英语国家概况简答题答案

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K ey points1. "British history has been a history of invasion". Please illustrate this point with the examples from the text. How did each of the invasions influence English culture ?
1. What are some of the factors in Irish and English history
that affect the situation in Northern Ireland today?
K eys:
1. racial,
2. religious
3. immigration in 17th c.
4. the British solders’ station in 1969
1. How did the doctrine of the “divine right of kings”, according
to the author, lead to the English Civil War? What do you know about the causes of the English Revolution in the 17th century?
K ing James I believed the divine right of kings, so did his descent---Charles I.
Charles I called his t Parliament only when he needed to collect money.
T he Civil War was caused by a dispute over the power of the king against Parliament in the 17th C. The Republican “roundheads”, led by Oliver Cromwell, wanted to abolish the monarchy and to reassert the
rights of Parliament. In 1642, the royalists were defeated and King Charles I was executed in 1649.
The English Civil War not only overthrew feudal in England but also shook the foundation of the feudal rule in Europe.It is generally regarded as the beginning of modern world history. T he Civil War was in essence a capitalist revolution because capitalism paved its way of development after the war.
1. What are three big parties in the UK? W hat are some of the
similarities and dissimilarities between the three parties? There are three major national parties: The Conservative party and the Labour party are the two biggest, and any general election is really about which of those two is going to govern. But there is a third important party, the Liberal Democrats, who usually receive up to about 20% of the votes: not enough to form a government, but enough to have a big impact on which of the other two parties does so. The Conservative Party spent most time in power
T hey are the Labor party, the Conservative party and the Liberal Democratic party.
the Labour party--- one of the 2 biggest parties in the UK. It is also the newest party, created by the trade union movement at the end of the 19th century. It is a socialist party, believing that a society should be relatively
equal in economic terms, and that the government should redistribute the wealth between the rich and the poor. It also thinks that the government should provide a range of public services for all the people.
the Conservative party --- one of the 2 biggest parties in the UK. It is basically the party of the individual, protectin g the individual’ s right to acquire wealth and to spend it as he/she wants. It advocates economic policies which are favourable to businessmen, such as low taxes. From 1979 to 1997, the Conservative party won 4 consecutive elections and was in power for quite a long period of time.
the Liberal Democrats--- the 3rd biggest party and often seen as a party of the “middle”, occupying the ideological ground between the two major parties. They are comparatively flexible and pragmatic in their balance of the individual and the social. They emphasize the need to change the Britain’s constitutional arrangements to make the government more democratic and accountable.
S imilarities:
1. they all support the capitalist system
2. generally speaking, they all are the active participants and supporters of representative democracy
3. they share some similar beliefs in their political and socioeconomic ideology
D issimilarities:
1. they represent the interests of different social groups
2. they have different opinions on the government’s role in social economy and they each take different economic policies during their administration
51. What are the foundations of Britain's foreign policy?
51. The contemporary foreign policy of the UK is greatly influenced by its imperial history and also by its geopolitical traits. Perhaps the most important single factor which influences British policy-makers is its history.。