Difference between revisions of "History Subject"
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**[[The Growth of Socialism]] | **[[The Growth of Socialism]] | ||
*[[Navy Laws]] | *[[Navy Laws]] | ||
+ | |||
===[[WWI]]=== | ===[[WWI]]=== | ||
*[[War Weariness]] | *[[War Weariness]] | ||
Line 386: | Line 387: | ||
*[[How Military Developments helped Defeat Germany in 1918]] | *[[How Military Developments helped Defeat Germany in 1918]] | ||
*[[Evolution of Military Tactics and Technology through WWI]] | *[[Evolution of Military Tactics and Technology through WWI]] | ||
− | *[[Ludendorff]] | + | *[[Ludendorff Offensive]] |
*[[German Spring Offensive]] | *[[German Spring Offensive]] | ||
*[[Allied Advance during The Hundred Days]] | *[[Allied Advance during The Hundred Days]] | ||
+ | |||
===[[Germany Surrenders]]=== | ===[[Germany Surrenders]]=== | ||
*[[Impact of the Blockade]] | *[[Impact of the Blockade]] | ||
Line 479: | Line 481: | ||
*[[Yalta Conference]] | *[[Yalta Conference]] | ||
*[[Potsdam Conference]] | *[[Potsdam Conference]] | ||
+ | *[[Tehran Conference]] | ||
*[[Division of Germany]] | *[[Division of Germany]] | ||
*[[Capitalism]] | *[[Capitalism]] | ||
Line 493: | Line 496: | ||
**[[Atom Bomb]] | **[[Atom Bomb]] | ||
**[[Dropping the H-Bomb]] | **[[Dropping the H-Bomb]] | ||
+ | |||
===[[Iron Curtain]]=== | ===[[Iron Curtain]]=== | ||
*[[Soviet Expansion in Eastern Europe]] | *[[Soviet Expansion in Eastern Europe]] | ||
Line 523: | Line 527: | ||
**[[Yuri Gagarin]] | **[[Yuri Gagarin]] | ||
**[[Apollo]] | **[[Apollo]] | ||
− | ===[[The 'Thaw]]=== | + | ===[[The 'Thaw']]=== |
*[[Hungary]] | *[[Hungary]] | ||
**[[Hungarian Uprising]] | **[[Hungarian Uprising]] | ||
Line 529: | Line 533: | ||
*[[U2 Crisis]] | *[[U2 Crisis]] | ||
*[[Paris Peace Summit]] | *[[Paris Peace Summit]] | ||
+ | |||
===Transformation of the [[Cold War]]=== | ===Transformation of the [[Cold War]]=== | ||
*[[Berlin Wall]] | *[[Berlin Wall]] | ||
Line 702: | Line 707: | ||
*[[Iraq's Stability at the end of Bush's Presidency]] | *[[Iraq's Stability at the end of Bush's Presidency]] | ||
− | ==Britain | + | ==Medicine and Health in Britain: c1000 to the Present Day== |
− | ===Medicine | + | ====[[Medieval Medicine in England]]==== |
− | + | *[[England]] | |
+ | *[[Medieval]] | ||
+ | *[[Medicine]] | ||
+ | *[[Beliefs on Causes of Medieval Illnesses]] | ||
+ | **[[Theory of the Four Humours]] | ||
+ | **[[Misma Theory]] | ||
+ | **[[Hippocratic Medicine]] | ||
+ | **[[Galeanic Medicine]] | ||
*[[Different Approaches in Medieval Medicine]] | *[[Different Approaches in Medieval Medicine]] | ||
− | |||
− | |||
*[[Medieval Doctors]] | *[[Medieval Doctors]] | ||
**[[Training of Medieval Doctors]] | **[[Training of Medieval Doctors]] | ||
− | |||
===[[Progress in Medieval Medicine]]=== | ===[[Progress in Medieval Medicine]]=== | ||
*[[Christianity]] | *[[Christianity]] | ||
− | **[[ | + | **[[Christianity and Medieval Medicine]] |
*[[Medieval Hospitals]] | *[[Medieval Hospitals]] | ||
*[[Islam]] | *[[Islam]] | ||
Line 719: | Line 728: | ||
*[[Medieval Surgery]] | *[[Medieval Surgery]] | ||
**[[Medieval Surgical Theory]] | **[[Medieval Surgical Theory]] | ||
+ | **[[Medieval Hospital Care]] | ||
+ | *[[Progress in Medieval Medicine]] | ||
===[[Public Health in the Middle Ages]]=== | ===[[Public Health in the Middle Ages]]=== | ||
*[[Towns and Monasteries in the Middle Ages]] | *[[Towns and Monasteries in the Middle Ages]] | ||
Line 725: | Line 736: | ||
**[[Beliefs about Treament and Prevention of the Black Death]] | **[[Beliefs about Treament and Prevention of the Black Death]] | ||
===The Beginnings of Change in Medicine=== | ===The Beginnings of Change in Medicine=== | ||
− | ====[[ | + | ====[[Medical Renaissance in Britain]]==== |
*[[Renaissance]] | *[[Renaissance]] | ||
+ | *[[Continuity in Medical Renaissance Britain]] | ||
+ | *[[Thomas Sydenham]] | ||
*[[Challenges to Medical Authority in Anatomy, Physiology and Surgery]] | *[[Challenges to Medical Authority in Anatomy, Physiology and Surgery]] | ||
*[[Vesalius]] | *[[Vesalius]] | ||
Line 954: | Line 967: | ||
*[[Windrush]] | *[[Windrush]] | ||
*[[Claudia Jones]] | *[[Claudia Jones]] | ||
+ | *[[Post-Empire Migration to Britain from Africa and Asia]] | ||
+ | **[[Idi Amin]] | ||
+ | *[[Commonwealth]] | ||
+ | *[[Falklands War]] | ||
+ | ===Britain's Relationship with Europe in 20th Century=== | ||
+ | *[[Britain's Relationship with Europe post-WWII]] | ||
+ | *[[Cold War]] | ||
+ | **[[End of the Cold War]] | ||
+ | *[[European Union]] | ||
+ | **[[British Membership of European Union]] | ||
+ | *[[Migration between Europe and Britain]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Norman England, c1066-c1100== | ||
+ | ===The Normans: Conquest and Control=== | ||
+ | *[[Normans]] | ||
+ | *[[Causes of Norman Conquest]] | ||
+ | **[[Edward the Confessor]] | ||
+ | *[[Claims to the British Throne in 1066]] | ||
+ | *[[Military Aspects of the Norman Conquest]] | ||
+ | **[[Battle of Stamford Bridge]] | ||
+ | **[[Battle of Hastings]] | ||
+ | *[[Anglo-Saxon Military Tactics in 1066]] | ||
+ | *[[Norman Military Tactics in 1066]] | ||
+ | *[[Military Innovations during Norman Conquest]] | ||
+ | ===Establishing Control after the [[Norman Conquest]]=== | ||
+ | *[[Harrying of the North]] | ||
+ | *[[Revolts against Norman Control, 1067-1075]] | ||
+ | *[[King William]] | ||
+ | *[[King William II]] | ||
+ | ===[[British Life under the Normans]]=== | ||
+ | *[[Feudalism]] | ||
+ | *[[Goverment]] | ||
+ | *[[Norman Government]] | ||
+ | **[[Norman Patronage]] | ||
+ | *[[Anglo-Saxon and Norman Government Systems]] | ||
+ | *[[Aristocracy]] | ||
+ | **[[Anglo-Saxon and Norman Society]] | ||
+ | *[[Military Service under Norman Rule]] | ||
+ | *[[Norman Justice and Legal System]] | ||
+ | *[[Domesday Book]] | ||
+ | *[[Anglo-Saxon and Norman Life]] | ||
+ | *[[Norman Forest Law]] | ||
+ | ===[[Norman Church and Monasticism]]=== | ||
+ | *[[Norman Church]] | ||
+ | *[[Anglo-Saxon Church before 1066]] | ||
+ | *[[Archbishop Lanfranc]] | ||
+ | **[[Lanfranc's Reform of the English Church]] | ||
+ | *[[Norman Church Organisation in Britain]] | ||
+ | *[[Relations between the Church and State in Norman Britain]] | ||
+ | *[[William II]] | ||
+ | **[[William II and the Church]] | ||
+ | *[[Wealth of the Church in Norman Britain]] | ||
+ | *[[British Relations with the Papacy in Norman Era]] | ||
+ | **[[Papacy]] | ||
+ | *[[The Investiture Controversy]] | ||
+ | *[[Norman Monastic Reforms]] | ||
+ | *[[Norman Monastic Life]] | ||
+ | *[[Norman Education]] | ||
+ | *[[Latin]] | ||
+ | **[[Latin Use in Norman Era]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | ==Edexcel History Key Stage 4== | ||
+ | ===Crime and Punishment in Britain, c1000-Present=== | ||
+ | =====Nature and Changing Definitions of Criminal Activity, Medieval England===== | ||
+ | *[[Anglo-Saxon]] | ||
+ | *[[Norman]] | ||
+ | **[[Norman Conquest]] | ||
+ | *[[Medieval England]] | ||
+ | *[[Crimes against People, Property and Authority in Medieval England]] | ||
+ | **[['Social' Crime in Medieval England]] | ||
+ | *[[Definition of Crime after Norman Conquest]] | ||
+ | **[[William I]] | ||
+ | **[[Forest Laws]] | ||
+ | ===Nature of Law Enforcement and Punishment, Medieval England=== | ||
+ | *[[Law Enforcement in Anglo-Saxon to Medieval England]] | ||
+ | *[[Penal System and Punishment in Anglo-Saxon to Medieval England]] | ||
+ | **[[Saxon Wergild]] | ||
+ | ===[[Case Studies on Crime and Punishment in Medieval England]]=== | ||
+ | *[[Influence of the Church in Early 13th Century Crime and Punishment]] | ||
+ | *[[Significance of Sanctuary and Benefit of Clergy]] | ||
+ | *[[Trial by Ordeal]] | ||
+ | ===Nature and Changing Definitions of Criminal Activity, early Modern England=== | ||
+ | *[[Crimes against People, Property and Authority in early Modern England]] | ||
+ | **[[Heresy]] | ||
+ | **[[Treason]] | ||
+ | *[[New Definitions of Crime in 16th Century]] | ||
+ | ===Nature of Law Enforcement and Punishment, early Modern England=== | ||
+ | *[[Law Enforcement in early Modern England]] | ||
+ | *[[Penal System and Punishment in early Modern England]] | ||
+ | ===[[Case Studies on Crime and Punishment in early Modern England]]=== | ||
+ | *[[Gunpowder Plot]] | ||
+ | *[[Matthew Hopkins and Witch Hunts 1645-47]] | ||
+ | ===Nature and Changing Definitions of Criminal Activity, 18th-19th Century Britain=== | ||
+ | *[[Crimes against People, Property and Authority in 18th-19th Century Britain]] | ||
+ | **[[Highway Robbery]] | ||
+ | **[[Poaching]] | ||
+ | **[[Smuggling]] | ||
+ | *[[Changing Definitions of Crime in 18th-19th Century]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Nature of Law Enforcement and Punishment, 18th-19th Century Britain=== | ||
+ | *[[Law Enforcement in 18th-19th Century Britain]] | ||
+ | **[[Fielding Brothers]] | ||
+ | **[[Development of a Police Force in 18th-19th Century Britain]] | ||
+ | **[[CID]] | ||
+ | *[[Penal System and Punishment in 18th-19th Century Britain]] | ||
+ | **[[Prison Reform in 18th-19th Century Britain]] | ||
+ | ***[[John Howard]] | ||
+ | ***[[Elizabeth Fry]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===[[Case Studies on Crime and Punishment in 18th-19th Century Britain]]=== | ||
+ | *[[Pentonville Prison in mid-19th Century]] | ||
+ | *[[Robert Peel]] | ||
+ | ===Nature and Changing Definitions of Criminal Activity, Modern Britain=== | ||
+ | *[[Crimes against People, Property and Authority in modern Britain]] | ||
+ | *[[Changing Definitions of Crime in modern Britain]] | ||
+ | **[[Racism]] | ||
+ | ===Nature of Law Enforcement and Punishment, Modern Britain=== | ||
+ | *[[Law Enforcement in modern Britain]] | ||
+ | **[[Neighbourhood Watch]] | ||
+ | **[[Changes within the Police Force in modern Britain]] | ||
+ | *[[Penal System and Punishment in modern Britain]] | ||
+ | **[[Abolition of the Death Penalty in Britain]] | ||
+ | **[[Open Prisons]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===[[Case Studies on Crime and Punishment in modern Britain]]=== | ||
+ | *[[Conscientious Objectors in First World War]] | ||
+ | **[[First World War]] | ||
+ | *[[Conscientious Objectors in Second World War]] | ||
+ | **[[Second World War]] | ||
+ | *[[Derek Bentley Case]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Whitechapel, c1870-c1900: crime, policing and the inner city== | ||
+ | *[[Whitechapel]] | ||
+ | *[[Housing and Overcrowding in Whitechapel]] | ||
+ | **[[Peabody Estate]] | ||
+ | *[[Workhouses]] | ||
+ | **[[Workhouses in Whitechapel]] | ||
+ | *[[Life in Whitechapel]] | ||
+ | *[[Reasons for Crime in Whitechapel]] | ||
+ | *[[Significance of Whitechapel as an inner city area]] | ||
+ | ===[[Immigration to Whitechapel]]=== | ||
+ | *[[Irish Immigration to Whitechapel]] | ||
+ | *[[Eastern European Immigration to Whitechapel]] | ||
+ | *[[Jewish Immigration to Whitechapel, 1880s]] | ||
+ | *[[Socialism]] | ||
+ | **[[Socialism in Whitechapel]] | ||
+ | *[[Anarchism]] | ||
+ | **[[Anarchism in Whitechapel]] | ||
+ | ===[[Policing in Whitechapel]]=== | ||
+ | *[[H Division]] | ||
+ | *[[Difficulties of Policing Whitechapel]] | ||
+ | *[[Lifestyle Problems in Whitechapel]] | ||
+ | *[[Whitechapel Vigilance Committee]] | ||
+ | *[[Investigative Policing in Whitechapel]] | ||
+ | *[[Problems caused by the Need for Cooperative Policing]] | ||
+ | *[[Jack the Ripper] | ||
+ | **[[Influence of the Media in the 'Ripper' Murders]] | ||
+ | *[[Metropolitan Police in late-19th Century Britain]] | ||
+ | *[[CID]] | ||
+ | *[[Sir Charles Warren]] | ||
+ | ===[[Whitechapel, c1870-c1900: crime, policing and the inner city Sources]]=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Medicine in Britain, c1250-present== | ||
+ | ===Ideas about the Cause of Disease and Illness, Medieval England=== | ||
+ | *[[Supernatural Explanations for Disease in medieval England]] | ||
+ | *[[Religious Explanations for Disease in medieval England]] | ||
+ | *[[Rational Explanations for Disease in medieval England]] | ||
+ | **[[Theory of Four Humours]] | ||
+ | **[[Miasma Theory]] | ||
+ | **[[Hippocratic Theory]] | ||
+ | **[[Galeanic Theory]] | ||
+ | ===Approaches to Prevention and Treatment, Medieval England=== | ||
+ | *[[Preventing Disease in medieval England]] | ||
+ | *[[Treating Disease in medieval England]] | ||
+ | *[[New Approaches to Hospital Care in 13th Century]] | ||
+ | *[[Traditional Approaches to Hospital Care in 13th Century]] | ||
+ | ===[[Case Studies in medieval England]]=== | ||
+ | *[[Black Death]] | ||
+ | ===Ideas about the Cause of Disease and Illness, Medical Renaissance in England=== | ||
+ | *[[Medical Renaissance]] | ||
+ | *[[Explanations for Disease and Illness in Medical Renaissance England]] | ||
+ | **[[Thomas Sydenham]] | ||
+ | **[[Printing Press]] | ||
+ | **[[Royal Society]] | ||
+ | ***[[Impact of Royal Society on the British Medical Renaissance]] | ||
+ | ===Approaches to Prevention and Treatment, Medical Renaissance in England=== | ||
+ | *[[Prevention, Treatment and Care in Medical Renaissance England]] | ||
+ | *[[Changes to Prevention, Treatment and Care in Medical Renaissance England]] | ||
+ | **[[Vesalius]] | ||
+ | ===[[Case Studies in Medical Renaissance England]]=== | ||
+ | *[[William Harvey]] | ||
+ | *[[Great Plague in London]] | ||
+ | ===Ideas about the Cause of Disease and Illness, 18th-19th Century Britain=== | ||
+ | *[[Explanations for Disease and Illness in 18th-19th Century Britain]] | ||
+ | **[[Louis Pasteur]] | ||
+ | **[[Robert Koch]] | ||
+ | ===Approaches to Prevention and Treatment, 18th-19th Century Britain=== | ||
+ | *[[Change in Care and Treatment in 18th-19th Century Britain]] | ||
+ | **[[Florence Nightingale]] | ||
+ | **[[Anaesthetics]] | ||
+ | *[[New Approaches to Disease Prevention in 18th-19th Century Britain]] | ||
+ | **[[Vaccinations]] | ||
+ | **[[Public Health Act 1875]] | ||
+ | ===[[Case Studies in 18th-19th Century Britain]]=== | ||
+ | *[[Edward Jenner]] | ||
+ | *[[Fighting Cholera in London,1854]] | ||
+ | ===Ideas about the Cause of Disease and Illness, Modern Britain=== | ||
+ | *[[Understanding Illness and Disease in Modern Britain]] | ||
+ | *[[Improvements in Diagnosis in Modern Britain]] | ||
+ | ===Approaches to Prevention and Treatment, Modern Britain=== | ||
+ | *[[Changes to Care and Treatment in Modern Britain]] | ||
+ | **[[NHS]] | ||
+ | *[[Advances in Medicine in Modern Britain]] | ||
+ | *[[New Approaches to preventing Disease in Modern Britain]] | ||
+ | ===[[Case Studies in Modern Britain]]=== | ||
+ | *[[Development of Penicillin]] | ||
+ | *[[Fight against Lung Cancer in 21st Century]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==British Sector of the Western Front, 1914-18: injuries, treatment and the trenches== | ||
+ | *[[World War One]] | ||
+ | *[[Western Front]] | ||
+ | *[[War in Flanders]] | ||
+ | *[[Ypres Salient]] | ||
+ | **[[Somme]] | ||
+ | **[[Arras]] | ||
+ | **[[Cambrai]] | ||
+ | *[[Trench Warfare]] | ||
+ | *[[Use of Mines in World War One]] | ||
+ | *[[Medical Treatment in World War One]] | ||
+ | *[[Illness and Injury during World War One]] | ||
+ | *[[RAMC]] | ||
+ | *[[FANY]] | ||
+ | *[[Transport in World War One]] | ||
+ | *[[Treatment Areas in World War One]] | ||
+ | *[[Significance of Western Front in Surgical Advances]] | ||
+ | *[[Medicine in Early 20th Century]] | ||
+ | ===[[The British Sector of the Western Front, 1914-18: injuries, treatment and the trenches Sources]]=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Warfare and British Society, c1250-present== | ||
+ | ===Nature of Medieval Warfare in England=== | ||
+ | *[[Medieval English Army]] | ||
+ | **[[Infantry]] | ||
+ | *[[Links between Social Structure and Army Command in Medieval England]] | ||
+ | *[[New Weapons and Formations in Medieval Warfare]] | ||
+ | **[[Longbow]] | ||
+ | **[[Schiltrons]] | ||
+ | *[[Importance of Gunpowder in Medieval Warfare]] | ||
+ | ===Experience of Medieval War=== | ||
+ | *[[Recruitment and Training in Medieval Warfare]] | ||
+ | *[[Impact of Medieval War on Civilians]] | ||
+ | **[[Feudalism]] | ||
+ | ===Case Studies in Medieval Warfare=== | ||
+ | *[[Battle of Falkirk, 1298]] | ||
+ | *[[Battle of Agincourt, 1415]] | ||
+ | ===Nature of Warfare in the early modern period=== | ||
+ | *[[Army in 16th and 17th Century]] | ||
+ | *[[Developments in the Army in 16th and 17th Century]] | ||
+ | *[[Developments in Weaponry in 16th and 17th Century]] | ||
+ | ===Experience of War in the early modern period=== | ||
+ | *[[Recruitment and Training in early modern British army]] | ||
+ | *[[Impact of early modern war on Civilians]] | ||
+ | ===Case Studies in early modern war=== | ||
+ | *[[Battle of Naseby]] | ||
+ | ===Nature of Warfare in 18th and 19th Century Britain=== | ||
+ | *[[Army in 18th and 19th Century Britain]] | ||
+ | *[[Developments in the Army in 18th and 19th Century Britain]] | ||
+ | *[[Developments in Weaponry in 18th and 19th Century British Warfare]] | ||
+ | *[[Impact of Industrialisation on Warfare]] | ||
+ | ===Experience of War in 18th and 19th Century Britain=== | ||
+ | *[[Recruitment and Training in 18th and 19th Century British Army]] | ||
+ | **[[Cardwell's Army Reform]] | ||
+ | *[[Impact of War on Civilians in 18th and 19th Century]] | ||
+ | ===Case Studies in 18th and 19th Century British Warfare=== | ||
+ | *[[Battle of Waterloo]] | ||
+ | *[[Battle of Balaclava]] | ||
+ | ===Nature of Modern British Warfare=== | ||
+ | *[[Army in Modern British Warfare]] | ||
+ | *[[Developments in the Army in Modern British Warfare]] | ||
+ | *[[Weaponry in Modern British Warfare]] | ||
+ | *[[Guerrilla Warfare]] | ||
+ | ===Experience of War in Modern Britain=== | ||
+ | *[[Recruitment and Training in Modern British Warfare]] | ||
+ | *[[Impact of War on Modern British Civilians]] | ||
+ | **[[World War One]] | ||
+ | **[[World War Two]] | ||
+ | ===Case Studies in Modern British Warfare=== | ||
+ | *[[Western Front and the Battle of the Somme]] | ||
+ | *[[Iraq War, 2003]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==London and the Second World War, 1939-45== | ||
+ | *[[World War Two]] | ||
+ | *[[London]] | ||
+ | **[[Context of London in World War Two]] | ||
+ | *[[Luftwaffe]] | ||
+ | *[[Preparations for World War Two in London]] | ||
+ | *[[Protecting London in World War Two]] | ||
+ | *[[Attacks on London in World War Two]] | ||
+ | **[[Black Saturday]] | ||
+ | **[[V2 attack on Deptford, 1944]] | ||
+ | *[[Bombs used in World War Two]] | ||
+ | *[[Blitz in London]] | ||
+ | **[[Impact of the Blitz on London Civilians]] | ||
+ | *[[Life going on in London during World War Two]] | ||
+ | *[[Morale in London during World War Two]] | ||
+ | *[[London's Response to World War Two]] | ||
+ | **[[Royal Family of Britain]] | ||
+ | **[[Queen Elizabeth II]] | ||
+ | **[[Cabinet War Rooms]] | ||
+ | *[['Dig for Victory' Campaign]] | ||
+ | *[[British Propaganda in World War Two]] | ||
+ | ===Sources for London and the Second World War, 1939-45=== | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Spain and the 'New World', c1490-c1555== | ||
+ | ===[[Discovering the 'New World']]=== | ||
+ | *[[Spain]] | ||
+ | **[[Spain in 1490]] | ||
+ | *[[New World]] | ||
+ | *[[Christopher Columbus]] | ||
+ | **[Columbus' Voyage to the New World]] | ||
+ | *[[Queen Isabella]] | ||
+ | *[[Christianity]] | ||
+ | ===[[Columbus in America]]=== | ||
+ | *[[La Navidad]] | ||
+ | *[[Exploring the Caribbean]] | ||
+ | *[[People of the New World]] | ||
+ | **[[Tainos]] | ||
+ | **[[Caribs]] | ||
+ | ***[[Conflict at Samana]] | ||
+ | *[[Discovering the Treasures of the New World]] | ||
+ | *[[Spain's Rivalry with Portugal over the New World]] |
Latest revision as of 16:29, 12 August 2019
Key Stage Wiki is looking for contributors to accelerate the process of creating the History curriculum pages.
Contents
- 1 History Key Stage 4
- 2 Understanding the Modern World
- 3 Germany, 1890-1945: Democracy and dictatorship
- 3.1 Germany and the Growth of Democracy
- 3.2 WWI
- 3.3 Weimar Democracy
- 3.4 Germany and the Depression
- 3.5 The Failure of Weimar Democracy
- 3.6 Establishing Hitler’s Dictatorship
- 3.7 The Experiences of Germans under the Nazis
- 3.8 The Impact of War on the German People
- 3.9 Social Policy under the Nazis
- 3.10 Opposition to the Nazis
- 4 Russia, 1894-1945: Tsardom and Communism
- 5 America,1920-1973: Opportunity and Inequality
- 6 Conflict and Tension: the First World War, 1894-1918
- 7 Conflict and Tension: The Inter-War Years, 1918-1939
- 8 Conflict and Tension between East and West, 1945-1971
- 9 Conflict and Tension in Asia,1950-1975
- 10 Conflict and Tension in the Gulf and Afghanistan, 1990-2009
- 11 Medicine and Health in Britain: c1000 to the Present Day
- 12 Britain: Power and the People: c1170 to the Present Day
- 12.1 Challenging Authority and Feudalism
- 12.2 Origins of Parliament
- 12.3 Challenging Royal Authority in Middle Age Britain
- 12.4 Reform and Reformers in 19th Century Britain
- 12.5 Workers Movements in 19th Century Britain
- 12.6 Equality and Rights in Modern Britain
- 12.7 Worker's Rights in Modern Britain
- 12.8 Minority Rights in Post-World War Two Britain
- 13 Britain: Migration, Empires and the People: c790 to the Present Day
- 13.1 Conquered and Conquerors in Early Medieval England
- 13.2 Origins of English Identity
- 13.3 Looking West in Middle Age Britain
- 13.4 Expansion of British Empire
- 13.5 British Expansion in Africa
- 13.6 Migration to, from and within Britain
- 13.7 Britain in the 20th Century
- 13.8 Legacy of British Empire
- 13.9 Britain's Relationship with Europe in 20th Century
- 14 Norman England, c1066-c1100
- 15 Edexcel History Key Stage 4
- 15.1 Crime and Punishment in Britain, c1000-Present
- 15.2 Nature of Law Enforcement and Punishment, Medieval England
- 15.3 Case Studies on Crime and Punishment in Medieval England
- 15.4 Nature and Changing Definitions of Criminal Activity, early Modern England
- 15.5 Nature of Law Enforcement and Punishment, early Modern England
- 15.6 Case Studies on Crime and Punishment in early Modern England
- 15.7 Nature and Changing Definitions of Criminal Activity, 18th-19th Century Britain
- 15.8 Nature of Law Enforcement and Punishment, 18th-19th Century Britain
- 15.9 Case Studies on Crime and Punishment in 18th-19th Century Britain
- 15.10 Nature and Changing Definitions of Criminal Activity, Modern Britain
- 15.11 Nature of Law Enforcement and Punishment, Modern Britain
- 15.12 Case Studies on Crime and Punishment in modern Britain
- 16 Whitechapel, c1870-c1900: crime, policing and the inner city
- 17 Medicine in Britain, c1250-present
- 17.1 Ideas about the Cause of Disease and Illness, Medieval England
- 17.2 Approaches to Prevention and Treatment, Medieval England
- 17.3 Case Studies in medieval England
- 17.4 Ideas about the Cause of Disease and Illness, Medical Renaissance in England
- 17.5 Approaches to Prevention and Treatment, Medical Renaissance in England
- 17.6 Case Studies in Medical Renaissance England
- 17.7 Ideas about the Cause of Disease and Illness, 18th-19th Century Britain
- 17.8 Approaches to Prevention and Treatment, 18th-19th Century Britain
- 17.9 Case Studies in 18th-19th Century Britain
- 17.10 Ideas about the Cause of Disease and Illness, Modern Britain
- 17.11 Approaches to Prevention and Treatment, Modern Britain
- 17.12 Case Studies in Modern Britain
- 18 British Sector of the Western Front, 1914-18: injuries, treatment and the trenches
- 19 Warfare and British Society, c1250-present
- 19.1 Nature of Medieval Warfare in England
- 19.2 Experience of Medieval War
- 19.3 Case Studies in Medieval Warfare
- 19.4 Nature of Warfare in the early modern period
- 19.5 Experience of War in the early modern period
- 19.6 Case Studies in early modern war
- 19.7 Nature of Warfare in 18th and 19th Century Britain
- 19.8 Experience of War in 18th and 19th Century Britain
- 19.9 Case Studies in 18th and 19th Century British Warfare
- 19.10 Nature of Modern British Warfare
- 19.11 Experience of War in Modern Britain
- 19.12 Case Studies in Modern British Warfare
- 20 London and the Second World War, 1939-45
- 21 Spain and the 'New World', c1490-c1555
History Key Stage 4
Understanding the Modern World
America, 1840-1895: Expansion and Consolidation
Expansion: Opportunities and Challenges
North America
Going West
Plains Indians
- Culture and Way of Life
- Early Government Policy
- Permanent Indian Frontier
- Relationship with the Plains Indians
Conflict across America
Conflict on the Plains
American Civil War
- Differences between North and South
- Slavery
- Westwards Expansion
- Free States Abolitionism
- Missouri Compromise
- John Brown
- Abraham Lincoln
- Jefferson Davis
- Social impact of the Civil War
- Economic impact of the Civil War
Aftermath of the Civil War
- 13th Amendment
- Civil Rights Act
- Rebuilding the South
- 1866-1877
- Carpetbaggers
- Federal and State Powers
Settlement of the West
The Resolution of the ‘Indian Problem’
- The Small Reservations Policy
- Attitudes towards Native Americans
- Battle of the Little Big Horn
- The Dawes Act
- Battle of Wounded Knee
- The Closing of the Frontier
Germany, 1890-1945: Democracy and dictatorship
Germany and the Growth of Democracy
Ruling Germany
- Germany
- Kaiser Wilhelm II
- Difficulties in Ruling Germany
- Rise of Parliamentary Government
- Influence of Prussian Militarism
- Industrialisation in Germany
- Social Reform
- Navy Laws
WWI
- War Weariness
- Economic Problems caused by WWI
- Defeat in WWI
- The End of German Monarchy
- The Crisis of 1923
Weimar Democracy
- Political Change and Unrest in Germany, 1919-1923
- Economic Recovery and Developments under Stresemann
- Gustav Stresemann
- Weimar Culture
Germany and the Depression
- Great Depression
- Adolf Hitler
- National Socialism
- Rise of Extremism in Germany
- Hitler’s Appeal to the Masses
The Failure of Weimar Democracy
Establishing Hitler’s Dictatorship
- Reichstag Fire
- Enabling Act
- Elimination of Political Opposition
- Trade Unions in Germany
- Ernst Rohm
- Night of the Long Knives
- Führer
The Experiences of Germans under the Nazis
Economic Changes under the Nazis
- Economic Benefits
- Economic Drawbacks
- Employment under the Nazis
- Rearmament
- Self-Sufficiency
- Economy during the War
The Impact of War on the German People
Social Policy under the Nazis
- Joseph Goebbels
- Nazi Propaganda
- Censorship under the Nazis
- Nazi Culture
- Repression and the Police State
- Heinrich Himmler
- SS
- Gestapo
Opposition to the Nazis
Russia, 1894-1945: Tsardom and Communism
The End of Tsardom
Russian Economy and Society
Nicholas II
Revolutionary Tensions in Russia
- Revolution
- Growth of Revolutionary Tensions
- 1905 Russian Revolution
- October Manifesto
- Attempts to reform Russia
- Dumas
- Pyotr Stolypin
WWI
- Impact of WWI on Tsarist Government
- Social Effects of WWI in Russia
- Economic Effects of WWI in Russia
- Unpopularity of the Romanovs
- Abdication of Nicholas I
Lenin’s New Society
The Provisional Government
- Communism
- Bolshevism
- Failure to deal with Russia’s problems
- Leon Trotsky
- Vladimir Lenin
- Rise of the Bolsheviks
- October Revolution
Lenin’s Dictatorship
Social and Economic Developments under Bolshevism
Stalin’s USSR
Joseph Stalin
- Lenin’s Succession
- Communist Control of Government
- Red Terror
- The Purges
- Stalin’s Army
- Stalin’s Secret Police
- Labour Camps under Stalin
- Censorship under Stalin
- Stalin’s Cult of Personality
- Propaganda under Stalin
Stalin’s Modernisation of the USSR
Impact of WWII on USSR
America,1920-1973: Opportunity and Inequality
American People and ‘The Boom’
The ‘Boom’
- Stock Market
- Benefits of the ‘Boom’
- Advertising and Consumer Society in 1920s America
- Hire Purchase
- Mass Production
- Wealth Inequality
- Republican Government Policies, 1920s
- Stock Market Boom
Social and Cultural Developments in 1920s America
- Entertainment in 1920s America
- Women in 1920s American Society
- Organised Crime
- Prohibition
- Racism in 1920s America
- Immigrants in 1920s America
- Red Scare
Bust - American’s Experiences of the Depression and New Deal
American Society during the Great Depression
- Unemployment during the Great Depression
- Farming during the Great Depression
- Businessmen during the Great Depression
- Herbert Hoover
- Franklin D. Roosevelt
- New Deal
- Republicans
- Roosevelt as President
- Pop Culture in Pre-War America
Impact of WWII
- WWII
- Impacts of WWII on America
- America’s Economic Recovery
- Lend Lease
- Exports in Post-War America
- Social Developments in Post-War America
Post-War America
Post-War American Society and Economy
- Consumerism
- Causes of Prosperity in Post-War America
- The American Dream
- McCarthyism
- Popular Culture in Post-War America
Civil Rights Movement
- Segregation Laws
- Martin Luther King
- Peaceful Protest
- Malcolm X
- Black Power Movement
- Civil Rights Act 1964
- Civil Rights Act 1968
America and the ‘Great Society’
Conflict and Tension: the First World War, 1894-1918
The Causes of the First World War
The Alliance System
- WWI
- The Triple Alliance
- Franco-Russian Alliance
- Relations between the ‘Entente’ powers
- Moroccan Crises (1905 and 1911)
- Crisis in the Balkans (1908-1909)
Anglo-German Rivalry
- Splendid Isolation
- Kaiser Wilhelm’s Foreign Policy
- Colonial Tensions between Britain and Germany
- European Rearmament pre-WWI
Outbreak of WWI
- Slav Nationalism
- Serbia
- Archduke Franz Ferdinand
- July Crisis
- Schlieffen Plan
- Why WWI broke out
- How WWI went from Tension to War
WWI: Stalemate
Schlieffen Plan
The Western Front
WWI on a Wider Scale
Ending WWI
Military Developments in 1918
- How Military Developments helped Defeat Germany in 1918
- Evolution of Military Tactics and Technology through WWI
- Ludendorff Offensive
- German Spring Offensive
- Allied Advance during The Hundred Days
Germany Surrenders
- Impact of the Blockade
- Abdication of the Kaiser
- Armistice
- Field Marshall Douglas Haig
- Ferdinand Foch
Conflict and Tension: The Inter-War Years, 1918-1939
Peacemaking
Armistice
- Aims of the Peacemakers
- Woodrow Wilson
- Georges Clemenceau
- David Lloyd George
- Success of the Peacemakers
Treaty of Versailles
The League of Nations
The Collapse of the League of Nations
Origins and Outbreak of the Second World War
Development of Tension pre-WWII
Escalation of Tension Pre-WWII
- Remilitarisation of the Rhineland
- Benito Mussolini
- Axis Forces
- Anti-Comintern Pact
- Anschluss
- Appeasement
- Sudetenland Crisis
- End of Appeasement
The Outbreak of World War II
- Occupation of Czechoslovakia
- Role of the USSR in WWII
- Invasion of Poland
- Outbreak of WWII
- September 1939
- Causes of WWII
Conflict and Tension between East and West, 1945-1971
The Origins of the Cold War
End of WWII
- Cold War
- Superpower
- Yalta Conference
- Potsdam Conference
- Tehran Conference
- Division of Germany
- Capitalism
- Communism
- USA
- USSR
- Joseph Stalin
- Winston Churchill
- Franklin D. Roosevelt
- Clement Attlee
- Harry Truman
- Nuclear Bombs
Iron Curtain
- Soviet Expansion in Eastern Europe
- US Policy against the Soviets
- Stalin's reaction to US Policy
- Cominform
- Comecon
- Yugoslavia
- Berlin Blockade
- Berlin Airlift
Development of the Cold War
Cold War Military Rivalries
The 'Thaw'
Transformation of the Cold War
- Berlin Wall
- Cuba
- Fidel Castro
- Bay of Pigs Invasion
- Nikita Khrushchev
- John F. Kennedy
- Czechoslovakia
- Brezhnev Doctrine
Easing of Cold War Tension
Conflict and Tension in Asia,1950-1975
Conflict in Korea
Causes of the Korean War
- Korea
- Nationalism
- USA
- China
- Division of Korea
- Kim Il Sung
- Syngman Rhee
- Invasion of South Korea, 1950
- USSR absence from UN
Development of the Korean War
- UN
- UN Campaign in North Korea
- UN Campaign in South Korea
- Inchon Landings
- Recapture of South Korea
- UN Advance into North Korea
- Chinese Intervention in Korean War
- General MacArthur
End of Korean War
- 38th Parallel
- Armistice in Korea
- Impact of the Korean War in Korea
- UN and Sino-American Relations post-Korean War
Conflict in Vietnam
- Vietnam
- French Colonial Rule in Vietnam
- Dien Bien Phu
- Geneva Agreement, 1954
- Civil War in South Vietnam
- Vietcong
- Guerilla Warfare
- Ho Chi Minh
US Involvement in Vietnam
- Communism
- Capitalism
- Domino Theory
- Dwight D. Eisenhower
- John F. Kennedy
- Intervention in Vietnam under Eisenhower and Kennedy
- Strategic Hamlets Programme
- Johnson's War
- Gulf of Tonkin
- US Response to Vietcong Tactics
- Mass Bombing Campaign in Vietnam
- Demands for Peace in Vietnam
- Student Protests Against Vietnam War in USA
- My Lai
- Search and Destroy Tactics
- Tet Offensive
Ending the Vietnam War
- Richard Nixon
- Vietnamisation
- Chemical Warfare
- Bombing Campaign 1970-72, Vietnam
- US Relations with China during Vietnam War
- Expansion of Vietnam War into Laos and Cambodia
Opposition to Vietnam War
- Kent State University
- Importance of Media and TV in influencing Public Opinion during Vietnam War
- Watergate Affair
End of the Vietnam War
- Paris Peace Talks
- Henry Kissinger
- Shuttle Diplomacy
- Role of Kissinger in ending Vietnam War
- US Withdrawal from Vietnam
- Fall of Saigon
- Problems in Vietnam in 1975
Conflict and Tension in the Gulf and Afghanistan, 1990-2009
Tensions in the Gulf
- Persian Gulf
- Iran
- Iraq
- Iran-Iraq War
- USA
- Russia
- International Interests in Iran and Iraq
- Israel
- Palestine
- Contribution of Israeli-Palestinian Conflict to Tension in the Gulf
Gulf War, 1990
- Iraqi Invasion of Kuwait
- George H.W. Bush
- Margaret Thatcher
- Role of Bush and Thatcher in First Gulf War
- UN Campaign against Saddam Hussein
- Consequences of the First Gulf War
- US Influence in the Gulf
War on Al-Qaeda
- Al-Qaeda
- Osama bin Laden
- 11 September Attacks
- Afghanistan
- Taliban
- Problems faced by Ethnic Groups in Afghanistan
War on Terror
- George W. Bush
- Tony Blair
- 2001 US/UK Operation in Afghanistan
- Overthrow and Collapse of the Taliban
- UN Peace Conference
- Hamid Karzai
Iraq War
- Saddam Hussein's Regime
- International Attitudes to Saddam Hussein
- Kurds
- Islam
- Iraq's links to Al-Qaeda
- Iraq's Reputation as a Rogue State
- Religious Divisions in Iraq
- Role of the UN in Iraq War
2003 Invasion of Iraq
- International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
- Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)
- Military Campaign in Iraq
- Western Interests in Iraq
- Downfall of Saddam Hussein
Impact of the Iraq War
- Impact of the Iraq War on the Iraqi People
- Insurgency in Iraq
- Elections after the Iraq War
- National Assembly
- Global Terrorism
- 2007 US Troop Surge
- Iraq's Stability at the end of Bush's Presidency
Medicine and Health in Britain: c1000 to the Present Day
Medieval Medicine in England
- England
- Medieval
- Medicine
- Beliefs on Causes of Medieval Illnesses
- Different Approaches in Medieval Medicine
- Medieval Doctors
Progress in Medieval Medicine
Public Health in the Middle Ages
The Beginnings of Change in Medicine
Medical Renaissance in Britain
- Renaissance
- Continuity in Medical Renaissance Britain
- Thomas Sydenham
- Challenges to Medical Authority in Anatomy, Physiology and Surgery
- Vesalius
- Pare
- William Harvey
- Opposition to Change in Renaissance Medicine
- Traditional Methods of Treatment in Renaissance Medicine
- New Methods of Treatment in Renaissance Medicine
- Quackery
- Plague
- Growth of Hospitals in Renaissance Britain
- Changes to the Training of Surgeons in Renaissance Britain
- John Hunter
- Innoculation
- Edward Jenner
- Vaccination
- Opposition to Vaccination and Innoculation
A Revolution in Medicine
- Germ Theory
- Louis Pasteur
- Robert Koch
- Paul Ehrlich
- Everyday Medical Treatments and Remedies in 19th Century
Surgical Revolution
- Anaesthetics
- Simpson
- Chloroform
- Antiseptics
- Joseph Lister
- Carbolic Acid
- Aseptic Surgery
- Surgical Procedures in the 19th Century
- Public Health Problems in Industrial Britain
- Cholera Epidemics
- Role of Public Health Reformers
- Local and National Government Involvement in Public Health Improvement in Industrial Britain
Modern Medicine
- Modern Treatment of Disease
- Development of the Pharmaceutical Industry
- Penicillin
- Modern New Diseases and Treatments
- Antibiotic Resistance
- Alternative Modern Medicine
Impact of War and Technology on Surgery
Modern Public Health
- Booth
- Rowntree
- Boer War
- Liberal Social Reforms in early 20th Century Britain
- Impact of Two World Wars on Public Health, Poverty and Housing
- Welfare State
- Creation of the National Health Service
- Costs, Choices and Issues of Healthcare in 21st Century
Britain: Power and the People: c1170 to the Present Day
Challenging Authority and Feudalism
Origins of Parliament
- Henry III
- Issues between Henry III and the Barons
- Simon de Montfort
- Provisions of Oxford
- Parliament of 1265
- Peasants Revolt
Challenging Royal Authority in Middle Age Britain
- Pilgrimage of Grace
- [[Henry VIII]
- Divine Right of Kings
- Parliamentary Authority
- English Revolution
- Political Radicalism
- Charles I
- Oliver Cromwell
- Commonwealth
- American Revolution
Reform and Reformers in 19th Century Britain
- Protests for Political Change in early 19th Century Britain
- Great Reform Act 1832
- Chartism
- Campaigning Groups in 19th Century Britain
- Factory Reformers in 19th Century Britain
- Social Reformers in 19th Century Britain
Workers Movements in 19th Century Britain
Equality and Rights in Modern Britain
Worker's Rights in Modern Britain
Minority Rights in Post-World War Two Britain
Britain: Migration, Empires and the People: c790 to the Present Day
Conquered and Conquerors in Early Medieval England
- Vikings
- Anglo-Saxons
- Danelaw
- Alfred and Wessex
- King Cnut
- Emma of Normandy
- North Sea Empire
- Norman Kingdom in Britain
- Angevin Empire
- Henry II
- Relationship between Britain and France during Norman Era
- Invasion of Ireland
- King John
Origins of English Identity
Looking West in Middle Age Britain
- New World
- British Empire
- British Pirates
- Development of the Slave Trade
- Impact of the Slave Trade on Britain
- Colonisation
- Native Americans
- Pilgrim Fathers
- Indentured Servants
- American War of Independence
- Huguenots
- Highland Clearances
- Ulster Plantations
Expansion of British Empire
British Expansion in India
- India
- British Control of India
- East India Company
- Robert Clive
- Warren Hastings
- Indian Rebellion (1857)
- British India
British Expansion in Africa
- British Involvement in Africa
- Missionaries
- [British Missionaries in Africa]]
- British Trade in Africa
- South Africa in the British Empire
- Egypt in the British Empire
- Scramble for Africa
- Cecil Rhodes
- Boer War
- British Imperial Propaganda
Migration to, from and within Britain
- Irish Migration to Britain, Empire
- Jewish Migration to Britain, Empire
- Migration to and from British Empire
- Migration from Rural to Urban Settings in Imperial Britain
Britain in the 20th Century
- End of British Empire
- Impact of First and Second World Wars on British Empire
- Suez Crisis
- Nationalism
Legacy of British Empire
- Windrush
- Claudia Jones
- Post-Empire Migration to Britain from Africa and Asia
- Commonwealth
- Falklands War
Britain's Relationship with Europe in 20th Century
- Britain's Relationship with Europe post-WWII
- Cold War
- European Union
- Migration between Europe and Britain
Norman England, c1066-c1100
The Normans: Conquest and Control
- Normans
- Causes of Norman Conquest
- Claims to the British Throne in 1066
- Military Aspects of the Norman Conquest
- Anglo-Saxon Military Tactics in 1066
- Norman Military Tactics in 1066
- Military Innovations during Norman Conquest
Establishing Control after the Norman Conquest
British Life under the Normans
- Feudalism
- Goverment
- Norman Government
- Anglo-Saxon and Norman Government Systems
- Aristocracy
- Military Service under Norman Rule
- Norman Justice and Legal System
- Domesday Book
- Anglo-Saxon and Norman Life
- Norman Forest Law
Norman Church and Monasticism
- Norman Church
- Anglo-Saxon Church before 1066
- Archbishop Lanfranc
- Norman Church Organisation in Britain
- Relations between the Church and State in Norman Britain
- William II
- Wealth of the Church in Norman Britain
- British Relations with the Papacy in Norman Era
- The Investiture Controversy
- Norman Monastic Reforms
- Norman Monastic Life
- Norman Education
- Latin
Edexcel History Key Stage 4
Crime and Punishment in Britain, c1000-Present
Nature and Changing Definitions of Criminal Activity, Medieval England
- Anglo-Saxon
- Norman
- Medieval England
- Crimes against People, Property and Authority in Medieval England
- Definition of Crime after Norman Conquest
Nature of Law Enforcement and Punishment, Medieval England
- Law Enforcement in Anglo-Saxon to Medieval England
- Penal System and Punishment in Anglo-Saxon to Medieval England
Case Studies on Crime and Punishment in Medieval England
- Influence of the Church in Early 13th Century Crime and Punishment
- Significance of Sanctuary and Benefit of Clergy
- Trial by Ordeal
Nature and Changing Definitions of Criminal Activity, early Modern England
- Crimes against People, Property and Authority in early Modern England
- New Definitions of Crime in 16th Century
Nature of Law Enforcement and Punishment, early Modern England
Case Studies on Crime and Punishment in early Modern England
Nature and Changing Definitions of Criminal Activity, 18th-19th Century Britain
- Crimes against People, Property and Authority in 18th-19th Century Britain
- Changing Definitions of Crime in 18th-19th Century
Nature of Law Enforcement and Punishment, 18th-19th Century Britain
- Law Enforcement in 18th-19th Century Britain
- Penal System and Punishment in 18th-19th Century Britain
Case Studies on Crime and Punishment in 18th-19th Century Britain
Nature and Changing Definitions of Criminal Activity, Modern Britain
- Crimes against People, Property and Authority in modern Britain
- Changing Definitions of Crime in modern Britain
Nature of Law Enforcement and Punishment, Modern Britain
Case Studies on Crime and Punishment in modern Britain
- Conscientious Objectors in First World War
- Conscientious Objectors in Second World War
- Derek Bentley Case
Whitechapel, c1870-c1900: crime, policing and the inner city
- Whitechapel
- Housing and Overcrowding in Whitechapel
- Workhouses
- Life in Whitechapel
- Reasons for Crime in Whitechapel
- Significance of Whitechapel as an inner city area
Immigration to Whitechapel
- Irish Immigration to Whitechapel
- Eastern European Immigration to Whitechapel
- Jewish Immigration to Whitechapel, 1880s
- Socialism
- Anarchism
Policing in Whitechapel
- H Division
- Difficulties of Policing Whitechapel
- Lifestyle Problems in Whitechapel
- Whitechapel Vigilance Committee
- Investigative Policing in Whitechapel
- Problems caused by the Need for Cooperative Policing
- [[Jack the Ripper]
- Metropolitan Police in late-19th Century Britain
- CID
- Sir Charles Warren
Whitechapel, c1870-c1900: crime, policing and the inner city Sources
Medicine in Britain, c1250-present
Ideas about the Cause of Disease and Illness, Medieval England
- Supernatural Explanations for Disease in medieval England
- Religious Explanations for Disease in medieval England
- Rational Explanations for Disease in medieval England
Approaches to Prevention and Treatment, Medieval England
- Preventing Disease in medieval England
- Treating Disease in medieval England
- New Approaches to Hospital Care in 13th Century
- Traditional Approaches to Hospital Care in 13th Century
Case Studies in medieval England
Ideas about the Cause of Disease and Illness, Medical Renaissance in England
Approaches to Prevention and Treatment, Medical Renaissance in England
- Prevention, Treatment and Care in Medical Renaissance England
- Changes to Prevention, Treatment and Care in Medical Renaissance England
Case Studies in Medical Renaissance England
Ideas about the Cause of Disease and Illness, 18th-19th Century Britain
Approaches to Prevention and Treatment, 18th-19th Century Britain
- Change in Care and Treatment in 18th-19th Century Britain
- New Approaches to Disease Prevention in 18th-19th Century Britain
Case Studies in 18th-19th Century Britain
Ideas about the Cause of Disease and Illness, Modern Britain
Approaches to Prevention and Treatment, Modern Britain
- Changes to Care and Treatment in Modern Britain
- Advances in Medicine in Modern Britain
- New Approaches to preventing Disease in Modern Britain
Case Studies in Modern Britain
British Sector of the Western Front, 1914-18: injuries, treatment and the trenches
- World War One
- Western Front
- War in Flanders
- Ypres Salient
- Trench Warfare
- Use of Mines in World War One
- Medical Treatment in World War One
- Illness and Injury during World War One
- RAMC
- FANY
- Transport in World War One
- Treatment Areas in World War One
- Significance of Western Front in Surgical Advances
- Medicine in Early 20th Century
The British Sector of the Western Front, 1914-18: injuries, treatment and the trenches Sources
Warfare and British Society, c1250-present
Nature of Medieval Warfare in England
- Medieval English Army
- Links between Social Structure and Army Command in Medieval England
- New Weapons and Formations in Medieval Warfare
- Importance of Gunpowder in Medieval Warfare
Experience of Medieval War
Case Studies in Medieval Warfare
Nature of Warfare in the early modern period
- Army in 16th and 17th Century
- Developments in the Army in 16th and 17th Century
- Developments in Weaponry in 16th and 17th Century
Experience of War in the early modern period
Case Studies in early modern war
Nature of Warfare in 18th and 19th Century Britain
- Army in 18th and 19th Century Britain
- Developments in the Army in 18th and 19th Century Britain
- Developments in Weaponry in 18th and 19th Century British Warfare
- Impact of Industrialisation on Warfare
Experience of War in 18th and 19th Century Britain
- Recruitment and Training in 18th and 19th Century British Army
- Impact of War on Civilians in 18th and 19th Century
Case Studies in 18th and 19th Century British Warfare
Nature of Modern British Warfare
- Army in Modern British Warfare
- Developments in the Army in Modern British Warfare
- Weaponry in Modern British Warfare
- Guerrilla Warfare
Experience of War in Modern Britain
Case Studies in Modern British Warfare
London and the Second World War, 1939-45
- World War Two
- London
- Luftwaffe
- Preparations for World War Two in London
- Protecting London in World War Two
- Attacks on London in World War Two
- Bombs used in World War Two
- Blitz in London
- Life going on in London during World War Two
- Morale in London during World War Two
- London's Response to World War Two
- 'Dig for Victory' Campaign
- British Propaganda in World War Two
Sources for London and the Second World War, 1939-45
Spain and the 'New World', c1490-c1555
Discovering the 'New World'
- Spain
- New World
- Christopher Columbus
- [Columbus' Voyage to the New World]]
- Queen Isabella
- Christianity