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For pupils working towards History Common Entrance & entrance examinations at 13+ this book is ideal. The revision guide consolidates all the key material pupils need to know for the Medieval Realms: Britain 1066-1500" " The Making of the United Kingdom: 1500-1750" & " Britain: 1750-1900" periods of the ISEB Common Entrance History Syllabus into one convenient resource. This title is perfect for pupils preparing for Common Entrance & entrance examinations at 13+. It provides guidance on how to approach the examination & what to include in answers to help pupils identify any gaps in knowledge. It

Includes::
sample questions that are drawn from past Common Entrance papers with worked examples followed by questions for practice
- ideal for honing exam technique."


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The History Keepers are in terrible danger once more. Stocks of Atomium
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Imagine if you lost your parents
- not just in place but in time. Jake Djones mum & dad have gone missing & they could be anywhere
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Howard Kirk product of the Swinging Sixties radical university lecturer & one half of a very modern marriage is throwing a party. The night will have all sorts of repercussions: for Henry Beamish Howards desperate & easily neglected friend & for Howards wife Barbara promiscuous 70s liberal & exhausted victim of motherhood. The History Man is Malcolm Bradburys masterpiece & the definitive campus novel of the 1970s. It brilliantly satirizes a world of academic power struggles & abuse at the highest level as the Machiavellian Howard effortlessly seduces his way around campus. ...
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Accompanying the BBC TV series of the same name Neil Olivers popular account of Britains prehistoric & Roman past strikes a personal note interweaving Olivers own voyage of discovery with a chronological survey. Featuring snippets of interviews with the archaeologists involved the book describes visits to Britains most important prehistoric sites & the results of the latest research building up a picture of the daily lives of Britains inhabitants over a vast period. ...
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The extraordinary history of Ancient Egyptian civilization
- from its earliest origins to the creation of its greatest monument
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Bath is one of the most popular & significant tourist destinations in Britain. No fewer than four million visitors each year visit the much-renovated Roman Baths marvel at the sites of this World Heritage city or simply meander through its now carefully conserved eighteenth-century streets. For a few hours before they are whisked away to Stratford-upon-Avon Edinburgh or London they absorb the carefully presented image of Bath as ancient spa elegant Georgian city & haunt of the likes of Richard ' Beau' Nash or Jane Austen. Bath has always tried to present itself in a favourable light. The true picture of Bath throughout its long & varied history is of course much fuller more interesting & varied than the facade presented to casual visitors. From its earliest known history as spa during the Roman period Bath transformed itself into Saxon monastic town & subsequently Norman cathedral city. It developed into a regional market &
- perhaps surprisingly
- a centre of the woollen trade during the Middle Ages before becoming probably the most important health resort of the sixteenth & seventeenth centuries. Thereafter rapid expansion in the Georgian period created an enduring architectural legacy which made Bath the country's foremost fashionable resort attracting increasing numbers of visitors. From the later 1700s the city experienced some years of relative decline from which it re-emerged this time as a favoured place of genteel residence in the nineteenth & twentieth centuries. This theme of constant re-invention now sees Bath attempt to become a 'festival city' in the market for cultural tourism while the long-anticipated opening of a new thermal spa should bring a new lease of life to the hot springs which of course represent Bath's very oldest attraction & in many ways its very raison d'etre. This book goes beyond the narrow popular image of Bath to explore 2000 years of extraordinary change variety & interest focusing wherever possible on the lives of ordinary residents & seeking to explain as well as to chronicle Bath's truly unique historical legacy.

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£10.23
Birmingham was a village worth only one pound in the Domesday Survey yet it rose to become the second city of the British Empire with a population that passed a million. Its growth began when Peter de Birmingham obtained a market charter in 1154 for his little settlement by an insignificant river with all roads leading to its all-important market-place the great triangular Bull Ring with the parish church of St Martins in the middle. In the succeeding centuries Birmingham has been a product of market forces as a market of agriculture trade & metal work. By the 18th century Birmingham overtook Coventry as the biggest town in Warwickshire & by 1800 it was the toy shop of Europe having cornered the markets for gun-making jewellery buttons & buckles with a bewildering variety of specialist craftsmen & traders. The factory system had already begun & men like James Watt Matthew Boulton Joseph Priestley & William Murdock made Birmingham the powerhouse of the Industrial Revolution selling their wares in vast quantities to the entire world. The middle of the 19th century saw Birmingham pioneering political reform education & municipal government. In this first single-volume history of the city for half a century Dr Upton looks at why Birmingham grew & what it has become. It has always been a place in which to experiment from the steam engine to the factory in a garden; from the Bull Ring to Spaghetti Junction. To some the story of Birmingham is one of great industries: Boulton & Watt Dunlop Cadburys G.K.N. Lloyds Bank & Austin Rover. But there are many lesser known tales: of the Bull Ring Riots the Onion Fair the first floodlit football matches & the tripe sellers. It is a story of communities too. The Quakers settles in the 17th century the Irish & Italians in the 19th & more recently people from the Caribbean the Indian subcontinent China & Vietnam have all made Birmingham their home. As Birmingham makes it marks on the map of Europe again one thing is certain...the story of the city that brought us Joseph & Neville Chamberlain Thomas the Tank Engine Fu Manchu & Mendelssohns Elijah can hardly be dull. Chris Uptons lively account ensures that Birminghams fascinating story loses nothing in telling. ...
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£10.87
History clings tight but it also kicks loose writes Simon Schama at the outset of this the first book in his three-volume journey into Britains past. Disruption as much as persistence is its proper subject. So although the great theme of British history seen from the twentieth century is endurance its counter-point seen from the twenty-first must be alteration. Change
- sometimes gentle & subtle sometimes shocking & violent
- is the dynamic of Schamas unapologetically personal & grippingly written history especially the changes that wash over custom & habit transforming our loyalties. At the heart of this history lie questions of compelling importance for Britains future as well as its past: what makes or breaks a nation? To whom do we give our allegiance & why? & where do the boundaries of our community lie
- in our hearth & home our village or city tribe or faith? What is Britain
- one country or many? Has British history unfolded at the edge of the world or right at the heart of it? Schama delivers these themes in a form that is at once traditional & excitingly fresh. The great & the wicked are here
- Becket & Thomas Cromwell Robert the Bruce & Anne Boleyn
- but so are countless more ordinary lives: an Irish monk waiting for the plague to kill him in his cell at Kilkenny; & a small boy running through the streets of London to catch a glimpse of Elizabeth I. They are all caught on the rich & teeming canvas on which Schama paints his brilliant portrait of the life of the British people: for in the end history especially British history with its succession of thrilling illuminations should be as all her most accomplished narrators have promised not just instruction but pleasure.





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£16.00
This is the definitive visual guide to 5 000 years of British history. The History of Britain & Ireland" traces the key events that have shaped the British Isles. From the Elizabethan age of Shakespeare to the Iraq & Afghan wars of the 21st century this beautifully illustrated book offers a definitive visual chronicle of the most colourful & defining episodes in British history. Packed with visually arresting illustrations & clear concise text you can now explore the long & fascinating story of the British Isles. It

Includes::
profiles of key people in history such as Geoffrey Chaucer Alfred the Great Charles Dickens Queen Elizabeth I & Winston Churchill. " The History of Britain & Ireland" is ideal as a family reference for the home as well as a key history companion for schools."

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History Of Ancient Britain

Accompanying the BBC TV series of the same name Neil Olivers popular account of Britains prehistoric and Roman past strikes a personal note interweaving Olivers own voyage of discovery with a chronological survey. Featuring snippets of interviews with the archaeologists involved the book describes visits to Britains most important prehistoric sites and the results of the latest research building up a picture of the daily lives of Britains inhabitants over a vast period.
  • Availability: In Stock
  • Supplier: WHSmith
  • SKU: 9780753828861
Availability: In Stock
£7.19

Product Description

Accompanying the BBC TV series of the same name Neil Olivers popular account of Britains prehistoric & Roman past strikes a personal note interweaving Olivers own voyage of discovery with a chronological survey. Featuring snippets of interviews with the archaeologists involved the book describes visits to Britains most important prehistoric sites & the results of the latest research building up a picture of the daily lives of Britains inhabitants over a vast period.

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Jargon Buster

TV - A shortened term for television
History - Anything that happens in the past. An acedemic subject.
Personal - Something that belongs more to an individual due to it affecting them more by relating to them.
Popular - Something that is admired and liked by many people.

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