrounds it. Financial
services are still concentrated in the City, although several provincial cities
have developed their own financial centers. The City has the greatest
concentration of foreign banks in the world and one of the world’s largest
insurance markets. It is also the world’s main center for trading in stock of
overseas companies. One of the world’s largest financial derivatives markets is
in the City, as well. Financial derivatives are contracts to buy or sell, at a
future date, financial documents such as stocks and bonds.
The London Stock Exchange, one of the largest
exchanges in the world, has always been a focus of international trade. In 1986
it was substantially deregulated, an event known as the Big Bang in financial
circles. This led to the rapid expansion of products, markets, and numbers of
employees, a movement that slowed in the early 1990s but has since rebounded.
O
|
Currency
|
The pound sterling (£1), consisting
of 100 pence, is the basic unit of currency in Britain (£0.50 equal U.S.$1;
1996 average). Before Britain converted its currency to the decimal system
between 1968 and 1971, the pound equaled 20 shillings and each shilling was
made up of 12 pence. Bookkeeping had to be done using three columns and the
decimal system could not be applied.
The European Union established the euro as its unit
of currency, and other EU members made the transition to the euro between 1999
and 2002. However, the British government elected not to do so and instead
retained the pound as its currency.
P
|
Tourism
|
Britain is one of the world’s foremost travel
destinations, and tourism is an essential part of Britain’s income. It employed
about 1.4 million people and contributed about 3.5 percent to the GDP in the
early 2000s. The British Tourist Authority, which is supported by the
government, promotes tourism in Britain and maintains hundreds of Tourist
Information Centres to assist visitors. England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern
Ireland have their own government-supported tourist boards as well.
Visitors to Britain come from all over the world,
attracted by Britain’s heritage and arts, historic buildings, monuments,
museums, and galleries. In 2006, 30.7 million overseas visitors traveled to
Britain. The largest number came from the United States, followed by France,
Germany Ireland, and Netherlands.
London, the most popular tourist destination, is
crowded with tourists throughout the year. Among the sites regularly visited by
millions are the Tower of London, the Houses of Parliament, Buckingham Palace,
and Westminster Abbey. At night visitors enjoy the hundreds of theaters and
pubs in London.
Northwest Wales has many excellent castles, among
them Conwy, Caernarfon, and Harlech. In Scotland, historic Edinburgh Castle
looms over the capital. Great cathedrals from the Middle Ages still dominate
the skylines of many English cities, including Salisbury, Durham, and
Canterbury. In Wales the remains of Tintern Abbey and the small but beautiful
Saint David’s Cathedral are outstanding.
Stately homes are abundant throughout Britain.
Among the more famous is Blenheim Palace, the home of the Churchill family.
Hampton Court Palace, just outside of London, was one of the homes of Henry
VIII. The Palace of the Holyrood House in Scotland was once the home of Mary,
Queen of Scots. Among other worthwhile places to visit are Oxford and
Cambridge, both university towns with many ancient buildings, and the Tudor
home in which William Shakespeare was born in the town of Stratford-upon-Avon.
VI
|
GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED KINGDOM
|
A
|
Overview
|
The United Kingdom is a parliamentary monarchy—that
is, the head of state is a monarch with limited powers. Britain’s democratic
government is based on a constitution composed of various historical documents,
laws, and formal customs adopted over the years. Parliament, the legislature,
consists of the House of Lords, the House of Commons, and the monarch, also
called the crown. The House of Commons is far more influential than the House
of Lords, which in effect makes the British system unicameral, meaning the
legislature has one chamber. The chief executive is the prime minister, who is
a member of the House of Commons. The executive branch also includes Her
Majesty’s Government, commonly referred to simply as “the government.” The
government is composed of ministers in the Cabinet, most of whom are members of
the House of Commons; government departments, each of which is responsible to a
minister; local authorities; and public corporations. Because the House of
Commons is involved in both the legislative and executive branches of the
British government, there is no separation of powers between executive and
legislature as there is in the United States.
B
|
The Constitution
|
The British constitution comprises multiple documents.
The written part consists of the Magna Carta, written in 1215; the Petition of
Right, passed by Parliament in 1628; and the Bill of Rights of 1689. It also
includes the entire body of laws enacted by Parliament, precedents established
by decisions made in British courts of law, and various traditions and customs.
The democratically elected House of Commons can alter these laws with a majority
vote. The constitution continually evolves as new laws are passed and judicial
decisions are handed down. All laws passed by Parliament are regarded as
constitutional, and changes or amendments to the constitution occur whenever
new legislation overrides existing law. Although the crown gives its royal
assent to legislation, this is a mere formality.
C
|
The Monarchy
|
The British monarchy stands for the continuity of
British history going back to Anglo-Saxon times, and today it serves as a
figurehead for the state. In theory, the British monarch has enormous powers,
but in reality those powers are limited and the crown follows the dictates and
advice of the ministers in Parliament. The British monarchy has been a
hereditary position since the 9th century, although Parliament has stepped in
at times to alter the succession, for example, in 1701 when the House of
Hanover was selected to replace the Stuart dynasty.
Primogeniture, the passing of the throne to the eldest
son when a monarch dies, has been the rule of succession, and when there are no
sons, the eldest daughter ascends the throne. This was the case when Elizabeth
II succeeded to the throne in February 1952 upon the death of her father,
George VI. Her husband, Prince Philip, has the title of Prince Consort, but no
rank or privileges. The current heir to the throne is Elizabeth II’s eldest
son, Charles, Prince of Wales. According to the Act of Settlement of 1701, only
Protestants are eligible to succeed to the throne. A regent may be appointed to
rule for the sovereign if he or she is underage or incapacitated.
As the official head of state, the monarch
formally summons and dismisses Parliament and the ministers of the Cabinet. The
monarch also serves as head of the judiciary, commander in chief of the armed
forces, and Supreme Governor of the Church of England and the Church of
Scotland. In reality, the government carries out the duties associated with
these functions. Theoretically, the monarch appoints all judges, military officers,
diplomats, and archbishops, as well as other church officers. The monarch also
bestows honors and awards, such as knighthoods and peerages. In reality, all of
these appointments are made upon the advice of the prime minister. The prime
minister declares war and peace and concludes treaties with foreign states in
the name of the crown. The monarch serves as the ceremonial head of the
Commonwealth of Nations and is the ceremonial head of state for 16 Commonwealth
countries.
The real work of the monarchy consists
largely of signing papers. The monarch has the right, however, to be consulted
on all aspects of national life and review all important government documents.
The monarch may also meet with the Privy Council, a now largely ceremonial body
made up of Cabinet members that serves in an advisory capacity to the monarch.
Since Britain is a democracy, the monarchy could potentially be abolished if a
majority of the population decides to do so. In the early 21st century the
monarchy generally remained popular, despite unpleasant media coverage
surrounding the marriages and relationships of the royal family. Only Scotland
had a small majority that wanted to make the United Kingdom a republic.
The royal family endorses developments in Britain
by performing such ceremonial functions as cutting ribbons, opening businesses,
launching ships, and laying cornerstones. Many members of the royal family are
involved in charity work and maintain a public presence by visiting shelters,
hospitals, and clinics. Because foreigners are attracted to the pageantry of
royalty, tourism related to the royal family brings a substantial amount of
money into the country.
D
|
The Executive
|
D1
|
The Prime Minister
|
The chief executive of the government is the prime
minister. He or she is the leader of the party that holds the most seats in the
House of Commons. The monarch goes through the ceremony of selecting as prime
minister the person from the House of Commons who is head of the majority
party. The prime minister presides over the Cabinet and selects the other
Cabinet members, who join him or her to form the government that is part of the
functioning executive. Acting through the Cabinet and in the name of the
monarch, the prime minister exercises all of the theoretical powers of the
crown, including making appointments. In the past, prime ministers also came
from the House of Lords. Today, in the unlikely circumstance that a peer (a
member of the House of Lords) is sought as a prime minister by one of the
parties, he or she must first resign from the House of Lords and gain election
to the House of Commons.
When legislation comes before the House of Commons, the
prime minister can usually count on the support of a majority of the votes
because his or her party has a majority of the seats, and party discipline
tends to be strong in Britain. In some circumstances prime ministers must
depend on a coalition of strong parties. This was the case during both world
wars and during the worst of the Great Depression in the 1930s. At times a
prime minister comes from a party that does not quite have a majority of seats
in the House of Commons. In such a case, that party must rely on an alliance
with smaller parties, the smaller parties voting with the party in power on
necessary legislation. A government formed from a party without a majority in
Parliament is called a minority government. Between 1974 and 1979, for example,
a minority Labour Party government was able to stay in power because the
Liberal Party generally voted with it.
D2
|
The Cabinet
|
The Cabinet developed during the 18th century out of
informal meetings of key government ministers during the reigns of the
Hanoverian monarchs, who took relatively little interest in politics. During
the 19th century this committee of key ministers evolved into an effective body
that wielded the monarch’s executive power.
The Cabinet has about 20 members, or ministers, all
of whom must be members of Parliament (MPs). Members of the Cabinet are leaders
of the majority party in the House of Commons or, more rarely, members of the
House of Lords. Cabinet ministers who head a particular government department,
such as the Ministry of Defense, are known as secretaries of state. The prime
minister serves as the first lord of the treasury and as minister for the civil
service. In addition to the various secretaries of state, the Cabinet includes
nondepartmental ministers who hold traditional offices—such as the lord
president of the council, the paymaster general, and the lord privy seal—and
ministers without portfolio, who do not have specific responsibilities but are
assigned to specific tasks as needed. The lord chancellor holds a unique
position. The lord chancellor’s executive duties as a Cabinet member include
being responsible for legal affairs in the United Kingdom, but he or she is
also head of the judiciary, which is a separate part of the British government.
The prime minister has the power to move members of the Cabinet from post to
post, or to drop individuals from the Cabinet entirely. Former Cabinet
ministers may retain their positions as members of Parliament.
Two key doctrines of Cabinet government are
collective responsibility and ministerial responsibility. Collective
responsibility means that the Cabinet acts unanimously, even when Cabinet
ministers do not all agree upon a subject. If an important decision is
unacceptable to a particular Cabinet member, it is expected that he or she will
resign to signify dissent. Ministerial responsibility means that ministers are
responsible for the work of their departments and answer to Parliament for the
activities of their departments. The policy of departmental ministers must be
consistent with that of the government as a whole. The ministers bear the
responsibility for any failure of their department in terms of administration
or policy.
D3
|
The Privy Council
|
The Privy Council is a large, and generally
ceremonial, body of more than 450 members that developed out of the royal
council that existed in the Middle Ages. By the 18th century the Privy Council
had taken over all the powers of the royal council. The Privy Council comprises
all current and former Cabinet members, as well as important public figures in
Britain and the Commonwealth. The council advises the monarch and arranges for
the formal handling of documents. It has a large number of committees, each
with a specific task, such as dealing with outlying islands, universities, or
legal matters. The most important committee is the Judicial Committee of the
Privy Council, which is the highest court of appeal for certain nations in the
Commonwealth, some church-related appeals, and for disciplinary committees of
some professions.
E
|
The Legislature: Parliament
|
Parliament comprises three parts: the crown, the House
of Lords, and the House of Commons. Over the course of centuries, the seat of
power has passed from the crown to the Lords to its final resting place in the
House of Commons. Parliament originated in the great councils called by the
crown during the Middle Ages. Through these meetings, medieval monarchs sought
the advice of their subjects, exchanged information about the realm, and
gathered petitions. In other words, Parliament originated with the royal wish
to gain the approval and sanction of the realm for acts of state. Later,
Parliament served to supplement royal revenues by making grants of
taxation—that is, by granting the monarch’s request for extra subsidies to pay
for wars. The crown invited all great nobles and church leaders to attend these
councils. By the end of the 13th century representatives from the counties,
called knights of the shire, and representatives of the towns, called
burgesses, were also being summoned to attend regularly. The knights and the
burgesses eventually came to sit separately from the nobles and church leaders,
in what eventually became the House of Commons. The nobles and church leaders
sat in what came to be called the House of Lords.
By the end of the Middle Ages Parliament
had taken on a form that would be recognized today. It legislated and approved
taxes and passed laws. Long, complicated struggles between the monarch and the
two houses of Parliament resulted in the government gaining power, while the
crown lost power. In the 20th century the House of Commons successfully
struggled to curtail the power of the House of Lords. Today the House of Lords
can only delay legislation. For the past 280 years the monarch’s royal assent
to legislation has been given automatically. (For more information on the
history of Parliament, see Parliament, British.)
Parliament is elected roughly every five years and is
dissolved by the crown on the advice of the prime minister, who then calls a
general election. Parliamentary sessions are held each year and begin in
October or November. Parliament meets at the Houses of Parliament in London,
officially called the New Palace of Westminster. The Parliament of the United
Kingdom legislates for the entire nation and includes representatives from
England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland.
E1
|
The House of Lords
|
The House of Lords today is more a place of
discussion and debate than one of power, and it normally passes legislation
already approved by the House of Commons. Its members are not elected. The
House of Lords is made up of the lords temporal, the lords spiritual, and the
law lords.
The lords temporal are either hereditary peers or
life peers. The House of Lords long consisted primarily of hereditary peers,
but the House of Lords Act passed by Parliament in 1999 abolished peers who
inherit their position, with the exception of 90 interim members who will hold
their power until the next stage of reform. These 90 members were chosen by
committee in 2001. Today, the majority of members of the House of Lords—about
600—are life peers. Life peers are appointed by the monarch for the duration of
the person’s lifetime. These appointments are usually made in recognition of
outstanding careers or contributions to society. Famous people who have been
made peers are former British prime ministers Winston Churchill and Harold
Wilson. The lords spiritual include the archbishops of Canterbury and York; the
bishops of London, Durham, and Winchester; and the 21 next most senior bishops.
The law lords, or lords of appeal, assist in the judicial functions of the
House of Lords.
The House of Lords has the power to introduce
bills, although bills dealing with financial matters can only originate in the
House of Commons. The Lords can also offer amendments to bills passed by the
House of Commons, and Commons is obligated to consider these amendments before
passing a bill into law. The Lords have the right to delay legislation, and may
delay bills for up to about a year. Financial bills, however, may only be
delayed for a month, and they become law in 30 days whether or not the House of
Lords approves of them. The terms of the Parliament Acts of 1911 and 1949
forbid the Lords from disapproving nonfinancial bills if the House of Commons
has passed them in two successive sessions. The only exception is a bill to
lengthen the life of a Parliament past five years, which requires the assent of
both chambers.
These powers of the House of Lords are limited
because most Britons believe that in a modern democracy a nonelected house
should only act as a forum for opinion, one that is comparatively free from
party politics and pressures. Although this house has relatively little power,
many Britons would like to either abolish it completely or replace it with some
form of elected second chamber.
E2
|
The House of Commons and Legislation
|
The House of Commons is the source of real
political power in the United Kingdom. Its members are democratically elected
by universal suffrage of citizens over the age of 18. Certain groups that are
denied the right to vote, however, include members of the House of Lords, some
detained mental health patients, sentenced prisoners, and those convicted of
corrupt or illegal election practices in the previous five years. In addition,
certain persons are excluded from standing for election to the House of
Commons. They include peers; clergy from the Church of England, the Church of
Scotland, the Church of Ireland, or the Roman Catholic Church; people sentenced
to more than a year in prison; and those with unpaid bankruptcy bills.
Members of the House of Commons are elected
from geographical constituencies determined by population, and each MP
generally represents a constituency of 60,000 to 70,000 people. Four permanent
boundary commissions exist, one each for England, Wales, Scotland, and Northern
Ireland. Their purpose is to keep the constituencies equal and the boundaries
fair. The commissions review the constituencies every 8 to 12 years and
recommend changes based on population shifts. Based on a review conducted in
1995, the elections of 1997 and 2001 were held for 659 constituencies in the United
Kingdom: 529 in England, 72 in Scotland, 40 in Wales, and 18 in Northern
Ireland. A subsequent review by the Boundary Commission for Scotland reduced
the number of constituencies there to 59. Accordingly, the number of seats in
the House of Commons was reduced to 646 as of the 2005 general elections.
British citizens living abroad may vote in British
elections for up to 20 years after they have left Britain. Those temporarily
living overseas as members of the military or other state service may vote in their
home constituencies. In 1992 a record high of 78 percent of the electorate
voted in the general election. In 1997 a reported 71 percent of the electorate
voted. Voter turnout dropped to 59 percent in 2001 and then rose slightly in
2005 to 61 percent.
A session of Parliament lasts for five years unless
the prime minister dissolves Parliament, which can happen for a number of
reasons. Although the monarch officially dissolves Parliament, this happens
only after the prime minister calls for it. The prime minister can dissolve
Parliament over a major issue that he or she believes should be submitted to
the voters. The prime minister also might dissolve Parliament if the tide of
public opinion seems to be flowing strongly on the side of the party in office.
Holding a general election when public opinion is highly supportive of the
party in power enables that party to possibly gain more seats in the House of
Commons, and so extend their stay in power with a stronger majority.
Parliament can also be dissolved if the government
is defeated on an important piece of legislation. When a Parliamentary majority
votes against the legislation it is treated as a vote of no confidence for the
prime minister and his government. A specific vote by that name may be taken to
indicate that the majority of MPs are against the legislation. This tradition
is so deep that actual votes of no confidence are rarely taken. The government
of Labour Prime Minister James Callaghan was dissolved in 1979 when a vote of
no confidence was taken after union workers went on strike in reaction to the
government’s attempt to limit wage increases. There had been no such vote of no
confidence in Britain since 1924. When the prime minister dissolves Parliament,
a general election is held for all the seats in the House of Commons.
The members of the majority party sit on one
side of the house, directly facing the minority party members. Each side has a
so-called front bench where its most important political leaders sit. The prime
minister and his or her Cabinet colleagues sit in the majority party front
bench. The opposition party front bench is occupied by what is called the
Shadow Cabinet, which consists of the opposition party leader and those who
would receive Cabinet posts if the opposition leader became prime minister.
Debates in the House of Commons can be quite lively. C-SPAN television in
America often broadcasts the raucous sessions when the prime minister answers
questions from the house.
Most legislation is initiated by the Cabinet in the
form of public bills, or legislation pertaining to the general law, which
govern the population as a whole. Individual members of Parliament may
introduce private bills to address specific or local concerns, such as the railways
or local authorities. Ministers of departments initiate most of the public
bills relating to their department; these kinds of public bills are called
government bills. When a bill is passed into law, it then receives the royal
assent. Much of the Cabinet’s work on legislation is accomplished in
specialized committees, which debate and publish reports that help shape
legislation.
Bills may be introduced into either the House of
Commons or the House of Lords, except for financial bills, which may be introduced
only in the House of Commons. Each bill is given three separate readings in
each house. In the first reading, the bill is presented without debate. After
the bill is read a second time, the house debates the bill’s general
principles. The bill then goes to a committee for thorough study, discussion,
and amendment. At the third reading, the bill is presented to the house in its
final form and a vote is taken.
If the bill is passed on the third reading, it
is sent to the other house, where it goes through the same procedure. If passed
by the second house, the bill is sent to the monarch for the ceremonial
formality of royal assent before becoming law. If amended by either house, the
amendments must be resolved by both houses before the bill is sent to the
monarch. The House of Lords can delay legislation for no more than one year (30
days for financial bills). A bill originating in the House of Lords can be
tabled and not considered in the Commons, but a bill originating in the Commons
will become law, even without the approval of the House of Lords, if it passes
Commons again in the following year’s session.
F
|
The Judiciary
|
Britain has a long judicial history. Its legal
system has been emulated throughout the world and many of its key principles
and rights are part of U.S. law. The principles derived from British law
include the right to trial by jury; the right to due process of law; freedom
from unlawful imprisonment, called the writ of habeas corpus; the trial system
of prosecution and defense; and the presumption that a person is innocent until
proven guilty.
The judicial system has its roots in the
Anglo-Saxon period, when the monarch established local courts to provide
justice for all subjects. Monarchs delegated the power to hear cases to royal
justices, who presided over courts in the monarch’s name. The British legal
system relies on common law, which is based on custom and on decisions in
previous legal cases, called precedents. Common law originated in the 12th
century, growing out of the rules and traditions that ordinary people had
worked out over time. Through the centuries common law evolved as it
incorporated legal decisions made in specific cases, and it remains the basis
of British law except when superseded by legislation. Unlike the United States,
Britain does not have a Supreme Court that reviews legislation to determine its
constitutionality; that responsibility falls to Parliament.
Those who practice law in Britain are divided into
solicitors and barristers. Solicitors perform the everyday work of the law,
particularly legal matters that can be handled solely with paperwork.
Barristers plead cases in court. In Scotland barristers are called advocates.
Solicitors engage barristers when they believe a client needs to go to court.
Eminent barristers and, since 1996, some solicitors, may become Queen’s
Counselors, or QCs. When they do it is said that they “take silk,’ because they
switch from wearing cotton gowns to silk gowns in court. Barristers with long
and distinguished careers may be chosen to become crown judges by the lord
chancellor, the head of the judicial system in England and Wales. Scotland and
Northern Ireland have their own legal systems.
Britain has several layers of courts and two kinds
of legal proceedings, criminal and civil. Criminal law is concerned with acts
punishable by the state, such as murder. Civil law involves disputes between
private parties, either individuals, organizations, or companies. The final
court of appeal for both civil and criminal cases is the House of Lords, where
appeals are heard by the law lords.
Criminal cases are handled in one of two ways.
Petty offenses, such as simple theft or vandalism, are brought before a local
magistrate, or justice of the peace (JP). These unpaid magistrates are
appointed by the lord chancellor. They are members of the community who are
assisted by legal experts. The vast majority of criminal cases in Britain are
minor enough to be handled by JPs. More serious criminal offenses, such as
murder, rape, and robbery, are sent to a Crown Court, where they are tried
before a High Court or a circuit judge and a jury of local citizens. The Crown
Court also hears appeals from the magistrate’s court. Convictions and sentences
from the Crown Court may be taken to the Court of Appeals for the Criminal
Division. The final court of appeals is the House of Lords.
Civil cases are heard in county courts before a
single judge. County courts hear cases dealing with families, property,
contracts, and torts (violations of a legal duty imposed by the state that
cause injury to an individual). Above the county courts is the High Court,
which hears more complicated civil cases. High Court cases are sent to one of
three divisions: the Family Division, which handles complex divorce cases,
adoptions, and matters relating to children; the Chancery Division, which
handles business matters and estate cases; or the Queen’s Bench Division, which
handles property matters and torts, as well as maritime and commercial cases.
Appeals are heard by the Court of Appeals for the Civil Division, and
ultimately by the House of Lords.
A more informal and less expensive alternative
to civil and criminal courts is a tribunal, which handles minor cases outside
of the official court system. Tribunals are made up of lay people and are
regulated by the law. They settle disputes between private citizens, grievances
between employers and employees, and complaints between citizens and public
authorities.
G
|
Local Government
|
There is no constitutional division of powers
between the central government and local government in Britain as there is in
the United States between the federal government and state and local government
bodies. Local governments can be either councils or authorities at the county,
borough, or district level. Local councils are controlled by laws and policies
established by the central government, particularly concerning budgets and
spending. Councils at the local level in Britain are responsible for police and
fire services, roads, traffic, housing, building regulations, libraries,
environmental issues, and schools paid for by direct grants from central
authorities.
G1
|
Local Government Prior to 1996
|
Reforms were made to the structure of local
government throughout the United Kingdom during the 1970s. In 1973 Northern
Ireland was divided into 26 districts, each with its own council. This is a
single-tier system, meaning that the districts are the only layer of local
government. The systems in England, Wales, and Scotland were made two-tier. In
1974 England and Wales were divided into counties, which were further
subdivided into districts. Each county and district had its own council, with
separate areas of responsibility. Six counties in England were designated
metropolitan counties, and they have only district councils. In 1975 mainland
Scotland’s counties were replaced with regions, which were subdivided into
districts. Three all-purpose unitary island authorities were created for the Orkneys,
Shetlands, and the Western Isles.
Northern Ireland had its own parliament, the
Stormont, between 1921 and 1972. During this time it also sent representatives
to Parliament in London. Civil violence erupted in the late 1960s and early
1970s in Northern Ireland when Catholics protested against the domination of
the Protestant-controlled Stormont and inequality in treatment. The mounting
violence eventually forced the British government to send in troops and to take
control of the Northern Irish government, disbanding the Stormont.
In addition to local authorities or councils,
Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland each had a Cabinet minister, a secretary
of state who was responsible for budget and policy matters in areas such as
education, public and health services, the environment, and industries. The
Scottish minister worked through the Scottish Office, the Welsh minister
through the Welsh Office, and the Northern Irish minister through the Northern
Ireland Office.
Until recently, London did not have its own government
or mayor. It was divided into 32 boroughs, which had their own councils. In
addition to the boroughs, there was the City of London, a one-square-mile area
of the old part of London containing Saint Paul’s Cathedral and many modern
businesses. (The term city in Britain is applied only to those places
that have a cathedral.) The City’s government, the Corporation of the City of
London, was a separate entity from London’s 32 boroughs. It had its own council
and mayor, who held the title lord mayor of London.
In 1984 the Conservative government established
strict controls over local government in an effort to curtail local government
spending. It also attempted to change the method of taxation in 1990, but was
unsuccessful. To help with the cost of local government the Conservative
government replaced the property tax with an annual community charge tax. This
community charge tax was soon dubbed the poll tax because it set a fixed amount
to be paid per person rather than taxing people according to their income
level. Opposition to the tax was so strong it led to rioting in London. The
community charge tax was repealed in 1992 and replaced with a council tax based
on property value, with discounts for certain properties and low-income levels.
G2
|
Recent Changes in Local Government
|
Local government was greatly reorganized in 1996 in
Scotland and Wales. The two-tier structure of local government was replaced
with unitary authorities, in the belief that most places would be better served
by one layer of government rather than two. Scotland was divided into 29
authorities (in addition to the three island authorities) and Wales into 22
authorities, each with its own council. Gradually some nonmetropolitan counties
in England, especially those with large populations, were divided into unitary
authorities as well, although most counties retained two-tier authorities. In
May 1998 the citizens of London voted to create a Greater London Authority
(GLA). Established in 2000, the GLA includes a mayor elected to a four-year
term and a 25-member elected assembly. In the past, the City of London had a
lord mayor with only ceremonial power who was appointed by the government. The
new London mayor has considerable power to govern the entire London
metropolitan area, including the old City of London, and holds similar
responsibilities to American mayors. Changes in local government have been
controversial. Those opposed to reforms assert that changes are costly to
implement and reflect the bias of the party in control of the government.
Government in Scotland and Wales changed again in 1997,
when both regions voted to create their own legislatures to handle local
matters—a parliament in Scotland and an assembly in Wales. The step taken by
the British government is called devolution, a process by which the powers of
the central government over local affairs devolve, or are passed down, to the
Scottish and Welsh people through their own democratically elected local
legislatures. The secretaries of state for Scotland and Wales remain as Cabinet
posts but only represent each region’s interests within the British government.
Their former responsibilities were taken over by the new elected parliament or
assembly, which determines the shape of the local governments. Each region
continues to elect members to the House of Commons, and the Parliament in
London continues to preside over the entire United Kingdom in such matters as
national defense and security, overall economic policy, employment legislation,
and social security.
In 1998 an accord was signed between Catholic
and Protestant factions in Northern Ireland to create a semiautonomous
government for the province. The Good Friday Agreement, as it was called,
established a 108-seat Northern Ireland Assembly, headed by an executive
council, that would have power over a wide range of local issues. After long
delays and several false starts, the British government transferred power to
the new government in mid-2000.
H
|
Political Parties
|
British political parties date from the 17th century,
when the Whig and the Tory parties appeared during the time of the Revolution
of 1688 (see Glorious Revolution). Whigs believed in a strong Parliament
and came from the landed classes who were allied with the merchants and
Nonconformist or non-Anglican Protestants. Tory supporters came from the landed
aristocracy and were defenders of the king and the Church of England. In the
1800s the Whigs merged with other parties interested in social reform to form the
Liberal Party. The Tories took on the additional name of the Conservative Party
in the 1830s in order to appeal to a broader electorate, and both names are
used interchangeably. The Conservative Party is still a major party in the
United Kingdom, but the Labour Party, founded around the turn of the 20th
century, grew to become the primary opposition to the Conservatives, taking the
place of the Liberals. The Liberal Party evolved into the Liberal Democrat
Party, the third most popular party in Britain.
Since its founding days, the Labour Party has drawn
traditional financial and electoral support from the trade unions. The Labour
Party has a socialist element, supporting state control of important industries
and a more equal distribution of wealth. After World War II (1939-1945), the
Labour government nationalized a number of industries and established the
welfare state, which provided people with social security, unemployment
insurance, and the National Health Service. Subsequent Conservative governments
denationalized industries but kept the National Health Service and the main
provisions of the welfare state. In recent years, trade union membership has
declined, as has union influence in the Labour Party. At the same time, the
Labour Party has moved toward the political center; in 1995 it gave up its
commitment to socialism and the nationalization of industries. The Labour Party
won the May 1997 general elections by a landslide, taking 418 of the 659 seats
in Parliament. Labor retained its majority-party status following the 2001 and
2005 general elections.
The Conservative Party favors private enterprise and
minimal state regulation, and accepts the mixed economy, which involves private
ownership of businesses with some government control. Although a mixed economy
entails more public spending than conservatives in the United States would
support, the British business community is a strong supporter of the
Conservative Party because it has historically supported private enterprise and
a free market. In the 1980s the Conservative government under Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher sought to increase private enterprise and reduce public
legislation by introducing more competition into the National Health Service
and by selling off public housing. Thatcher’s domestic policies were highly
controversial and eventually led to the downfall of the Conservative government
in the mid-1990s. Subsequently, the Conservative Party became the largest
opposition party in Parliament, as the Labour Party won three straight victories
(in 1997, 2001, and 2005).
The most important of Britain’s minor parties is
the Liberal Democrat Party, formed in 1988 from the remnants of the Liberal
Party and a majority of the Social Democratic Party. The Liberal Democrats make
up the third largest party in Parliament, after Labor and the Conservatives.
Other parties include the Scottish Nationalist Party; Plaid Cymru, the Welsh
nationalist party that seeks self-government for Wales; and parties in Northern
Ireland—Sinn Fein, the Ulster Unionist Party, the Democratic Unionist Party,
and the Social Democratic and Labour Party.
The current voting system is called “first past the
post.” This means that the party and candidates receiving the most votes win
the election and become the party in power even if they do not receive more
than 50 percent of the vote. Under this system, smaller parties have
proportionally less representation in Parliament than their share of the
popular vote, as their candidates often do not garner enough votes in
constituencies to send members to Parliament. As a result, some people support
a system of proportional representation, which is used in a number of European
countries. In such a system, which can take various forms, the number of seats
a party receives in the legislature is proportional to the number of votes the
party receives in the election. Critics of proportional representation assert
that it produces too many political parties and leads to weak governments. A
commission was set up in 1997 to review voting reform and consider switching to
proportional representation.
I
|
Defense
|
A century ago Britain was the most formidable
military power in the world, particularly at sea, facing the task of defending
its vast empire. Today Britain is no longer a superpower and its defense
establishment has been considerably reduced, particularly since the end of the
Cold War. Nevertheless, Britain is one of a number of nations in the world to
officially possess nuclear weapons. Its army, navy, and air force, while
smaller in numbers than in prior decades, are highly trained. They are
responsible for protecting Britain and its dependent territories, as well as
providing additional support for the respective civil authorities.
The prime minister is responsible for defense
policy, and he or she works with the full cabinet, secretary of state for
defence, and the Cabinet’s Defence and Overseas Policy Committee. The British
equivalent of the American Joint Chiefs of Staff is the Defence Council, which
is chaired by the secretary of state for defence and has seats for the army,
navy, and air force plus other important government leaders. It exercises
powers of command and administrative control.
Britain also contributes to United Nations operations
and has deployed troops to Bosnia, Cyprus, Kuwait, and Angola. British military
instructors are active in many countries, and thousands of military students
from around the world attend military training courses in Britain. Britain
maintains overseas garrisons in Germany, Brunei, Gibraltar, Cyprus, and the
Falkland Islands, as well as a training group in Belize. British troops were
deployed to Northern Ireland in 1969 to support the local police, the Royal
Ulster Constabulary (now the Police Service of Northern Ireland), in
maintaining law and order. Britain also engaged in armed conflicts in the
Falklands War in 1982, the Persian Gulf War in 1991, and the U.S.-Iraq War that
began in 2003.
I1
|
The Royal Navy
|
The Royal Navy has played an important part in
British history. The first king to order a fleet built was Alfred the Great,
who in the 9th century used ships to defend against the Danes. In the 15th
century Henry VII built the first naval dockyard in Britain as England began
exploring regions overseas. Britain went on to become the world’s strongest
naval power, holding this position until the 20th century when the United
States surpassed it. Today, Royal Navy ships are present at all times in
British waters to assist merchant ships. British ships contribute to NATO’s
standing naval forces in the Atlantic, the English Channel, the Persian Gulf,
and the Mediterranean. The navy also has a fleet of nuclear-powered submarines.
The Royal Navy is governed by the Admiralty Board under the secretary of state
for defence and includes an infantry arm, known as the Royal Marines, as well
as a Royal Navy Reserve and a Royal Marines Reserve.
I2
|
The British Army
|
The first permanent standing British army was
established in the 17th century. Today the army consists of infantry, or foot
soldiers; cavalry, initially soldiers on horses, now soldiers in tanks and
armored vehicles; and the Army Air Corps, which operates helicopters and other
aircraft. The army also includes a force of some 4,000 Gurkhas, professional
soldiers from the country of Nepal in Asia. The Gurkha regiment dates from the
early 19th century. The army’s support arms include the Royal Artillery; the
Royal Engineers; the Royal Signals, which handle communications; and the Royal
Intelligence Corps. The Territorial Army, also known as the militia or
volunteer force, is a general reserve force. The British Army is the key land
component in NATO’s rapid reaction forces. The army is controlled by the
Defence Council through an Army Board composed of both civilian and military
members.
I3
|
The Royal Air Force
|
The Royal Air Force (RAF) began as the Royal
Flying Corps in 1912 and became the RAF in 1918 when it joined with the Royal
Naval Air Service. It gained immense popularity after its victory over the
German air force in the Battle of Britain during the summer of 1940. This
battle halted the German invasion of Britain. The RAF became an important part
of the Allied war effort in World War II. Today the RAF has more than 40
squadrons and contributes approximately 100 fixed-wing aircraft and 40
helicopters to NATO’s rapid reaction forces. It is under the Ministry of
Defence and administered by an Air Force Board headed by the secretary of state
for defence.
J
|
United Kingdom Membership in International Organizations
|
The United Kingdom is one of the founding members
of the United Nations (UN) and occupies one of the five permanent seats on the
United Nations Security Council, the most powerful body in the UN. It is an
important contributor to UN peacekeeping operations. Britain also plays an
important part in the European Union (EU), an organization dedicated to
economic cooperation among European nations. Britain’s defense policy rests on
membership in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), along with the
United States and other member states. As a member of the Western European
Union (WEU), the United Kingdom is part of a forum that consults and cooperates
on defense issues concerning European NATO members. Britain also belongs to the
Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), whose 55 member
nations work to foster and protect human rights. Britain is an original member
of the Council of Europe, whose 40 parliamentary democracies work together on
human rights and social and cultural issues.
Perhaps the most historically significant
international organization the United Kingdom belongs to is the Commonwealth,
which evolved out of the former British Empire. It consists of 54 members
worldwide that have a historical connection to Britain. The British monarch is
recognized as the nominal head of the Commonwealth. It brings together leaders
and groups from developed and less-developed areas of the world to support each
other economically, politically, and socially, thereby linking widely differing
cultures.
Britain belongs to many other international bodies.
One of the most important is the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The IMF
oversees the international financial system and assists member nations that are
experiencing financial difficulties. Britain also joined with other industrialized
countries to form the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD), which promotes collaboration on economic issues, gathers statistical
information, and offers advice to less-developed countries.
VII
|
HISTORY OF THE UNITED KINGDOM
|
Beginning in the 16th century, the British Isles
underwent a series of political changes that eventually led to the
establishment of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland in 1801. The
creation of the United Kingdom brought England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales
(the four cultural regions of Britain) under the rule of a central government
headed by a common monarch and administered by a single parliament. When
Ireland (with the exception of its six northern counties) achieved independence
in 1922, the kingdom was renamed the United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Northern Ireland.
England and Wales were the first regions to
function under a single government. During the 13th century, England
established control over Wales after several centuries of intermittent warfare.
The two nations officially merged in 1536 and were known collectively as
England.
Scotland and England moved toward union after the
Scottish monarchs inherited the throne of England in 1603. Although a common
ruler united these two countries, Scotland and England remained separate
nations with separate governments. In 1707 the Scottish and English parliaments
passed an Act of Union, which merged the formerly independent nations into the
Kingdom of Great Britain.
The English established control over Ireland beginning
in the 12th century, when English colonists invaded the island. They gradually
established English domination over the entire island. Ireland remained a
separate country under the rule of the English and British monarchs until the
British Parliament passed the Act of Union of 1800. This act created the United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
However, opposition to the United Kingdom remained
strong among Ireland’s predominantly Roman Catholic population. Many Irish
citizens resented the long history of domination by Britain’s Protestant
majority. In 1922 Ireland achieved its independence, although its six northern
counties, where Protestants are in the majority, remained a part of the United
Kingdom.
For a history of the nations of Britain
prior to 1707, see Scotland; Britain, Ancient; England; and Wales. For a
history of Ireland prior to 1800, see Ireland.
A
|
England and Scotland in the 17th Century
|
A union of England and Scotland seemed
unlikely at the beginning of the 17th century. The two nations had been
periodically at war with each other for almost 700 years as a result of
disputes over control of border regions and occasional attempts by the English
to expand northward into Scotland. In order to protect its independence,
Scotland maintained a traditional alliance with France, England’s primary enemy
on the European continent. When Elizabeth I of England died childless in 1603,
James VI of Scotland, a member of the royal house of Stuart and a relative of
Elizabeth, inherited the English throne. In addition to ruling as James VI of
Scotland, he then became James I of England.
A1
|
Regional Differences
|
James held royal authority in two kingdoms that
were very different. Scotland was sparsely populated, and its land was largely
barren and infertile. Rocky soil, a cold and wet climate, and insufficient
irrigation prevented agriculture from thriving. A long tradition of
self-sufficient farms and estates discouraged trade and limited the growth of
industry. Scotland was divided into two distinct regions, the Highlands and
Lowlands. By far the largest concentration of population in Scotland was in the
southern Lowlands around the two principal cities: Glasgow and the capital
city, Edinburgh. The Lowlands were fully integrated into royal government; the
king ruled with little opposition. Scotland’s Parliament met rarely and dealt
with limited issues. In the Highlands, however, the royal government had little
direct influence. Clans—social groups based on extended family ties—still
dominated the region.
In contrast, England at the beginning of the 17th
century was a dynamic society, growing rapidly in population and wealth.
England’s south and east had fertile agricultural land. In the north and west,
estates carried out sheep herding on a large scale. A thriving export trade
existed in wool, grain, and other products. England’s capital city, London, was
one of the largest cities in the world.
The Tudor monarchs, who ruled England from 1485 to
1603, had effectively centralized English government by the early 17th century.
The nobility—the once powerful class of landowning aristocrats—no longer formed
a powerful independent political force, but instead served the crown and became
dependent on royal support. The gentry—landowners with country estates—formed
the core of royal government in the countryside, enforcing the law as sheriffs
or serving as justices in the local courts.
Although the Tudors centralized administration,
they failed to implement a financial system to pay for the escalating costs of
government. Rents on royal lands, supplemented by limited taxes on imports and
on the church, barely financed government administration. During wars or times
of emergency, the monarchy had to request funds from Parliament, which alone
had the right to approve additional taxes and to pass new laws.
A2
|
Religious Differences
|
Religious issues also separated the two nations. Both
the Church of Scotland and the Church of England were Protestant churches.
However, in England the monarch reigned as head of a compliant, centralized
church. Henry VIII had established the Church of England in 1534 with the
monarch as its supreme head. His successors maintained tight royal control over
church affairs and held the final say in matters of religion.
James had less control over Scotland’s church.
Protestantism had made major gains among the people, and a Presbyterian system,
built upon independent local church organizations, formed without royal
approval. In 1560 the Scottish Parliament accepted the Presbyterian form of
Protestantism as the official religion. James appointed bishops to establish
his authority over the church, but the Presbyterian system remained intact on
the local level and continued to decide many religious matters independently of
the king and the bishops.
A3
|
Resistance to Union
|
When James inherited the English throne in 1603, he
assumed that he would unite the two countries, but his efforts at union were
blocked on both sides of the border. James was unable to overcome the hostility
and prejudice that the citizens of both countries felt toward each other after
centuries of war. The Scots were fearful of losing their independence. The
English, already jealous of James’s Scottish advisers, saw no advantage in
merging with a poor, less-developed nation. Unable to form a union, James did
everything he could to establish closer connections between the two kingdoms.
He elevated Scottish lords to English titles, provided them with English
estates, and arranged marriages between English and Scottish noble families.
James’s son Charles I made no attempt to unite his
kingdoms, although he did try to create greater uniformity between the Scottish
and English churches that he headed. His attempts at church reform in Scotland
led to a rebellion against him in 1639. Charles convened Parliament and
requested new taxes to pay for an army to suppress the Scottish rebellion.
However, Charles had attempted to govern without Parliament in the past, and
Parliament refused to raise revenues until Charles addressed a series of
grievances raised by its members.
The conflict between Charles and Parliament
escalated into a civil war in which Scots and English fought side by side both
for and against the king (see English Revolution). Parliamentary forces
defeated Charles and executed him in 1649. They established a revolutionary
government to rule over the king’s former domains. Oliver Cromwell, the leader
of the Parliamentary army, eventually assumed total political control and
brought about a brief political union between England and Scotland. Under this
arrangement, the Scots sent representatives to the English Parliament.
Cromwell also established complete British control over
Ireland. The English presence in Ireland began in the 12th century, when
English invaders landed on the eastern coast and gradually moved westward.
English feudal lords gained control of vast areas of the Irish countryside.
Over time many of these English lords adopted Irish customs and manners.
Although these lords technically owed allegiance to the English monarch, their
distance from England and their isolation in country estates made them
practically independent.
In the late 16th century a group of Irish
lords, predominantly based in the northern province of Ulster, rebelled against
England. The English defeated the Irish forces in 1601 and seized lands in
Ulster that belonged to the rebels. With these lands, the English established a
plantation, or colony, of English and Scottish Protestants. The present
majority of Protestants in Northern Ireland stems from this settlement.
In 1641 the Irish Catholics rose up against
the Protestants. The local population took vengeance on the settlers who had
seized their lands, killing thousands. The rebels were unable to capture the
city of Dublin, a royal stronghold and the center of English administration on
the island. A stalemate ensued. In 1649 Cromwell brought an army to Ireland to
assist the Protestants. Cromwell’s highly trained army easily defeated the
Catholics, often with brutal savagery. Within a year all major opposition had
been eliminated. Cromwell seized all estates owned by Catholics and gave the
land to Protestants.
Following Cromwell’s death in 1658, Charles’s son
returned to England from exile in 1660 and took the throne as Charles II. He
reestablished separate governments in Scotland and England. In the 1670s there
were occasional outbreaks of violence against the king’s rule in Scotland, but
they were brutally suppressed. In 1685 a prominent Scottish noblemen, Archibald
Campbell, 9th earl of Argyll, led a rebellion against the newly crowned James
II of England. It, too, was violently crushed.
James II did not serve long as king. English
Protestants became suspicious that the king, who was Catholic, might impose his
religion on the nation. This suspicion increased in 1687 when James removed
legal restrictions placed on Roman Catholics and on Protestants who did not
belong to the Church of England. In 1688 the birth of the king’s son, James
Francis Edward Stuart, created the potential of a Catholic heir to the throne.
A4
|
Revolution of 1688
|
Shortly thereafter, Protestant political leaders
launched a revolt against James II. The Revolution of 1688 deposed James in
favor of his nephew, William of Orange. William was a Dutch Protestant noble
who had married James’s daughter Mary. An act of Parliament made Mary II and
William III joint monarchs in 1689.
The revolution deeply divided the Scots. As the head of
Scotland’s royal family, James II continued to attract loyalty, especially in
the Highlands. The most powerful Scottish politicians and aristocrats were
willing to accept William III only if he gave Scotland greater freedom to
govern itself. William granted the Scots a nearly independent Parliament and
pledged not to interfere in the Scottish church. William later made several
overtures for a political union, offering the Scots the benefits of free trade
with England, participation in the emerging English Empire, and guarantees to
preserve Scotland’s legal, religious, and political institutions. The Scots
rejected these proposals.
B
|
The Act of Union
|
A crisis concerning the succession to the throne
brought more immediacy to the unification issue. William and Mary were
childless, as was Mary’s sister, Anne, who succeeded to the throne in 1702. To
assure a smooth transition of power to a Protestant monarch, in 1701 the
English Parliament passed the Act of Settlement, which stated that a German
branch of the royal family, the Hanovers, would succeed Anne as the monarchs of
England. The Scottish Parliament refused to ratify the act, creating the
potential that the two kingdoms would split after more than 100 years under the
same monarchs.
The English feared that an independent Scotland
might ally itself with France and provide a backdoor for a French invasion of
England. The English fear of an invasion was especially strong at the beginning
of the 18th century. At this time, England led a coalition of nations that were
struggling to prevent Louis XIV of France from gaining mastery over Europe.
After 1701 the stakes increased as Louis attempted to establish his grandson on
the throne of Spain. The ensuing War of the Spanish Succession (1701-1714)
engulfed most of western Europe as England, Netherlands, Denmark, Austria, and
later Portugal formed an alliance against France and Spain.
To avoid facing an enemy on the northern
border, Anne’s ministers threatened the Scottish Parliament. They warned
Scotland that they would treat all Scots as aliens in England, stop all trade
between the nations, and capture or sink Scottish ships that traded with
France. These threats led the Scots to accept the union with England.
In 1707 Great Britain was born. Fear had led the
politicians of both nations to a union that would prove durable for hundreds of
years. The Act of Union of 1707 created a single national administration,
removed trade barriers between the countries, standardized taxation throughout
the island, and created a single Parliament. However, England and Scotland
continued to have separate traditions of law and separate official churches.
C
|
Developments in Ireland
|
Catholics had gained hope of a return to power in
Ireland during the reign of James II, who appointed Catholics to positions of
authority in the royal administration and the military hierarchy of the island.
Following the Revolution of 1688, James II fled to Ireland, where he raised an
army of Catholic supporters. William III defeated the Catholics and once again
imposed the firm rule of Protestant nobles. Although Ireland had its own
Parliament, which was composed of Protestant landowners, the real power lay
with royal officials, who administered the island based on orders from London.
The Protestant rulers of Ireland instituted a series of highly restrictive laws
that excluded Catholics from owning land or firearms, from practicing certain
professions, and from holding public office. These discriminatory laws united
Ireland’s Catholic population in opposition to Protestant rule.
D
|
Rise of Great Britain
|
Great Britain emerged from the War of the Spanish
Succession (1701-1714) as one of the world’s great military powers.
Traditionally a naval power, Britain had built a modern, professional army
during the reign of William III. This army, under the brilliant military
leadership of John Churchill, 1st duke of Marlborough, led the anti-French
alliance to decisive victories. On the seas, the British navy captured the
island of Minorca in the Mediterranean and the strategic fortress of Gibraltar,
which guards the entrance to the Mediterranean, on the southern coast of Spain.
These victories gave Britain control over the Mediterranean.
In 1713 and 1714 a series of treaties
known as the Peace of Utrecht brought the war to a formal conclusion. As a
result of the war, Britain gained Gibraltar and important trade concessions
from Spain, including a monopoly on the slave trade to the Spanish colonies.
From the French they won the colonies of Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, and Hudson
Bay.
E
|
18th-Century Britain
|
E1
|
18th-Century British Society
|
British society was stratified in the 18th century,
with a tiny aristocracy and landed gentry at the top and a vast mass of poor at
the bottom. For the aristocracy, the 18th century was its greatest age. British
lords who controlled large estates saw their wealth increase from a boom in
agricultural production, an expansion of investment opportunities, and the
domination of the government by the aristocracy. They built vast palaces and
developed new areas of London, Edinburgh, and Dublin. The monarchy almost
exclusively appointed aristocrats to the most important political offices.
In contrast to the aristocracy, the gentry
lost much of the political and financial influence it had wielded since the
days of the Tudor monarchs. Many holders of small estates found that land was
no longer the secure source of wealth it had once been, especially with the
high taxes imposed on landowners to finance Britain’s wars. The immense estates
of Britain’s aristocratic class provided their owners with a constant flow of
funds, while higher taxes often consumed the profits generated by the smaller
estates of the gentry. Although the gentry’s status in the local community was
secure, merchants who traded luxury commodities overseas soon eclipsed the
gentry in wealth and influence on the national level during the 18th century.
Society in the 18th century was becoming more
fluid than in the past, in part because of the growth of the middle classes in
towns and cities. Middle-class families earned their livings in trade or in
professions, such as law and medicine. They valued literacy, thrift, and
education, ideas that were spread by thinkers of the Age of Enlightenment.
Especially influential were philosophers John Locke and David Hume and
economist Adam Smith. Locke and Hume stressed the importance of the senses and
the environment in shaping the individual. Locke also described the human mind
as a blank slate that was to be filled by education and experience. Smith, in
his book The Wealth of Nations (1776), demonstrated how the efficient
organization of economic activity created wealth.
Increased literacy and education spread throughout the
country. In towns, the middle classes established lending libraries to
distribute books, clubs to discuss ideas, and coffeehouses to debate politics.
Newspapers became the most popular form of media, and more than 50 towns
produced their own newspapers by the end of the century. So much written
material was being produced that writer Samuel Johnson thought it necessary to
attempt to codify the language by publishing his Dictionary of the English
Language (1755). Women shared in the upsurge in literacy. Dozens of weekly
magazines and installment romance stories, which contained a strong moral
message encouraging chastity and sobriety, were directed at women.
The newest form of literature was the novel. Pamela;
or Virtue Rewarded (1740) by Samuel Richardson was one of the first works
of this genre. The writings of novelist Jane Austen were popular toward the end
of the century. The rise of the middle class was also seen in the most
important religious movement of the era, Methodism. Founded by theologian John
Wesley, Methodism encouraged the population at large to believe personal
salvation could be achieved without relying on the formal rituals of the Church
of England. Wesley directed his energies to laborers and the poor, but his
message was derived from the attitudes of the middle class.
Poverty dominated the lower reaches of British society,
especially as the population grew and food prices rose in the middle of the
century. Towns swarmed with homeless families, the sick, and individuals with
disabilities. The government and charitable organizations established
orphanages and hospitals, as well as workhouses where the unemployed could find
temporary work. While women and children were left to live in poverty, the
government forced able-bodied men into military service by the thousands.
London experienced the worst of this situation. Poor migrants flooded the city
seeking work or charity; most found an early death instead.
Paradoxically, improvements in sanitation, medicine, and food
production allowed many poor people to live longer lives, increasing the
population of poor and adding to the problems. The epidemics of plague and
smallpox, which had routinely killed a third of the people in towns during
earlier centuries, were now a thing of the past. The production of cheap
alcoholic beverages, such as gin and rum, eased some of the pain of the poor,
but increased alcohol consumption also raised the level of violence and crime.
Crime was so common in 18th-century Britain
that Parliament made more than 200 offenses punishable by death. Executions
were weekly spectacles. To deal with excess prison populations, the British
government deported many inmates to British overseas colonies. The government
sent tens of thousands of convicts to the Americas as indentured servants and
established the colony of Australia as a prison colony at the end of the
century.
E2
|
18th-Century British Politics
|
Following the union with Scotland, the British
government functioned according to an unwritten constitution put in place after
the Revolution of 1688. This agreement between the monarchs and Parliament
provided for the succession of Anne’s German Protestant cousin, George of
Hanover, and his heirs. It excluded from the throne the Catholic descendants of
James II who now lived in France and who periodically attempted to regain the
throne. Their supporters were known as Jacobites, and they rose in an unsuccessful
rebellion in 1715. The Church of England remained the official religious
establishment, but most Protestants who belonged to other churches enjoyed
toleration.
The revolution also resolved the struggle for power
between the monarch and Parliament, which had been an ongoing issue under the
Stuarts. Parliament emerged as the leading force in government. The Hanoverians
ruled as constitutional monarchs, limited by the laws of the land. During the
18th century, British monarchs ruled indirectly through appointed ministers who
gathered and managed supporters in Parliament. Landowners eligible to vote
elected a new House of Commons every seven years, although membership into the
upper house of Parliament, the House of Lords, remained limited to hereditary and
appointed lords and high church clergy. Parliament passed laws, controlled
foreign policy, and approved the taxes that allowed the monarch to pay the
salaries of officials, the military, and the royal family.
The Hanoverian monarchs associated the Whig Party with
the revolution that brought them to power and suspected the Tory Party of
Jacobitism. As a result, the Whigs dominated the governments of George I
(1714-1727) and his son, George II (1727-1760). Neither king was a forceful
monarch. George I spoke no English and was more interested in German politics
that he was in British politics. George II was preoccupied with family
problems, particularly by an ongoing personal feud with his son. Although they
both were concerned with European military affairs (George II was the last
British monarch to appear on a battlefield), they left British government in
the hands of their ministers, the most important of whom was Sir Robert
Walpole.
Walpole led British government for almost 20 years.
He spent most of his life in government, first as a member of Parliament, then
in increasingly important offices, and finally as prime minister. Walpole had
skillful political influence over a wide range of domestic and foreign policy
matters. He was chiefly interested in domestic affairs and was able to improve
royal finances and the national economy. He reduced the national debt and
lowered the land tax, which had slowed investment in agriculture. He secured
passage of a Molasses Act in 1733 to force British colonists to buy molasses
from British planters and ensure British control of the lucrative sugar trade.
Walpole kept Britain out of war during most of his administration. A growing
sentiment in Parliament for British involvement in European conflicts forced
Walpole to resign in 1742.
Walpole so firmly established the Whigs that the
two-party system all but disappeared from British politics for half a century.
He created a patronage system, which he used to reward his supporters with
positions in an expanding and increasingly wealthy government. Opposition to
patronage eventually grew within the Whig Party among those who believed that
ministers had acquired too much power and that politics had grown corrupt.
In 1745 a Jacobite rebellion posed a serious
threat to Whig rule. Led by Charles Edward Stuart, the grandson of James II,
the rebellion broke out in Scotland. The rebels captured Edinburgh and
successfully invaded the north of England. The rebellion crumbled after William
Augustus, who was the duke of Cumberland and a son of George II, defeated the
Jacobites at Culloden Moor in Scotland in 1746.
F
|
British Colonial Expansion
|
F1
|
The First British Empire
|
Britain already controlled many overseas areas by the
18th century. For more than 100 years English explorers had ventured east and
west in search of raw materials, luxury goods, and trading partners. The
eastern coast of Canada gave the British access to rich fishing grounds, New
England provided timber for the Royal Navy, the southern American colonies
exported tobacco, and the West Indies produced sugar and molasses. From Asia
came coffee, tea, spices, and richly colored cotton cloth. Enslaved people from
western Africa were sent to work on plantations in the Americas and the
Caribbean.
The first British Empire sprang from the
enterprises of individuals and government-sponsored trading companies. They
risked money, ships, and lives to establish England’s presence around the
world. The British government created royal monopolies—private companies to
whom the monarch granted exclusive rights to trade in a particular region or
field of commerce. For example, the East India Company had a monopoly to trade
in the east, the Royal African Company to enter the slave trade, and the
Hudson’s Bay Company to exploit the fisheries of Nova Scotia and Newfoundland.
The lands that these companies claimed became possessions of the crown, and
investors bought shares in successful companies on the London Stock Exchange.
In the early 18th century optimism ran so high
that speculation in one royal monopoly created one of the great financial
panics in British history. The government awarded the South Seas Company a
monopoly on trade with South America and the Pacific Islands. Investor interest
drove the price of the company’s stock higher and higher until it reached ten
times its actual value. When some of the company’s directors sold their stock,
other investors panicked, and the price of the stock plummeted. Thousands of
stockholders met with financial ruin when what came to be known as the South
Sea Bubble collapsed in 1720.
The most important of Britain’s imperial
possessions, however, were not trading posts but settled colonies in the
Americas. In Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Rhode Island, settlers
established communities for religious reasons; in Virginia and Barbados,
farmers, tradespeople, and merchants were in search of economic opportunity. As
a result of successful wars with Netherlands and Spain, England acquired New
York and Jamaica, both thriving settlements. Prosperous cities sprang up along
the eastern seaboard of North America in imitation of the towns of Britain.
England’s colonies grew rapidly. The tens of thousands of settlers in the mainland
North American colonies in 1650 grew to 1.2 million inhabitants by 1750.
The Navigation Act of 1651 regulated trade between
England and its colonial outposts. The act followed an economic philosophy
known as mercantilism. Under this system, governments regulated economic
activities by increasing exports and limiting foreign imports in an effort to
generate wealth. According to the theory of mercantilism, the value of colonies
lay in their natural resources, which could be transported to Britain and converted
into exportable products. The Navigation Act benefited British merchants by
restricting the types of products produced in the colonies, mandating that only
British ships transport products to and from the colonies, and prohibiting
direct trade between the colonies and other nations. Mercantile policies made
Britain the greatest center of trade in the world.
F2
|
Imperial Wars
|
As a consequence of its military exploits
under William III and John Churchill, the duke of Marlborough, Britain had
become a great power. Britain’s military strength and its growing prosperity
created an international rivalry among the three great colonial powers—Britain,
Spain, and France.
Spain controlled extensive colonies in Mexico, Central
America, and South America. Because the Spanish and British empires both
employed the restrictive mercantile system to regulate trade with their
colonies, Spanish and British colonies were not allowed to trade directly with
one another. The Spanish navy attacked British ships when they attempted to
trade in South American ports. However, Spanish traders carried on a lucrative
smuggling operation with the British colonies, exchanging sugar, rum, molasses,
and other goods for raw materials and agricultural products from the British
colonies.
Relations were particularly tense between Britain and
France. The French resented the expansion of Britain’s American colonies as
well as the ban on direct trade between the colonies and non-British merchants.
French territories in the Americas included Saint-Domingue (the largest of the
Caribbean sugar islands), mainland North America from the Ohio Valley to the
Mississippi River, and all but the easternmost part of Canada. Clashes between
French and English forces became frequent in the North American colonies.
It had been Walpole’s policy to keep Britain out of
European wars, but the merchants’ interest in expanding British control of
overseas trading routes and the desire of the Hanoverian monarchs to protect
their German properties ultimately made this impossible. In the mid-1700s
Britain became embroiled in two major wars. Both the War of the Austrian
Succession (1740-1748) and the Seven Years’ War (1756-1763) were world wars,
fought by great armies on the European continent, by navies in the Atlantic,
and by privateers in the West Indies and the spice-rich islands of Asia.
The War of the Austrian Succession erupted
following the death of Charles VI, Holy Roman emperor and archduke of Austria.
The war was fought over the succession of his daughter, Maria Theresa. It
pitted England, the Netherlands, and Austria, who were trying to defend Maria
Theresa’s succession, against an alliance of France, Spain, Bavaria, Prussia,
Saxony (Sachsen), and Sardinia. After eight years of fighting, the conflict
ended when the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle confirmed Maria Theresa as Charles’s
heir. The treaty returned almost all the conquered lands to their original
owners, except for the Austrian province of Silesia, which was ceded to
Prussia.
The Seven Years’ War was one of the greatest
of all British triumphs. A coalition of Britain, Prussia, and Hannover fought
against France, Spain, Russia, Austria, Sweden, and Saxony. The war began as a
European conflict, when Maria Theresa attempted to regain Silesia from Prussia.
It soon expanded into a major contest between Britain and France for control of
their colonial empires.
British prime minister William Pitt, 1st earl of
Chatham, engineered the expansion of the war. Pitt was known as William Pitt
the Elder to differentiate him from his son, William Pitt the Younger, who
served as Britain’s prime minister in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
Pitt’s family made its fortune in colonial trade, and Pitt saw clearly that
Britain’s best interest lay in enlarging its colonial empire rather than in
dominating Europe.
Pitt backed young military leaders and supported
them with the forces they needed. He was rewarded beyond all expectation. In
India, Robert Clive, the governor of a small British trading post, achieved two
major victories. In 1757 he captured Chandernagore, the principal French
settlement in India, and at the Battle of Plassey he defeated the army of the
Indian ruler of Bengal. These victories established a permanent British
foothold in India. In North America, where the war was known as the French and
Indian War, British general James Wolfe took Québec and drove the French from
the province. At the conclusion of the war, Britain secured all French
territory in Canada and east of the Mississippi and acquired Florida from
Spain. The Treaty of Paris, which ended the war in 1763, represented a French
surrender around the globe.
F3
|
George III and the American Revolution
|
F3a
|
Domestic Politics
|
Although William Pitt had become a national hero, he did
not survive the change of monarchs in 1760. George III came to the throne
determined to rule Britain without the help of the Whigs. He chose his former
tutor, Lord Bute, as his first chief minister, but quickly replaced him with a
series of successors. George III was determined to participate actively in
Parliament’s political decisions; this brought him into conflict with his own
ministers, who foresaw parliamentary opposition to a politically active
monarch. The king also faced opposition from critics such as political reformer
John Wilkes, a member of Parliament who was arrested for libel when he
criticized one of the king’s speeches.
Wilkes became an advocate of freedom of the press
and a champion of parliamentary reform. One of Wilkes’s proposed reforms
involved redrawing parliamentary districts. He advocated the elimination of
rotten boroughs—parliamentary districts in depopulated rural areas. The
boundaries of many of these boroughs had not been adjusted since the 15th
century. In some rotten boroughs, a few dozen voters returned members to
Parliament, while the entire city of Manchester went unrepresented. Parliament
defeated a bill to eliminate the worst of the rotten boroughs in 1785, largely
because many members of Parliament depended on the patronage system, which was
controlled by politicians who came from these boroughs. “Wilkes and Liberty!”
became the cry of a host of discontented groups within English society.
F3b
|
Colonial Unrest
|
Britain’s role in the imperial wars cost the
country a staggering amount, and the national debt rose higher than it had ever
been before. In order to lower the national debt, the king’s ministers decided
to make colonial government pay for itself. Beginning in 1763 Parliament passed
laws to tax colonial commodities such as sugar, glass, cider, and tea. The most
controversial of these duties was the Stamp Act of 1765, which taxed legal
documents and publications. Americans not only complained about the cost of
these taxes, they also questioned the British government’s right to impose
them. They decried being taxed by Parliament when they were not allowed
representation in British government.
The American Revolution (1775-1783) divided the
governing classes in Britain. Prominent intellectuals such as political
philosopher Edmund Burke were accused of treachery for supporting the
colonists. However, the government of Prime Minister Lord North continued to
try to enforce colonial taxation. In 1775, 13 of the American colonies rebelled
against British rule.
The American Revolution gave France and Spain an
opportunity to strike back at the British Empire. Both supported the American
colonists with money and ultimately declared war on Britain. The British army
was unprepared for war in North America, and it suffered a series of
humiliating defeats, culminating in the surrender of British general Charles
Cornwallis to American forces at Yorktown, Virginia, in 1781 (see Siege
of Yorktown). The Royal Navy fared no better. When hostilities ended, Florida
was returned to Spain, and the 13 rebellious colonies achieved independence as
the United States of America.
Domestic problems accompanied these military disasters.
In London mobs ruled the streets for nearly a week as the worst rioting of the
century—the anti-Catholic Gordon riots in 1780—left 700 dead. Indignation at
government incompetence in the handling of the American Revolution led to the
formation of public associations to reform government. After Lord North’s ministry
fell in 1782, Parliament passed several reform laws, including the Economical
Reform Act, which reduced the patronage powers of the king and his ministers.
The loss of the American colonies came at
great cost to Britain’s self-image. George III was blamed for the disaster, and
he decided to withdraw from direct control of government. He would soon have
the first of a series of bouts with porphyria that eventually left him
incapable of ruling the nation.
F4
|
Act of Union with Ireland
|
In Ireland, Protestants formed volunteer military groups
during the war, supposedly to defend the island from a French invasion. Backed
by these groups, the Irish Protestants pressured the British government into
granting greater independence to the Irish Parliament in 1782. This
independence did not last long.
In 1798 three antigovernment activities shook the
confidence of the Irish Protestants. A revolt broke out in May and June among
Catholic peasants, while a group of dissenting Protestants in Ulster also rose
in rebellion; in August a small French army landed in western Ireland. All
three challenges were handled by British troops. These events caused widespread
concern among the Protestant elite about their ability to maintain political
power in Ireland. In 1800 the Irish Parliament approved an Act of Union that
made Ireland an integral part of the new United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland. The Irish Parliament was dissolved, and Irish representatives were
seated in the British Parliament.
F5
|
Revolution and War
|
In 1783 the king turned power over to William
Pitt the Younger, who was only 24 when he became prime minister. Pitt, the son
of a former prime minister, immediately set about repairing the damage that had
been done to the colonial empire by the recent losses. The India Act of 1784
removed the administration of India from the English East India Company and
placed it directly under the control of the British government. Pitt’s greatest
concern was to reduce the huge debt acquired from nearly a half century of
warfare. He encouraged the resumption of trade with the United States. Pitt
also created a fund to pay government creditors and to accumulate the money
necessary to repay long-term loans. This strategy might have resulted in
financial stability had it not been for developments in France.
F5a
|
French Revolution
|
In 1789 the French Revolution erupted. French
citizens rose against their monarch, Louis XVI, eliminated the ancient legal
distinctions based on social class, and established a republican government.
The French revolutionaries invited all of the peoples of Europe to follow their
example. Conservative monarchs throughout Europe were hostile toward the
revolution. Within a few years wars broke out between France and a number of
European powers.
In Britain, there were early supporters of the
cause of revolution. Anglo-American political philosopher Thomas Paine, who had
been instrumental in the American Revolution, took up the French cause with
vigor. Most British politicians adopted a more conservative philosophy because
they were frightened by the introduction of radical social and political
changes in France. First, the British government suspended civil rights in 1792
and began actively prosecuting individuals for sedition (inciting revolution).
Individuals who advocated even minor government reform were imprisoned. Then,
in 1795, Parliament approved a law allowing the government to imprison without
trial anyone who criticized its policies. The last years of the century were
dark days for the government as food prices rose, the Bank of England suspended
the gold payments that guaranteed its debts, and fear of a French invasion
mounted.
In 1793 France declared war on Britain, and the
final phase of nearly 500 years of warfare between France and Britain began. It
was a titanic struggle. Initially, Britain stayed out of the land war in Europe
and chose instead to focus on defending its colonial possessions and
maintaining control of the seas. In 1798 British admiral Horatio Nelson
defeated the French navy in Egypt (see Battle of the Nile), securing
India’s safety throughout the war. The Royal Navy captured nearly all of the
important French colonies in the West Indies and Africa. In 1805 Nelson
achieved one of the greatest of all naval victories at the Battle of Trafalgar
when he defeated a combined French and Spanish fleet.
F5b
|
Napoleonic Wars
|
Britain could not stay out of the European conflict
indefinitely. The rise of French emperor Napoleon and his powerful armies
threatened the international balance of power. The Napoleonic Wars were fought
between France and a variety of European nations from 1799 to 1815.
Napoleon’s policy of blockading trade between
Britain and the European continent hurt British trade. In response Britain
instituted a blockade of goods going into or out of European ports controlled
by Napoleon. The British policy of stopping and searching ships suspected of
traveling to French-held areas of Europe led to the War of 1812 (1812-1815)
between Britain and the United States. The war began when the United States
insisted that Britain had no right to stop, search, or seize ships belonging to
neutral countries.
After Napoleon invaded Russia in 1812 and suffered a
disastrous defeat, Britain mobilized its forces for a land war and joined a
coalition with Russia, Austria, and Prussia. The center of fighting shifted to
Spain, where a British force under the duke of Wellington successfully fought
its way across the country and invaded France in 1813. Two years later
Wellington led the coalition of forces that decisively defeated Napoleon at the
Battle of Waterloo and ended the French revolutionary wars.
The Congress of Vienna, which ended the Napoleonic
Wars, was a great diplomatic victory for Britain. France was left intact but
its continental neighbors achieved security of their borders. The treaty
created a balance of power among the nations of Europe that led to 40 years of
peace on the continent. With peace established in Europe, Britain was free to
spend its energy and resources on expanding its overseas empire.
F6
|
The 18th-Century Economy
|
More than anything else, the economic development
of Britain in the 18th century made possible its military successes and the
expansion of its empire. The creation of financial institutions—such as the
Bank of England and the Bank of Scotland—at the end of the 17th century and
beginning of the 18th century helped increase the circulation of money and the
speed with which business transactions could take place.
The establishment of a permanent national debt,
funded by the sale of bonds that investors redeemed at a later date at an
increased value, allowed the British government to amass the vast sums
necessary to mount military expeditions of unprecedented size and cost. At the
end of the century Britain had more than half a million men in the military,
and the task of supplying and paying them was gargantuan. The War of the
Spanish Succession, which ended in 1714, had cost less than £100 million; the
Napoleonic Wars, which ended a century later, cost £1.5 billion. The national
debt rose accordingly. Despite these enormous outlays for war, and the
accumulation of debt, Britain was a richer society at the end of the century
than at the beginning. Roughly, income per capita more than doubled despite rapid
population growth.
Following the union with Scotland in 1707, the
British population stood at about 6.5 million; a century later it had reached
15.75 million. More importantly, most of that growth had taken place after 1750
in one of the greatest population explosions in British history. Before the
19th century, most people still lived in the countryside and engaged in
agricultural occupations.
Agricultural production changed gradually over the course of
the century, but these changes had a profound impact on British society. In the
regions where soil was rich, landowners converted small family farms into large
commercial enterprises. Acts of Parliament allowed them to enclose land and
create vast estates where single crops intended for the marketplace could be
grown. New techniques brought increased productivity. Scientists developed new
strains of grasses to restore the fertility of the soil, bred more productive
livestock, and pioneered the use of new fertilizers. Agriculture became a
business rather than a means of subsistence, and the owners of small plots of
land gradually became agricultural laborers rather than independent farmers.
Although most people lived in the country, the 18th
century was notable for the growth of towns. Ports such as Bristol and
Liverpool grew from the prosperity of overseas trading. Seaside resorts catered
to the middle and upper classes, and the resort town of Bath became a vacation
center. In the Midlands of west central England, towns turned to cities as
agricultural workers from the south and east began to migrate north toward the
new industrial jobs. Birmingham, Sheffield, and above all Manchester grew
rapidly.
But nothing matched the colossus that was London.
Already the largest city in the Western world at the beginning of the century,
London continued to expand, reaching a population of 1 million by 1800. It was
almost completely rebuilt after a great fire destroyed much of the city in
1666. Eighteenth-century improvements included sewers, water mains,
streetlights, and even the numbering of houses. One out of every eleven Britons
lived in the capital. London was the center of every important institution in
the nation except for the universities, which were located in Cambridge and
Oxford.
Increased wealth and a rapidly growing population
were sustained by the profits of commerce. At the beginning of the century,
Britain still competed on an equal footing with the Dutch, the Spanish, and the
French. By the century’s end Britain was the dominant commercial power in the world
marketplace. Traders bought brightly colored cotton cloth in Asia; they
exchanged the cloth in Africa for slaves, who were brought either to the
southern colonies in America or to the West Indies. In the West Indies slaves
were exchanged for sugar, the most desirable of the products of the Americas.
The importation of goods from British colonies and
the exportation of these goods all over the world became the key to British
prosperity. Roads were built connecting London to every other center of population,
and canals were excavated to connect inland waterways so that goods could move
farther faster. Commerce drove the expansion of the shipbuilding industry,
provided tens of thousands of jobs for laborers on the London docks, and
spawned wholesale and retail trade everywhere. Commerce was so important to the
British economy that Scottish economist Adam Smith described Britain as “a
nation of shopkeepers.”
G
|
Industrialization and Progress
|
G1
|
Early Stages of Industrialization
|
The development of industry in Britain was a long
and gradual process. Industrialization took place earlier and more rapidly in
Britain than anywhere else because existing conditions were favorable in
England. A system of internal waterways and canals and the absence of physical
barriers to trade made the transport of goods less difficult than in other
nations. Coalfields and thick forests, located conveniently close to large
deposits of metal ores, provided fuel to power the furnaces that produced iron.
Thriving commercial banks provided financing for investments in industrial
plants and machinery.
Advances in agriculture also contributed to the
industrialization process. Beginning in the mid-17th century, England underwent
a process of agricultural improvement that enabled fewer farmers to feed more
people while cultivating the same amount of land. Between 1750 and 1800, grain
yields rose 50 percent; this increase sustained the steadily rising population,
which in England grew from 5.5 million in 1750 to around 9 million in 1801, to
over 16 million by 1851. Agricultural improvement not only produced more food
at cheaper prices, it also allowed farms to produce more food with fewer
workers. Workers who could no longer find work on farms migrated to the towns
in search of employment. As a result, there was a dramatic shift in population
during the 19th century from the agricultural southeast to the Midlands and the
north, where industry was located.
The first phase of industrialization centered
on the production of cotton clothing. At the beginning of the 18th century
Britain still imported finished cotton cloth from India. Soon domestic
manufacturing reversed this flow, and England became the world’s primary
supplier of cotton cloth. Two developments made this possible: the availability
of cheap raw cotton from Egypt and America, and the invention of new machines
that enabled workers to spin more thread and weave more cloth.
One of these new machines was known as the
spinning jenny. It used foot pedals to control the spinning of multiple
threads. This device allowed a worker to spin 200 times as much thread in 1815
as could be spun 50 years earlier. Another mechanical device, the flying
shuttle, quickly and automatically passed thread through a loom, the device on
which cloth is woven. This flying shuttle enabled one person to operate a loom,
whereas previously it had taken an entire team of workers.
The operation of machinery became more efficient
and profitable with the addition of waterpower and later the perfection of the
rotary steam engine by Scottish inventor James Watt. Cotton production soared.
By 1815 Britain was exporting 100 times the amount of cotton it had exported
half a century earlier. Cotton became its most important product.
With the introduction of machinery, factories became the
site of organized production of textiles, replacing small-scale manufacture in
the home. At first most factories were comparatively small, employing fewer
than 100 workers. They were efficient and initially allowed families to remain
together, husbands weaving, wives spinning, and children fetching and carrying.
Ultimately, however, factories disrupted family life. Women and children easily
operated the power-driven machines, and they worked the same 12-hour days as men.
Since factory owners could pay women and children lower wages, men were driven
out of the industry. The craft of handloom weaving disappeared amidst great
hardship. An occupation that employed about 250,000 men in 1820 sustained fewer
than 50,000 by 1850.
In some communities, displaced workers attacked
factories and factory owners. In others, rioters known as Luddites attacked the
machines themselves. Luddites attempted to defend their communities and their
way of life, but they were unable to stop the development of new factories.
Factory owners grew rich by producing cheap, durable cottons with the new
machines.
G2
|
Iron and Railroads
|
Iron was the miracle product of
industrialization. Engineers used it to build the machines that powered production
and ultimately the rails and engines that powered distribution. Iron had long
been refined in England in furnaces that used charcoal as fuel. This process,
known as smelting, involved heating iron ore to high temperatures to remove
most of the impurities. However, charcoal left some impurities in the iron,
which made it difficult to cast the iron into bars. Abraham Darby, an English
iron manufacturer, discovered that smelting with coke, a purified form of coal,
made possible the production of a better product. Newly developed techniques
allowed the iron to be heated and stirred in great vats until impurities had
burned off. Factory workers then fed the cooling iron through rolling machines
that formed it into bars. By 1850 English manufacturers were producing more
than half of the world’s iron.
The most important use of this enormous output of
iron was in building railroads. The railroads developed as a result of the
technological advances made during the Industrial Revolution. The iron
factories produced high-grade material suitable for constructing train engines
and tracks. Skilled ironworkers provided machine parts of exact sizes.
Inventors put Watt’s steam engine to use, first to pump water from mines, then
to drive pistons up and down, and finally to generate the rotary motion that
propelled the wheels of trains.
Systems of rails and carriages had long
existed to move coal from the mines to the barges on which it was shipped.
Humans or horses pulled these carriages. After 1800 inventors began experimenting
with Watt’s steam engine as a means of powering carriages. In 1829 engineer and
inventor George Stephenson created an engine that could pull three times its
weight and outrun a horse. The following year the first important railway
opened, carrying coal and bulk goods between Manchester and Liverpool. It soon
carried more people than products. Passenger travel by rail was faster,
cheaper, and more comfortable than travel by coach. The introduction of the
railroad changed forever concepts of speed and distance that were centuries
old. Hundreds of independent railway companies sprang up. They invested
millions of pounds to employ hundreds of thousands of laborers to lay thousands
of miles of iron track. All railroad lines ultimately connected to London, the
commercial center of the nation.
G3
|
The Impact of Industrialization
|
Industrialization transformed nearly every aspect of British
life. Glasgow came to rival Edinburgh as a center of wealth in Scotland.
Ireland, which had grown faster than Scotland throughout the 18th century,
failed to industrialize and remained largely agricultural, with dire
consequences. Famine devastated Ireland in 1845 after a fungus destroyed the
potato crop, which had become a staple of the Irish diet.
In 1851, for the first time, manufacturing
employed more workers than agriculture. The growth of industrial cities was
staggering. While the population as a whole grew by 100 percent between 1801
and 1851, the population of towns such as Liverpool and Manchester grew by
1,000 percent. Town authorities found it impossible to regulate the explosion
in the population. Landlords constructed ramshackle housing simply to provide
shelter. In Liverpool thousands of people lived in basements without light or
heat. Sanitary conditions were appalling; in one Manchester district there were
215 people for every toilet. London, which had about 1 million inhabitants by
1801, grew to more than 2.3 million by 1850, many of them living in poverty.
More remarkably, 9 towns had populations of more than 100,000, and more than 50
had populations of more than 20,000. Urbanization, with its costs and benefits,
came to Britain all at once.
At one level, industrialization consolidated Britain’s
position as the greatest power in the world. By 1830 Britain produced half of
Europe’s iron and cotton, three-quarters of its coal, and nearly all of its
steam engines. The English supplied the technological expertise for engineering
in other countries, and they planned the railway systems for nearly all of
Europe. In 1851 the Great Exposition, a public exhibition that highlighted
Britain’s industrial achievements, took place in London. Architects and iron
manufacturers constructed the Crystal Palace of iron and glass to showcase
Britain’s accomplishments.
Britain’s vast overseas empire was now as much a
consumer of British manufactured goods as it was a supplier of Britain’s raw
materials. Steam-powered ships made the world a smaller place in the same way
that railroads had shrunk the British Isles. Bulk cargoes were now easily moved
around the globe, and wealth poured into London and the commercial ports in
western Britain. By rough estimates, the per capita wealth of England tripled
from 1801 to 1851, a remarkable growth considering that the population doubled.
This increase in wealth, however, did not benefit
everyone. If the standard of living rose for some, the quality of life declined
for others. Agricultural labor was performed to seasonal rhythms by the light
of the sun, but the clock governed factory production, 12 hours a day, 6 days a
week. Factory work was dangerous, dirty, and unhealthful, but those who could
get it were considered lucky compared to those who begged or starved in the
streets.
In the first phase of industrialization,
workers were unprotected by social legislation—even efforts to eliminate child
labor met serious opposition. Few safety regulations existed. There was no
relief for those who could not afford food until, in 1795, a group of local
justices in Berkshire inaugurated what was known as the Speenhamland System,
after the British parish in which it was pioneered. This system offered wage
supplements pegged to the price of bread and the size of a worker’s family.
Local governments in other regions instituted similar programs. This did little
to help the unemployed, however, and had the unintended effect of lowering
wages. Employers discovered that, with relief available to workers, they could
offer less in wages. In years of poor harvests, low investment, or economic
slump, there was great misery among the poor.
Workers attempted to organize to force better
conditions, but without protection against dismissal, their efforts were
sporadic and violent. In 1819 one of Britain’s largest public demonstrations
was held in Manchester. Between 50,000 and 60,000 people appealed for political
and economic reform. Government cavalry troops attacked the crowd. Eleven
people died, and more than 400 sustained injuries in what came to be known as
the Peterloo Massacre. This event was critical in the early history of labor
organization in Britain; many moderate Britons were outraged at the
government’s action and gave their support to the emerging labor movement.
G4
|
British Politics under the Conservatives
|
Both the end of the Napoleonic Wars and
the development of industrialization placed stress on the British government.
High taxes, bad harvests, and tens of thousands of former soldiers returning to
the labor market overwhelmed the government of Tory prime minister Robert Banks
Jenkinson, 2nd earl of Liverpool, who became head of government in 1812. A
severe economic downturn occurred in 1815. Interest payments on the national
debt were so high that the government could do little to alleviate the
suffering of the working poor. During the early decades of the 19th century,
the poor frequently rioted.
Because the Tories continued to fear the radicalism
that had developed in the wake of the French Revolution, protest movements met
a forceful response. In 1819 Parliament passed the Six Acts in response to
rioting. These acts curtailed civil liberties by limiting the freedom of the
press, restricting public meetings, and increasing penalties for those who advocated
action that might cause public disturbances. Other laws prohibited political
rallies and the formation of labor organizations.
To protect the interests of landlords, Parliament
passed the Corn Laws of 1815, which placed taxes on imported grain. The repeal
of the income tax in 1817 benefited merchants and manufacturers. At the same
time, however, Parliament shifted the major burden of taxes onto commercial and
industrial businesses, whose owners were largely unrepresented in Parliament.
The poor resented new taxes passed on consumption goods such as tea, beer,
tobacco, and sugar, which were the few luxury items in their lives.
There was increasing sentiment for radical reform
among leading intellectuals. The ideas of British philosopher Jeremy Bentham,
who in his philosophy of utilitarianism preached that the aim of government
should be the greatest happiness for the greatest number, were particularly
influential. Romanticism in poetry—led by William Wordsworth, Samuel Taylor
Coleridge, and Lord Byron—stressed natural freedom over the constrictions of
the traditional world. There were only two real areas of progress in these
years, however. The first was the abolition of slavery in the British colonies
in 1833. The second was in matters of religion. In 1828, under increasing
pressure from dissenters (Protestants who were not members of the Church of
England), Parliament repealed the Test Acts. These acts had barred dissenters
from working in government jobs and the professions, and from attending universities.
In the following year, after a long struggle in Ireland, Parliament removed the
legal restrictions that had prevented Catholics from holding public office in
the United Kingdom. The issue of Catholic emancipation was so divisive that it
split the Tory Party.
With the Tory Party divided, the Whig
government of Charles Grey, 2nd earl Grey, took office in 1830. Grey’s
government finally instituted parliamentary reforms that restructured the
outdated electoral system. Prior to Grey’s reforms, only voters who owned
sizable areas of land in a patchwork of districts created during medieval times
could elect members to the House of Commons. This system denied the vote to
merchants, manufacturers, and skilled laborers who did not own land. Regions
that had been prosperous hundreds of years earlier were overrepresented in
Parliament while many new urban centers had no representation at all. Some
parliamentary seats were virtually owned by individuals. One town represented
in Parliament had disappeared under the sea.
G5
|
Agitation for Political Reform
|
The Reform Bill of 1832 was the first
successful attempt to correct these inequities. Although the bill was a
moderate compromise, it was defeated twice in the House of Lords; only when
King William IV threatened to create a number of new Whig peers in the House of
Lords was it allowed to pass. The act decreased the amount of land one had to
own to qualify to vote, especially in towns. It redistributed nearly
one-quarter of the seats in the House of Commons, mainly from the agricultural
southwest to the industrial northwest, but this was still far too few seats to
reflect the redistribution of population. More than 250,000 adult males were
added to the electoral rolls, but still only 20 percent now had the vote in
England; the figure was 12 percent in Scotland, and 5 percent in Ireland.
The Reform Act of 1832 was a bitter
disappointment to many radicals who had hoped for fundamental change. Social
discontent in Britain came to mirror the country’s emerging class structure.
The wealthy, who had been divided between landowners and capitalists, gradually
merged into a single ruling class that dominated the government, the church,
and the military. Birth and family connections combined to define its members,
who attended elite public schools and universities. The middle classes, which
had expanded greatly in the 18th century, now participated in the political
process as a result of the Reform Act. Their values of tight-knit families,
religious observance, and moral personal conduct were to characterize the
coming Victorian era.
The working class became the outsider looking in.
By far the biggest class, workers had few rights and little security. The
ruling and middle classes looked upon the working class with suspicion and
feared their numbers and their potential for violence. However, they also
provided the leaders who agitated for reforms in working conditions, political
rights, and economic justice that ultimately improved the lives of British
workers.
Two important political parties emerged during the
1830s. The Whig faction in Parliament combined with a group of radicals to
create the Liberal Party, which devoted its energy to government reform, free
trade, and the extension of voting eligibility to a larger percentage of the
population. The Conservative Party evolved as the successor to the Tory Party.
The Conservatives were staunch supporters of the monarchy and championed the
cause of imperialism.
In the mid-19th century two significant reform
groups presented their programs to government: the Anti-Corn Law League and the
Chartists. The Anti-Corn Law League championed free trade and advocated the
removal of high taxes on imported grains. The Chartists hoped to expand
political participation to members of the working class.
Agitation for repeal of the Corn Laws came from
middle-class radicals who believed in free trade rather than protection. They
argued that the Corn Laws only benefited rich landowners whose profits came at
the cost of expensive bread for everyone else. The terrible potato famine in
Ireland, which began in 1845 and killed nearly 1 million people, finally
convinced Prime Minister Robert Peel to repeal the laws in 1846. The repeal
split the Conservative Party, but it made Britain the world’s leading advocate
of the principle of free trade.
Chartism championed the cause of workers by demanding
that they receive full political rights. In imitation of the Magna Carta, which
had secured the rights of the nobility from the crown in 1215, the Chartists
produced a People’s Charter. The charter advocated the extension of the vote to
all adult males, the redistribution of parliamentary seats on the basis of
population, and the use of the secret ballot. The Chartists presented their
program to Parliament in 1839, 1842, and 1848. Each time Parliament decisively
rejected it.
Eventually nearly all of the Chartist demands were met.
The male electorate was doubled by the Reform Bill of 1867, which extended the
vote to many men working in urban areas, and then tripled by the Reform Bill of
1884, which extended the vote to agricultural workingmen. Both bills furthered
the redistribution of parliamentary seats, and the bill of 1884 virtually
conceded that further reform must be made on the basis of population. The
secret ballot was introduced in 1872. It was not until 1918 that all men and
women received the vote.
H
|
Victorian Era
|
Queen Victoria ruled Britain from 1837 to 1901. Her
reign was the longest of any monarch in British history and came to be known as
the Victorian era. As embodied by the monarchy, this era was represented by
such 19th-century ideals as devotion to family life, public and private
responsibility, and obedience to the law. Under Victoria, the British Empire
expanded, and Britain became an increasingly powerful nation. As the country
grew into an industrialized nation, the length and stability of Victoria’s
reign gave an impression of continuity to what was actually a period of dynamic
change.
H1
|
Social Reform
|
As the social consequences of industrialization
became more apparent, so did the need for government oversight of working and
living conditions in the mushrooming industrial cities. Many social reformers
believed that government should restrict the influence of powerful individuals.
Others believed in the philosophy of self-help. Self Help was also the
title of a mid-century best-seller by social reformer Samuel Smiles. In this
1859 work, Smiles presented short, inspirational biographies of famous men and
urged his readers to improve their own lives by following these examples.
The underlying belief of Victorian society was in
progress—that things were better than ever before and could be made better
still. This belief was the impetus for thousands of voluntary associations that
worked to improve the lives of the poor both at home and abroad. It also
underlay the charitable foundations created by wealthy benefactors and the
public philanthropies of some of the greatest industrialists. Social
experiments were conducted by individuals such as factory owner Robert Owen,
who founded utopian communities in which wealth was held in common. Novelists
such as Charles Dickens were ardent social reformers who brought the
intolerable conditions of the workhouses and the factories to the attention of
the public in their books. Dickens’s novels Oliver Twist (1837-1839) and
Hard Times (1854) are examples of this kind of literature.
H1a
|
Child Labor
|
The earliest and most persistent movement for
social reform concerned child labor. Children formed an important component of
the industrial labor force because employers could pay them lower wages. From a
very young age they worked the same hours as their parents in the same
difficult conditions. Parliament first limited the hours children could work in
textile factories in 1833, following a public outcry over a parliamentary
inquiry into working conditions for children. The law prevented children under
nine years of age from working more than nine hours per day. In 1842 a law
extended this protection to children working in mines.
Limitation of the hours that children worked fed
naturally into the movement for child education. In the 1860s less than one in
seven British children had any formal education, and literacy was declining.
Elementary schools were operated by private individuals or religious societies
and were financed by charitable donations, personal grants, or fees paid by
students. The Education Act of 1870 mandated that local districts establish
public schools supported by local taxes. An act of 1881 finally made education
compulsory for children aged five to ten.
Another area of reform centered on improvements in
public health and in living conditions, particularly in the crowded industrial
towns. Social reformer Edwin Chadwick was the primary leader in establishing
boards of health, creating standards for drinking water, and overseeing the
construction of effective sewage disposal systems. Social legislation aimed at
improving safety and sanitary conditions in the workplace also made headway in
the general movement for social reform.
H1b
|
Trade Unions
|
The most significant issues for workers, such as
wages, hours, and working conditions, could only be addressed by organizations
of workers themselves. Efforts at trade union organization went back to the
late 18th century, but they were isolated and sporadic until socialist Robert
Owen founded the Grand National Consolidated Trades Union in 1833. Although
this experiment quickly failed, it raised the prospect of a national
organization of all workers.
In 1868 leaders of individual unions formed a
Trades Union Congress to coordinate action among the unions, even though the
formation of unions was illegal at the time. Up to that time, only highly
skilled workers such as engineers had formed successful unions and bargained
collectively. In 1871 the government formally recognized the existence of
unions and their right to strike, although picketing remained illegal. In addition,
the responsibility of unions for the acts of their members continued to
threaten their financial existence. A strike by London dockworkers in 1889
secured an incontestable victory for the labor movement. Despite the use of
nonunion workers and threats from the police and the government, dockworkers
held firm until they won a minimum wage. Following the strike, the labor unions
became a force in British politics. At the beginning of the 20th century,
representatives from unions and other labor organizations formed the Labour
Party to secure the election of politicians sympathetic to labor issues. During
the 20th century Labour emerged as one of the two major political parties in
Britain.
H2
|
Gladstone, Disraeli, and Victorian Politics
|
Victorian politics were characterized by the contest
between two great party leaders, William Gladstone of the Liberal Party and
Benjamin Disraeli of the Conservative Party. Gladstone came from a Liverpool
merchant family, went to school at Eton and Oxford—two of England’s most
prestigious schools—and moved effortlessly into government. Originally a
Conservative, he broke with the main body of the party when he supported the
repeal of the Corn Laws. In 1859 he joined the Liberal Party, ultimately
becoming its leader.
Disraeli’s background was quite different. His father was a
Jewish intellectual who broke with his synagogue following an argument and
baptized his children into the Church of England. The fact that Disraeli was a
member of the Church of England made him eligible to serve in Parliament.
Disraeli did not receive an elite education and supported himself first as a
novelist. He, too, entered the Conservative Party, but he supported the Corn
Laws and remained in the Conservative mainstream, twice serving as chancellor
of the Exchequer, the minister in charge of finances. Disraeli introduced the
Reform Bill of 1867, which gained the Conservatives the support of the urban
middle classes when it extended the vote to them. He briefly became prime
minister in 1868 and again from 1874 to 1880. Disraeli identified the
Conservatives with the monarchy, the church, the landed interests, and the
strengthening of the British Empire. Nevertheless, he supported important
elements of social reform legislation.
Gladstone outlasted his rival and served as prime
minister on four separate occasions (1868-1874, 1880-1885, 1886, and
1892-1894). He advocated free trade and was gradually converted to
parliamentary and social reform. Gladstone’s government eliminated the remaining
laws that discriminated against dissenting Protestants and implemented reforms
that awarded civil service jobs on the basis of merit.
Gladstone’s greatest efforts, however, were devoted to
solving the problem of governing Ireland. Agitation for an independent Ireland
had existed for centuries. It increased following the famine of 1845, which
reshaped Irish society. Between 1845 and 1847 the Irish population was reduced
by 25 percent through famine and emigration. Most families who remained faced
financial ruin.
Although the famine was a natural disaster, the
Irish blamed the British for creating the conditions that caused it. They
condemned the British government for failing to respond adequately to the
crisis. They also condemned absentee English landlords who evicted their
impoverished tenants when they could no longer afford to pay rent. Many of
these landlords lived in England and had grown rich collecting rents. They
rarely saw their Irish properties and remained unaware of the problems
affecting their tenants. Many Irish grew to despise absentee landlords,
especially after evictions left thousands of starving tenants homeless.
Gladstone was sympathetic to many Irish grievances. He
passed acts that removed the Protestant Church of Ireland as the nation’s
official church and that protected tenants from being evicted by landlords. In
the 1880s Gladstone attempted further reforms, especially to protect
impoverished tenants. However, he had little support even within his own party.
Irish leaders considered Gladstone’s actions inadequate
and demanded nothing less than the creation of a free Irish state. In 1867
Irish nationalists formed a secret society, the Fenians, to overthrow British
rule and establish an independent Ireland. Irish resistance, led by Irish
nationalist politician Charles Stuart Parnell, intensified with boycotts of
English residents, businesses, and institutions. Violence against British
officials also increased.
In 1886 Gladstone realized that no amount of
piecemeal reform would succeed. In an about-face that shocked his party, he
offered a home rule bill to establish a free Irish state. It was defeated, and
the Liberal Party split between those who supported home rule for Ireland and
those who wished Ireland to remain under British rule. In his final ministry,
at the age of 83, Gladstone again introduced a home rule measure in Parliament
and fought it successfully through the House of Commons, only to have it
overwhelmingly defeated by the House of Lords. The failure to secure a form of
home rule for Ireland left Britain with one of its most bitter legacies.
Violent conflict would soon follow between British troops and those seeking
independence for Ireland. Although most of Ireland gained its independence in
1921, violence continued to be a problem in the six northern counties of
Ireland, where the Protestant majority voted to remain a part of the United
Kingdom. The conflict escalated in the latter half of the 20th century.
H3
|
The Second British Empire
|
The first British Empire was the creation of
explorers and traders and was based on an economic relationship between
colonies and the mother country. The second British Empire was the creation of
bureaucrats and generals and was based on a political relationship known as
imperialism. Imperialism involved an effort to rule native peoples by importing
British institutions and values, intervening in local affairs, and maintaining
a strong military presence. The shift in goals and methods was gradual. The
most important colonies of the first empire had developed in sparsely populated
regions where native populations were brutally cast aside to establish British
colonies. The second empire involved the domination of colonial peoples.
British naval power enabled Britain to control a
far-flung empire, especially after the development of steam-powered warships.
Geographical emphasis shifted from the west to the east; the most important
dominions were located in the South Pacific, South Asia, and Africa. India was
the centerpiece of the British Empire. British rule in India began with the
expulsion of the French from Bengal in 1757 and grew as the British used
military conquest to gain direct control over areas of India. Wars in
Afghanistan and the Punjab in the 1840s led to British annexation of the
northern Muslim provinces. The British created a unified India out of hundreds
of separate kingdoms and principalities. The conquest of the eastern territory
of Burma (now Myanmar) began in the 1820s and ended following the second
Anglo-Burmese War in 1852.
Successive governors-general attempted to bring to the Indian
subcontinent what they regarded as Britain’s superior system of law and social
relations. They governed through a vast civil service transplanted mainly from
Britain. Although the British made significant inroads against the extremes of
poverty and disease that existed in India, they generally viewed Indian society
as less cultured than their own and treated the indigenous population with
contempt. Inevitably a clash of cultures took place. In 1857 there was a mutiny
by sepoys (Indian troops in the British military), who sought to protect their
social and religious traditions. The sepoys seized garrisons and killed British
officers and civilians. British relief forces repeated the process in reverse,
and the Sepoy Rebellion left a legacy of mutual hostility.
British expansion into Africa was fueled by the race for
colonies in which all of the European powers participated during the decades
that followed the 1880s. British traders had long been present on the western
coast of Africa, where they dominated the Atlantic slave trade. With the
abolition of slavery after 1833, interest in Africa shifted to the east, where
the British drove the French from Egypt. In 1882 the British gained control of
the Suez Canal, a vital link between Britain’s eastern and western empires.
British explorers such as David Livingstone helped open
the interior of Africa to Europeans, while entrepreneurs such as Cecil Rhodes
exploited its vast mineral wealth. Rhodes acquired one of the great fortunes of
the second empire by gaining control of African diamonds and gold. He dreamed
of unifying the eastern side of the continent by establishing a railroad from
Cape Town in the south to Cairo in the north, passing only through British
controlled territory. Rhodes’s efforts helped trigger the Boer War (1899-1902),
in which British troops fought Dutch colonists for possession of some of the
richest gold and diamond mining areas of southern Africa. The Scramble for
Africa created conflicts between the European powers, and Rhodes’s scheme
faltered because of the powerful German presence in eastern Africa.
Seeking to expand the opportunity for trade along
the Chinese coast, the British acquired the island of Hong Kong in southern
China following the first Opium War (1839-1842) with China. The war broke out
when Chinese officials in the port of Guangzhou seized the opium shipments that
merchants were illegally importing into China. The British responded by sending
a naval force and occupying Hong Kong in 1841.
I
|
The Early 20th Century
|
I1
|
Edwardian Society
|
The beginning of the 20th century seemed to
release a pent-up spirit of change that had been corseted by the conservative
Victorian era. In towns the classes mixed more freely, and women enjoyed
greater freedom of movement as they discarded bulky and constrictive clothing
and took to traveling by bicycle. When Victoria died in 1901, her son Edward
VII ascended the throne. The Edwardian period (1901-1910) was the final age of
aristocratic excess. The nobility’s lavish spending, carefree lifestyle, and
personal behavior that flaunted the morals of the times were chronicled in
weekly magazines such as Punch, Vanity Fair, and the Tattler,
which were now copiously illustrated by photographs of garden and shooting
parties.
Commuter railroads and motorized buses made possible the
growth of the suburbs, where the middle classes could build large houses on
spacious grounds. In the suburbs, they could isolate their children from crime
and social problems, and yet still pursue their urban businesses and
professions.
The problems of the working classes and of the
poor had persisted despite half a century of social reform. The economy had run
in cycles of boom and bust for decades, and each upturn left working-class
families slightly more behind. The value of pay for workers declined throughout
the period, and not until 1913 did wages buy as much as they had in 1901. A
host of social programs to alleviate poor living conditions had a limited
impact. The poor constituted nearly one-third of the population, and many of
them were destitute.
Reform movements had begun as charitable
organizations, many of them sponsored by churches. During the early 20th
century, however, these movements changed their focus to reordering society.
Socialist movements flourished not only among industrial workers, but also in
the universities and among middle-class intellectuals. One of the most
important was the London Fabian Society, led by Sidney and Beatrice Webb. The
Fabians championed social scientific study of the conditions of workers and the
poor in the belief that government would adopt legislative remedies once it was
properly informed. Members of the Fabian Society included novelist H. G. Wells
and Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw, who attacked private property in his
play Major Barbara (1905) and class distinctions in Pygmalion
(1913).
The government introduced free school meals in 1906, and
pensions for the elderly came two years later. In 1909 politician David Lloyd
George, a Welsh socialist, introduced what became known as “the people’s
budget.” The budget raised taxes on the wealthy to fund extensive social
programs for the poor. The House of Lords opposed the budget, setting off a
constitutional crisis that was resolved only when George V (1910-1936)
threatened to create more than 250 new peers who would vote for the budget. The
passage of the budget also allowed for the most far-reaching of all welfare
proposals: the introduction of a scheme of national insurance that provided
both health-care and unemployment insurance to every family living below the
poverty line.
I2
|
Political Movements
|
Even such far-reaching social legislation fell short of
what many believed was necessary to create a more just society. Two of the
problems that had bedeviled Gladstone—trade union strikes and Irish home
rule—became more severe, while a third, the movement for women’s emancipation (see
Women's Rights), sprang to the fore. In a sense, all three were political
movements.
During the early 1900s strikes in the coal mines,
on the railways, and on the London docks paralyzed the economy and showed the
power of a unified labor movement. Government attempts to break the unions not
only failed, they instilled greater resolve in those who were arrested, locked
out of their jobs, or denied employment because of their union activities. The
Labour Party was created to gain representation in Parliament for workers; the
result was the election in 1906 of 29 Labour members, who entered into a
coalition with the Liberals. The Liberal government responded by passing the
Trade Union Act of 1913, which allowed union dues (fees paid by union members)
to be used for political purposes.
At the same time, all of the Irish members of
Parliament stood for home rule and threatened to withdraw their support from
the Liberal government if home rule was not granted. The situation in Ireland
had deteriorated since the failure of home rule in 1893. Irish citizens were
divided into two camps: Irish republicans supported independence for Ireland,
while British unionists supported continued union with Britain. Tension
continued to escalate between the two groups and eventually led to the Irish
Revolution (1912-1922). The revolution began in 1912 as Irish on both sides of
the issue armed themselves for war after the introduction of the third home
rule bill in Parliament.
Following the outbreak of World War I (1914-1918) in
Europe, Britain faced the possibility of simultaneously fighting a European war
while dealing with a potential civil war in Ireland. To defuse the situation,
Parliament finally passed home rule for Ireland in 1914. However, it suspended
the enactment of home rule until after hostilities ended in Europe.
The issue of women’s suffrage was perhaps the
most difficult for members of Parliament to handle. Led by the formidable
Emmeline Pankhurst, the suffrage movement was the first time an organization
used civil disobedience as a political weapon. Woman suffrage activists
defiantly broke laws to call attention to their struggle. They set mailboxes
alight, broke glass windows, obstructed traffic, and went on hunger strikes
when jailed. London police, who had waded into mobs of strikers with clubs
flying, were unwilling to use similar tactics against middle-class women. The
suffrage movement, along with violence in Ireland and clashes between strikers
and strikebreakers, threatened the government with the prospect of anarchy in
1914.
I3
|
World War I
|
Domestic matters declined in significance with the
outbreak of one of the most violent wars in Britain’s history, World War I. The
scramble for colonial possessions around the globe inevitably led to conflicts
among the European powers and to incidents that diplomacy could not easily
solve. Hoping to discourage hostilities, groups of nations formed alliances,
which eventually led to the establishment of two opposing camps of nations.
Britain signed an accord known as the Triple Entente with France and Russia to
meet the growing threat of a German military buildup. Germany established its
own system of alliances, the Triple Alliance, with Austria-Hungary and Italy.
The war began unexpectedly. In 1914 a Serbian
nationalist assassinated Archduke Francis Ferdinand, the heir to the throne of
Austria-Hungary. Serbia, a small nation in southeastern Europe, was struggling
to maintain its independence from its powerful neighbor, Austria-Hungary. The
assassination led to conflict between Austria-Hungary, which threatened to
retaliate against Serbia, and Russia, which had promised to protect the Serbs
from aggression. Nations throughout Europe began preparing their armies for
military action to honor their diplomatic alliances. France backed the
Russians. Germany supported its Austrian ally and declared war on France.
Britain wavered until German armies marched through neutral Belgium to attack
France. Total war ensued, with Europe’s major powers pulled into the conflict
by the series of diplomatic alliances they had formed.
The war changed British society like no event since
the Industrial Revolution. The warring Conservative and Liberal parties formed
a coalition government that included Labour representation. The unions pledged
an end to labor unrest. Even the suffragettes called off their campaign of
civil disobedience.
Lloyd George, who was minister of war and then prime
minister, was the outstanding figure in the government. A constant innovator,
he expanded the use of machine guns and tanks and introduced the mortar, one of
the most effective weapons in the trench warfare that ensued. He also backed
the convoy system, in which military and merchant ships traveled in large
groups to discourage attacks by deadly German U-boats (submarines), which sank
British cargo ships at will.
The government fixed wages, took control of the
munitions industry, ordered farmers to increase grain cultivation, and
ultimately rationed food. It introduced a military draft in 1916 for men aged
18 to 41. More than 6 million British men became members of the armed forces.
Women streamed into the industrial labor force, replacing men who were serving
in the military. In 1918, before the war was over, women were given the vote in
a bill for universal suffrage.
The war lasted longer than anyone had predicted.
The fighting was more gruesome and the weapons more destructive. Fighting along
the border between France and Germany soon became mired in a bloody stalemate
as armies dug defensive trenches and fortified their positions against attack.
Trench warfare was both terrifying and demoralizing. Infantry soldiers lived in
unsanitary conditions in muddy trenches that stretched from the English Channel
to the Swiss border.
Troops made massive suicidal charges across open
terrain against fixed enemy defensive positions that were lined with barbed
wire and defended with machine guns. In the first Battle of the Somme, in 1916,
there were nearly 60,000 British casualties on the first day alone. In 1917, at
Passendale in Belgium, the number of British killed or wounded reached the
staggering total of some 250,000 (see Battle of Ypres). Overall, the war
cost Britain roughly 3 million casualties and resulted in large numbers of
veterans with disabilities who returned to live in every corner of the British
Isles.
I4
|
Irish Independence
|
Despite the promise of home rule, the situation in
Ireland exploded during the war. In 1916 the Easter Rebellion caused a profound
change in Britain’s relations with the Irish. While thousands of Irish
participated in the British war effort, pro-independence activists saw the war
as an opportunity to win total freedom. On Easter Sunday in 1916 an armed
uprising took place in Dublin. Although the British brutally suppressed the
Easter Rebellion, it accelerated the pace of the Irish Revolution.
In 1918 Irish representatives to Parliament refused
to take their seats and instead declared an independent Irish Free State. They
formed their own Parliament, the Dáil Éireann (Gaelic for “Assembly of
Ireland”), with Irish independence activist Eamon de Valera as its leader. The
British government refused to recognize the rebel government, but the Irish
republicans had the support of the people, especially during the following
years of guerrilla warfare. Armed independence groups merged to create the
Irish Republican Army (IRA), which launched attacks against members of British
security forces and Protestant Irish police. By 1921 southwestern Ireland was
under British martial law.
The British government realized that the revolution
could not be put down without considerable casualties. In 1922 both sides
accepted a bill establishing the independent Irish Free State. The Irish Free
State became an independent nation, but it remained part of the British Empire
and its members were required to swear allegiance to the British monarchy.
Under this arrangement the six northern Irish counties, which were
predominantly Protestant, continued to be part of Britain. Some members of the
Irish Republican Army never recognized this provision and conflict continued
into the early 21st century. For a history of Ireland after its independence
from Britain, see Ireland and Northern Ireland.
I5
|
Peace and Economic Adjustment
|
The Treaty of Versailles (1919), the peace
settlement for World War I, severely punished Germany for its aggression by
setting limitations on the size of the German military and leveling high
reparation payments. Britain absorbed some of the German colonies in Africa and
received a small part of the reparation payments, but otherwise attempted to
soften more severe French proposals for revenge.
Lloyd George, whose coalition government was
reelected in 1918, came home a hero from Versailles but immediately discovered
that it would be as difficult to win the peace as it had been to win the war.
The effect of large numbers of soldiers returning from the war pushed up prices
and drove down wages. The United States, whose economy came out of the war far
stronger than Britain’s, challenged Britain for commercial supremacy in
overseas markets. Labor unions attempted to protect their members through
collective action. Between 1919 and 1920 there were close to 2,000 strikes; the
most ominous was in the coal industry, which was still nominally under government
control. By 1921 close to one-quarter of the British workforce was unemployed,
and the high number of people without work threatened to overwhelm the national
program that provided unemployment insurance.
Lloyd George’s coalition government consisted largely of
Conservatives, and as the economy worsened it broke apart. The Conservatives
won the election of 1922, and for the first time, Labour elected more members
to Parliament than did the Liberals. In 1924 the first Labour government ruled
briefly, but paradoxically it was brought down by a series of strikes by the
unions that had raised it to power.
In 1926 the Trades Union Congress supported a
general strike after a series of failed strikes over wages and hours in the
coal industry. The general strike officially lasted nine days; it fanned fears
of revolution and further divided the social classes. Both mine owners and mine
workers proved entirely inflexible, and the government was placed in the
hopeless position of mediator. Workers gained little from the strike, but the
Conservatives were defeated at the next election. Labour was elected in 1929 in
a coalition with the Liberals. The coalition advanced a program of social
welfare and full employment. They had hardly taken their seats when the world
was plunged into economic crisis.
The worldwide economic depression of 1929 struck Britain
hard. Unemployment rose to 2.5 million within a year and to 3 million by the
beginning of 1933. Ramsay MacDonald, the Labour prime minister, resigned in
1931 but agreed to sit in a national coalition government to handle the
worsening crisis. The government put emergency measures into effect to raise
income taxes on the wealthy, to reduce salaries of government workers, and to
reduce unemployment benefits that were crippling the government.
For the first time in a century, Britain
abandoned free trade. The government placed duties on imports and encouraged
the population to “buy British.” Government programs to build houses and
automobiles and expand electric utilities ultimately had their effect on the
domestic economy. During the 1930s the government began to nationalize
utilities, including coal, and to set wages and prices in large industries such
as steel. By 1933 unemployment began to decline, especially in the newer
industries, and by 1935 most sectors of the economy were recovering. Britain’s
share of world exports continued to shrink, however, and industries that had
failed to modernize no longer remained competitive. Not only had the United
States become an international competitor, but Germany, too, had survived the
worst of the depression; its economy recovered as the result of a massive
program of rearmament.
J
|
World War II and Its Aftermath
|
J1
|
World War II
|
Despite the effects of the Great Depression,
Britain was still one of the great world powers. It was one of the nations that
enforced compliance with the Treaty of Versailles, and it was a leader in the
League of Nations, an alliance that had been created in the aftermath of World
War I to help resolve international conflicts peacefully. But a feeling of
uncertainty and indecision had settled over Britain, especially in regard to
its international responsibilities. The war had taken a great toll, destroying
much of the generation that would now have come to power. There was little will
to fight again, especially to hold on to colonies that no longer wished to be
ruled by Britain.
Britain’s vast empire was proving costly and difficult
to maintain. In 1931 the colonies of Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and South
Africa became independent countries, although they remained part of the British
Commonwealth of Nations, a loose confederation of nations and political
entities with historic ties to Britain.
The British had occupied Egypt since 1882, but a
nationalist movement forced Britain to grant Egypt independence in 1922.
However, Britain retained control of the Suez Canal. The nationalist movement
in India, under the inspired leadership of Mahatma Gandhi, made British control
of India increasingly difficult.
Following the experience of World War I, the British
public seemed uninterested in affairs on the European continent. The outbreak
of the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), Italian aggression in North Africa, and
the blatant military buildup by Germany under the rule of the Nazi Party (see
National Socialism) were all met with public disinterest and government
evasion. In 1937 Neville Chamberlain became prime minister. He adopted a policy
of appeasement toward German expansion, attempting to influence Germany’s new
chancellor, Adolf Hitler, through personal diplomacy and veiled threats of
intervention. Chamberlain tried to maintain peace in Europe largely by making
concessions to Germany when conflicts arose.
This policy was one factor that encouraged
Germany to increase its military strength and expand its borders. In 1936
Germany sent troops into the Rhineland, a region of western Germany that had
been demilitarized under the Treaty of Versailles. Germany annexed Austria in
1938, seized the western half of Czechoslovakia later that year, and in 1939
occupied the remainder of Czechoslovakia as well as the Baltic city of Gdańsk,
which had been declared a free city by the Treaty of Versailles and was
controlled by the League of Nations. At each point Chamberlain drew a line in
the sand, and the waves of German expansionism washed it away.
Britain finally took a stand when Germany invaded
Poland in September 1939. When Britain and France declared war on Germany,
World War II began. Germany quickly occupied France. During the following two
years, the British faced the Germans alone in Europe. Other nations eventually
entered the war. By 1941 a coalition led by Germany, Italy, and Japan (known as
the Axis powers) faced an alliance of Britain, the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics (USSR), and the United States (known as the Allied powers).
As the military situation weakened, the will of the
British people strengthened. Britain fought back, inspired by Britain’s new
prime minister, Winston Churchill, one of the greatest orators in the history
of the nation. American loans allowed Britain to import much-needed food and
war materials. Britain’s first important victory was at Al ‘Alamayn when forces
led by General Bernard Montgomery drove the Germans out of the Egyptian desert
in 1942. This was followed by a defeat of Axis forces from North Africa and a
joint invasion of Italy by Britain and the United States. In 1943 the Royal Air
Force (RAF) began its own bombardment of German cities, as well as German munitions
and airplane factories. In the following year British forces participated in
the D-Day invasion, which landed Allied troops in France. Following the
landing, the British and Americans steadily pushed back German troops from the
west, while the USSR advanced into Germany from the east. Fighting in Europe
ended in May 1945 with the final defeat of Germany.
The war took a toll on British civilians
unlike any conflict since the civil wars of the 17th century. For five years,
inhabitants of every British city lived under blackout conditions in which
lights were extinguished to prevent German bombers from spotting targets. The
continual bombings of London and the industrial cities induced a feeling of
resignation and helplessness among the population as shells exploded with
random destructiveness. Toward the end of the war, rocket bombs created even
greater terror—the rockets traveled with such speed that air-raid sirens were
unable to warn the population.
The war was an all-consuming experience for
every Briton. More than 4.5 million men and women were in uniform overseas, and
another 3 million were part of the Home Guard, which responded to air raids and
prepared for the constantly anticipated German invasion. Industry shifted
entirely to a war footing, and emergency measures gave the government control
over nearly every element of the economy. Rationing of food and clothing
created hardships. Even in victory, Britain was sapped of its financial and
industrial reserves. It was estimated that the war wiped out more than a
quarter of the wealth of the entire nation.
J2
|
Postwar Britain
|
The immediate postwar period was one of severe
privation. More than 4 million houses had been destroyed or badly damaged; the
result was an acute shortage of housing, especially after soldiers returned
from the war. Commodity shortages meant the continuation of wartime rationing.
Rationing also had to be extended to include items that had not been rationed
during the war.
For the first time since the 18th century,
Britain became a debtor nation. The loans it had taken out from foreign nations
to finance the war exceeded the money it could raise in taxes and other
revenues. Without U.S. and Canadian aid, Britain would have defaulted on its
considerable debts. Even so, the flood of wealth out of the country was
considerable. The winter of 1947 was probably the lowest economic point of the
century. Fuel shortages, gas rationing, inadequate food and shelter, and one of
the coldest seasons on record all added to the nation’s problems. Unemployment
reached 2.3 million, and the monetary crisis worsened.
On the political scene, to the surprise of the
world, Churchill was swept out of office when his Conservative Party lost to the
Labour Party in the elections of 1945. The Labour government relaxed
restrictions on trade unions and embarked upon a program of nationalization.
This program resulted in government ownership of the Bank of England and of the
coal, electricity, and gas industries. The government consolidated the
railroads into British Rail and the airlines into British Overseas Airways
Company (BOAC). The most controversial takeovers were the iron and steel
industries, which were profitable private enterprises. The government
immediately encountered the difficulties of effectively running complicated
industries, many of which were badly in need of modernization. Efforts to make
these businesses profitable and competitive in the international market were
hampered by outdated equipment and inadequate facilities.
In 1948 the most far-reaching of Britain’s
social welfare programs was established. The National Insurance Act of 1946
consolidated benefits involving maternity, unemployment, disability, old age,
and death. The National Health Service, set up in 1948, provided free medical
service for Britons. British socialists now boasted that citizens were cared
for “from cradle to grave.” However, the price tag for both programs was far
greater than anyone had anticipated, and the government immediately cut back on
some services.
Gradually Britain’s economy recovered. After 1948 the
United Kingdom took advantage of the Marshall Plan, a four-year economic
recovery program designed by the United States to revitalize the economies of
European countries by making low-cost loans available for reconstruction. For
all of the damage it had suffered, Britain had not experienced the devastation
of other European nations such as France, and Britain soon reestablished its
export industries.
After the war, Britain still played an important
role in international affairs. In 1945 it became a permanent member of the
Security Council of the United Nations. (The United Nations, or UN, is an
international organization of countries that was founded in 1945 to promote
world peace and cooperation.) As a member of the UN, Britain served as one of
the countries that continued to occupy and rebuild Germany. The new Labour
government attempted to maintain Britain’s role as a world power by supporting
a large overseas military presence in both the British colonies and Europe and
by continuing a high level of military spending.
Tensions grew between Communist nations under the
leadership of the USSR and capitalist countries led by the United States.
Britain developed its own nuclear weapons and cooperated closely with the
United States in a policy that relied on using the threat of nuclear attack to
discourage aggression by potential enemies. For many Britons, the USSR replaced
Germany as the national enemy.
J3
|
The Loss of Empire
|
Even before World War II, Britain had begun to
adjust its relationship with many of its colonies. In 1931 Britain created the
Commonwealth of Nations. The Commonwealth conferred what was called dominion
status on several colonies that had been heavily settled by British immigrants.
This effectively ended British rule over Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.
Dominion status gave preferential treatment to goods from British dominions
after Britain abandoned free trade and began imposing import duties on foreign
goods, beginning in the 1930s. This arrangement benefited Britain as well since
all three dominions were heavy exporters of agricultural products—grain, meat,
butter, and cheese—which were in short supply in Europe after the war.
J3a
|
India
|
In India a movement for independence had been
gathering momentum for decades. Although the British concluded that they could
no longer rule in India, they did not feel that they could simply abandon their
centuries-old ties. India was religiously divided, and the two largest
groups—Hindus and Muslims—were increasingly antagonistic toward each other. The
attempt to create one dominion of India was undermined by the demand of the
Muslims for their own separate state.
After the war, the Labour government abandoned
efforts to mediate the conflict and resolved to end the British presence in
India as quickly as possible. The government opposed colonialism and felt
little political attachment to India. The costs of continued peacekeeping were
also keenly felt at a time when there was rationing at home. A heroic effort by
the last governor-general of India, Louis Mountbatten, created what appeared to
be a workable division between largely Hindu India and Muslim Pakistan (the
latter has since split into the nations of Pakistan and Bangladesh). The
British withdrawal from India in 1948 resulted in increased religious tensions
and a terrible civil war. The civil war resulted in the deaths of between
250,000 and 500,000 people, among them Gandhi, who was assassinated by a Hindu
extremist opposed to the division of India. The abandonment of India was a blow
to British prestige and the beginning of the total disintegration of the
empire.
J3b
|
Egypt
|
The next crisis for the empire occurred in
Egypt, where British domination of the Suez Canal sustained Britain’s role as a
world trader. Even before the war, British troops had withdrawn to a zone
around the canal, and Britain had ceased its once active role in Egyptian
government. Relations were complicated by the creation in 1948 of a Jewish
state, Israel, in British-controlled Palestine. Both Arabs and Israelis accused
the British of taking the other’s side, and both wanted Britain out of the
Middle East.
In 1956 Egyptian leader Gamel Abdel Nasser seized
the canal. Britain, with military assistance from France and Israel, attempted
to retake the canal and almost succeeded in doing so. However, the United
States and the USSR, who were caught unaware by the Suez crisis, insisted that
British, French, and Israeli forces withdraw from the canal area. The Suez
crisis saw Britain lose all of its influence in the region and raised at home
the idea that Britain was no longer a great power.
During the 1960s colonies throughout the world
rapidly acquired their independence. In 1961 South Africa withdrew from the
Commonwealth after controversy developed within the Commonwealth concerning
apartheid, South Africa’s policy of racial segregation. Other African
territories became self-governing states and joined the Commonwealth of
Nations. Ghana, Nigeria, Uganda, and Kenya—all large African states under
British control—developed into republics and adopted British forms of
parliamentary government, law, and finances.
The Commonwealth provided an international sphere of
influence for Britain during world crises and remained an important economic
union. Although Britain was no longer a superpower, the country’s traditional
role in Africa and the Middle East made it an obvious mediator of conflict.
London remained the financial center of choice for petroleum-rich states as
well as the educational center for the sons of the ruling elite in the former
colonies. The Commonwealth tied together the member nations by automatically
granting British citizenship to citizens of Commonwealth countries, a policy
that ended in 1983. British emigration to the former colonies of Canada,
Australia, and New Zealand remained a significant dimension of its population
history as did the even higher immigration into Britain from its former Asian
and African possessions. This immigration created racial tensions in Britain’s
largest cities. While the Race Relations Act of 1968 prohibited discrimination,
racial violence increased, especially among youths.
K
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The Search for Economic Well-Being
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K1
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Conservative Rule
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In 1951 the Labour Party lost its majority in
Parliament, and the Conservative Party regained control. The Conservatives led
the nation toward renewed prosperity. They returned the iron and steel
industries to private ownership, but left intact the major components of the
welfare state. Tight government control on imports and on government spending,
high rates of income tax for the wealthy, and investment in new industries such
as automobiles and chemicals finally created a surplus in British trading
accounts.
Private enterprise led the growth of what was being
called “the affluent society.” The value of the goods that workers could buy
with their wages rose by 40 percent during the 1950s. Two symbols of
affluence—cars and televisions—soon became so common that the government
undertook a program of motorway expansion. In addition, private investors
created the first independent television network to compete with the
government-owned British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC).
The accession of young Queen Elizabeth II in 1952
provided a ray of light toward a brighter future, as did the extraordinary
accomplishments of British sportsmen around the world. In 1953 a British
expedition scaled the world’s highest mountain, Mount Everest; another British
expedition crossed Antarctica; and in 1954 British athlete Roger Bannister
became the first person to run a mile in less than four minutes. In the early
1960s, British popular culture swept the world. For a time the United Kingdom
replaced the United States as the leader in fashion, style, and especially
music, with popular music groups such as the Beatles and the Rolling Stones
emerging as the dominant rock groups of the day.
K2
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Industrial Decline
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Almost imperceptibly, Britons came to realize that their
nation was in decline during the 1960s and 1970s. Early recovery from the war
led to an optimism that could not be sustained as other European countries
staged their own revivals. Despite being severed in two, Germany emerged once
again as an industrial and trading power. Under the energetic leadership of Charles
de Gaulle, France charted a course of independence from the United States by
refusing to join the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), a defensive
organization formed by the United States and a number of European countries to
counter the military strength of the USSR.
For a time, de Gaulle managed to keep Britain
out of the European Economic Community (now the European Union), an
organization designed to promote economic integration among European nations.
De Gaulle vetoed Britain’s membership applications in 1961 and 1967, largely
because of Britain’s close ties with the United States. Britons themselves
remained split over closer ties with the continental powers. It was not until
1973 that Britain finally became a member of the European Community.
By the mid-1960s Britain was mired in an economic
slowdown. Massive dock strikes in both 1966 and 1967 severely affected British
exports. In an effort to prevent the flow of money out of the country, the
government devalued the currency. Devaluation lowered the value of British
currency in relation to foreign currency, making it less expensive for Britain
to pay its foreign debts. It gave a boost to British exports by making British
goods less expensive on the foreign market. However, it also made imported
products more expensive for British citizens and lowered international
confidence in Britain’s currency.
Industries in which Britain had been dominant for
centuries were decaying rapidly. Shipbuilding, textiles, coal, and steel, all
of which had been bywords of Britain’s Industrial Revolution, were no longer
competitive. Each was beset with low productivity, high labor costs, and
outdated plants and machinery. Industrial relations between workers and
employers were at an all-time low, as workers staged hundreds of strikes, work
stoppages, and deliberate slowdowns.
Crisis came in 1973 when oil-exporting nations
in the Middle East dramatically cut shipments to pro-Israeli nations following
the Arab-Israeli War. Oil prices quadrupled, forcing British industries to use
more coal. This was the opportunity for which miners had waited. Miners were
dissatisfied because they opposed the government’s wage controls as well as the
policy of closing down unprofitable mines at the cost of miners’ jobs. Now the
miners introduced a ban on working overtime and finally began an all-out strike
to pressure the government to abandon its policy of legislating limits on wage
increases. In response, Prime Minister Edward Heath introduced emergency
legislation that limited the working week to three days and instituted national
electrical power cuts to minimize the amount of coal used in power plants.
The election of 1974 was fought on whether
government would restrain the unions. The Labour Party won a narrow majority by
promising not to interfere with the unions. With legal limits removed, the
unions won wage increases. Workers now had more money to spend, while the
amount of available goods on the market remained the same. As a result, prices
for products began to rise, and double-digit inflation ensued. Food prices rose
20 percent in 1973 alone.
Wages and prices spiraled out of control. Only a
supply of oil drilled from the North Sea off the coast of Scotland saved
Britain from a crisis over the payment of its foreign debts. Even with the new
supply of oil, the government raised taxes on income and on consumer goods to
finance raises in wages that had been negotiated with union members in
nationalized industries. The taxes left less and less for reinvestment. In 1979
an arrangement between the Labour Party and the unions to keep wage demands
moderate broke down, and another round of strikes took place.
K3
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The Thatcher Revolution
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The Conservatives capitalized on the situation to win
the election in 1979 under their newly chosen leader, Margaret Thatcher,
Britain’s first female prime minister. Thatcher was a strident Conservative,
and she was determined not to give in to the unions or change from the course
she had charted to revive the British economy. Thatcher based her policy on the
theory of monetarism. This theory involved strictly controlling the money
supply to reduce inflation, lowering tax rates to encourage investment, and
minimizing government intervention in industry to remove restrictions on the
expansion of businesses.
The Thatcher government began privatizing industry,
relaxing government regulation, and removing government subsidies. This was
strong medicine and initially led to an even more rapid decline. By 1981 both
interest rates and unemployment reached postwar highs, and a growing number of
British firms faced bankruptcy. Pressure mounted to reverse government policy,
and even members of Thatcher’s own party threatened to revolt. Thatcher refused
to abandon her policies.
A political crisis was averted only after war broke
out when Argentina invaded the Falkland Islands, a British dependency in the
South Atlantic that is also claimed by Argentina. The Falkland War released a
mood of defiance in Britain in the wake of decades of international setbacks.
Following Britain’s victory in the war, the Conservatives won a resounding
electoral victory in 1983. However, their 150-seat majority came almost
entirely from the southeast, where the benefits of monetarism were felt most.
The election victory allowed for the continuation
of Conservative economic policies, as well as an attack on the social programs
that had been the backbone of Labour policy for half a century. When the
government announced that it would close inefficient coal pits in 1983, the
miners again went on strike, but this time there was no compromise offered.
Despite its heavy cost to the economy, Thatcher allowed the strike to last an
entire year. Violent confrontations and hardships for thousands of mining
families resulted. In the end, the strike collapsed.
By the mid-1980s monetarist policy had brought down
interest rates and mortgages for an increasing number of homeowners. It had
dramatically curbed inflation, and the remaining British industries slowly
became internationally competitive. At the same time, social programs came
under attack with deep cuts in the National Health Service and in the budgets
of local government. Conservative support was now evenly balanced between
traditional upper-class Conservative voters and the lower middle classes,
including skilled workers who saw their standard of living rise and their
values of work, family, and personal responsibility vindicated.
The successes of Thatcherism were tempered by the
new social divisions it created. Scotland, Wales, and northern England all
became economic backwaters; their industrial bases were in ruins, and an entire
generation of workers was unemployed. Moreover, the new wealth that monetarism
created—in the financial industry, real estate, and technology—led to many
displays of luxury among the newly rich. The new wealth contrasted sharply with
the loss of income experienced by many inner-city residents and unemployed
middle-aged males. Conservative support slipped in the polls, and members of
the party revolted against Thatcher, who resigned in 1990.
K4
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Attempts at Peace in Ireland
|
In Ireland, the uneasy settlement that had kept
Northern Ireland part of Britain exploded in the late 1960s. In 1968 Northern
Ireland’s Catholic minority launched a series of protests against
discrimination in employment and housing. The protests led to increasing
violence between Catholic and Protestant groups. British troops were sent to
keep the peace in cities such as Belfast, which had large concentrations of
Catholics among the majority Protestant population. These troops became the
target of violence, and guerrilla warfare followed. Beginning in 1973 the Irish
Republican Army (IRA) targeted prominent sites in England, bombing subway
stations, department stores, and tourist locations.
For the next 25 years Catholic and Protestant
paramilitary groups waged a deadly battle. Catholics fought to create a single
Ireland; Protestants fought to maintain union with Britain. Almost every effort
toward peace was sabotaged by acts of violence by one side or the other. By the
early 1980s, hunger strikes conducted by IRA prisoners in Northern Ireland
heightened political tensions and fueled fears that the province’s moderate Catholics
would become radicalized. These concerns led the British government to pursue a
policy of close cooperation with the Irish government to achieve peace in
Northern Ireland. In 1985 Thatcher and Irish prime minister Garret FitzGerald
signed the Anglo-Irish Agreement, which gave Ireland a consultative role in the
administration of Northern Ireland.
Anglo-Irish cooperation provided fresh momentum to the peace
process, and in 1993 the British and Irish governments issued a joint peace
proposal called the Downing Street Declaration—a document intended to form the
basis for peace negotiations. In an important breakthrough, the IRA announced
in 1994 that it would suspend its paramilitary operations in favor of peace
talks. However, British demands that all-party peace talks could not proceed
until the IRA began disarming were rejected by the IRA, and in 1996 the IRA
broke its cease-fire with a renewed campaign of violence.
K5
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Conservative Decline and the Rise of New Labour
|
Thatcher’s Conservative successor as prime minister, John
Major, inherited a badly divided party, a country that had grown tired of
Conservative rule, and a major dispute over the European Community, which was
moving toward greater integration. In 1991 the major European powers agreed on
the Maastricht Treaty, which created the European Union (EU) and took the next
steps toward the establishment of a single economic union. The treaty tied the
exchange rates of European currencies together and proposed to create a single,
unified currency, the euro, in 1999. It was proposed that monetary policy
follow the lines that had already been adopted by Britain. However, other
aspects of the EU’s social and economic policy were bitterly opposed by
Thatcherite Conservatives as being too favorable toward labor and too expensive
for the government.
Major worked hard to keep his own party
together and to maintain the loyalty of key ministers. There was widespread
expectation that Labour would return to power in 1992, but Major surprised the
pollsters and many in his own party when the Conservatives won reelection.
However, voters soon lost confidence in the Conservatives. In the following
year the government’s approval rating sank to just 18 percent despite strong
economic growth and a new peace initiative in Northern Ireland. Major secured
parliamentary acceptance of the Maastricht Treaty by threatening his own party
defectors with new elections. In 1995 Major took the calculated risk of
resigning as chairman of the party. He ran again for the position, hoping to
solidify his control of the Conservatives by showing that he was the only
candidate with enough support to lead the party. Major was reelected, but a
third of the party voted against him. The Conservatives were now fragmented
beyond repair.
The loss of the 1992 elections had a
profound impact on the Labour Party. For nearly a decade, Labour had been
attempting to moderate its policies and distance itself from ties to the
unions. It developed a new platform that would build upon Britain’s economic
recovery, but that would also allow a more equitable distribution of the new
wealth that was being created.
In 1994 the Labour Party elected Tony Blair, a
young lawyer, as its leader. Under the title New Labour, Blair insisted that
his party abandon its nearly century-old commitment to creating a socialist
state. Blair benefited immediately from a series of scandals involving
Conservative ministers and Members of Parliament. The public spectacle
surrounding Prince Charles and Princess Diana, whose marital infidelities were
openly discussed on national television and who were finally divorced in 1996,
also hurt the Conservatives, who were strong supporters of the monarchy.
Despite the continued economic boom—by 1996 inflation had nearly disappeared,
unemployment was the lowest in Europe, and growth the highest—Labour led the
Conservatives in polls by a significant margin.
K6
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Labour’s Return to Power
|
The general elections of 1997 gave the Labour Party the
greatest landslide victory of the century and its largest-ever majority of 179
seats in the Parliament. The Conservative Party suffered its worst electoral
defeat of the century, and John Major resigned as party leader. As the United
Kingdom’s youngest prime minister since the 19th century, Blair seemed to speak
for a new generation and a new Britain.
Blair attempted to maintain his centrist approach
to government against the demands of the traditional Labour constituencies for
social justice and the redistribution of wealth. In a bold beginning, he made
the Bank of England independent of government. This move was designed to prevent
monetary policy from being affected by political issues. In addition, he
supported Parliament’s decision to reconstitute the ancient parliaments of
Scotland and Wales, giving them more regional control and political
independence.
Blair also worked closely with Irish prime minister
Bertie Ahern to revive the stalled peace negotiations in Northern Ireland. In
April 1998 a new peace accord was signed that had strong backing from the
British and Irish governments. Known as the Good Friday (or Belfast) Agreement,
the accord authorized the creation of a semiautonomous assembly for Northern
Ireland to replace direct rule of the province by the United Kingdom. The
accord won overwhelming endorsement from voters in Ireland and Northern
Ireland, and in December 1999 the United Kingdom formally transferred power to
the new provincial assembly. However, an impasse between Catholic and
Protestant groups over the pace of the Irish Republican Army’s disarmament
forced the United Kingdom to suspend the assembly in February 2000. Provincial
rule was restored in May, but the disarmament issue remained unresolved and a
source of persistent political tension.
Under Blair, the United Kingdom continued to play
an active role in the European Union (EU). However, Britain’s strong economy
and monetary policy provided little incentive to accept the unified European
currency, the euro. Blair’s government backed away from its commitment to a
complete economic union with the other EU countries because of the cost. In
addition, the economic union had always been unpopular with many Britons. In
early 1998 Blair announced a wait-and-see attitude toward monetary integration,
an attitude that he maintained even as 11 EU countries officially adopted the
euro in 1999.
In another move to modernize and streamline
the government, in November 1999 Blair made good on a campaign promise to strip
many of the hereditary peers in the House of Lords of their right to sit and
vote in Parliament. The House of Lords Act eliminated all but 92 of the more than
750 seats held by hereditary members of Parliament’s upper house.
K7
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Labour’s Second Term
|
The Labour Party won its second consecutive
landslide victory in the June 2001 general elections, gaining the largest
majority ever held by a British party in its second term. The elections were an
enormous victory for the Labour Party and the centrist policies of Blair, who
won a second term as prime minister.
Soon after the elections the impasse over the pace
of IRA disarmament again threatened to derail the peace process in Northern
Ireland. The British government briefly suspended the provincial assembly on
two more occasions in mid-2001 to prevent the government’s collapse. Blair
welcomed an announcement by the IRA in October that it had begun to disarm, as
did key Protestant leaders, and the assembly resumed operations the following
month. However, continued conflict among Northern Ireland’s political parties
led the British government to reimpose direct rule of the province in 2002.
Following the suspension, Blair and Irish prime minister Bertie Ahern renewed
negotiations in an effort to restore operations of the provincial assembly.
In the wake of the September 11 attacks
on the United States in 2001, Blair proclaimed that the United Kingdom would
stand “shoulder to shoulder” with the United States in the effort to root out
global terrorism. More than 100 British citizens were among the thousands of
people who died in the attacks. Blair began an intensive round of diplomatic
negotiations that took him to many European capitals and to a host of Muslim
countries—including Egypt, Oman, and Pakistan—to build international support
for action against the terrorists. In October the United Kingdom sent British
forces to participate in the U.S.-led assault on Afghanistan’s Taliban regime,
which was accused of harboring terrorists. Additional British troops were
deployed to Afghanistan in December 2001 and March 2002.
As the conflict in Afghanistan subsided, the
Labour government maintained its strong support for U.S foreign policy,
including the U.S.-led war against the government of Iraqi leader Saddam
Hussein. Blair—following the lead of U.S. president George W. Bush—accused
Hussein of stockpiling weapons of mass destruction and of posing a serious
threat to regional and global security, and he offered to contribute British
military forces to a preemptive U.S.-led attack on Iraq. Blair’s position put
him at odds with the leaders of many European countries, including France and
Germany, who preferred to work through the United Nations (UN) to ensure Iraq’s
disarmament. Blair also faced intense opposition from many Britons, including
members of the Labour Party, who opposed military action against Iraq. In March
2003 British forces joined the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, despite a failure to
secure a UN resolution explicitly sanctioning the action. The subsequent
failure to find weapons of mass destruction in Iraq opened Blair to criticism
that he had led the United Kingdom to war on the basis of unreliable
intelligence. See U.S.-Iraq War.
K8
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Labour’s Third Term
|
Blair called a general election in May 2005. The
Labour Party won its first-ever third consecutive victory, giving Blair a third
term as prime minister. Labour won 356 seats, giving it a solid but much
reduced majority in the 646-seat House of Commons. Analysts said Labour’s
slimmer majority reflected voter discontent with Blair’s decision to support
the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq. The Liberal Democrats, who opposed Britain’s
involvement in the war, increased their representation in the House of Commons,
winning 62 seats. The Conservatives, who waged an aggressive campaign, picked
up 33 seats, bringing their total to 197.
On July 7, 2005, four bomb explosions struck
London during the morning rush hour. The bombings targeted trains in the subway
system known as the tube and a double-decker bus. The bombings appeared to be a
coordinated attack, with three of them detonating almost simultaneously and the
fourth nearly an hour later. Prime Minister Blair said it was clear the
bombings were a terrorist attack timed to coincide with the opening of the
Group of Eight (G-8) summit in Scotland. The bombings killed 56 people and wounded
about 700 others.
London’s Metropolitan Police Force, commonly known as
Scotland Yard, conducted an investigation that soon identified four British
Muslim men as the suspected bombers. They were among those killed in the
attacks. Three of the suspects were British nationals of Pakistani descent from
West Yorkshire. Pakistani officials confirmed the men had visited Pakistan in
2004, but any connection between the visits and the bombers’ motivations
remained unclear. The fourth suspect was a Jamaican-born resident from
Buckinghamshire. Exactly two weeks after the July 7 bombings, London’s
transportation system became the target of a second coordinated attempt to set
off explosive devices. However, the bombs failed to explode, and there were no
casualties.
Blair stepped down as prime minister in June 2007,
and the Labour Party chose Gordon Brown as Blair’s successor. Blair’s
resignation came at a time when Labour popularity was at a low ebb, in part
because of the ongoing war in Iraq, in part because of unmet promises to reform
and improve healthcare and education, and in part because of party scandals,
including accusations that peerages were awarded in return for large
contributions to the party. As chancellor of the exchequer in Blair’s
government, Brown was noted for his prudent economic management under which
Britain had enjoyed a decade of economic growth.
Blair enjoyed a final success before leaving
office. In May 2007 longtime foes took office in a power-sharing government in
Northern Ireland as self-rule was restored to the troubled region. Ian Paisley,
leader of the predominantly Protestant Democratic Unionist Party, was sworn in
as Northern Ireland’s first minister. Martin McGuinness, a former IRA commander
and chief negotiator for the largely Roman Catholic Sinn Fein, became deputy
first minister. In 1998 Blair, along with Ireland’s prime minister Bertie
Ahern, had brokered the peace accord that led to the power-sharing government. See
also Northern Ireland Conflict.
Fifty years of Labour Party dominance ended in
Scotland when the separatist Scottish Nationalist Party narrowly defeated
Labour in 2007 parliamentary elections. One of the party’s main goals was to
hold a referendum on Scottish independence, but its narrow margin of victory
made such a decisive step unlikely in the near future.