ks4 gcse history to your future - whitworth park

9
Norman England, c1066–1100 Military aspects: Battle of Stamford Bridge Battle of Hastings Anglo-Saxon and Norman tactics military innovations, including cavalry and castles Feudalism and government: the Anglo-Saxon and Norman aristocracies and societies military service justice and the legal system such as ordeals ‘murdrum’ Inheritance the Domesday Book. Economic and social changes and their consequences: Anglo-Saxon and Norman life including towns, villages, buildings, work, food, roles and seasonal life Forest law The Church Historic Environment 2022 location, function, structure, design how the design reflects the culture, values, fashions of the people at the time connected people connect important events & developments Causes of Norman Conquest including the death of Edward the Confessor, the claimants and claims Establishing and maintaining control: the Harrying of the North Revolts, 1067–1075 King William’s leadership and government William II and his inheritance The Church Church-state relations William II and the Church the wealth of the Church relations with the Papacy the Investiture Controversy Monasticism the Norman reforms, including the building of abbeys and monasteries monastic life learning; schools and education Latin usage and the vernacular The Normans: Conquest and Control To Exams Life under the Normans Feudalism and government: roles, rights, and responsibilities landholding and lordship land distribution patronage Anglo-Saxon and Norman government systems the Anglo-Saxon Church before 1066 Archbishop Lanfranc and reform of the English Church, including the building of churches and cathedrals Church organisation and courts The Norman Church and monasticism Castle Acre Priory, Norfolk KS4 GCSE HISTORY To Your Future Year 11 History A Year to Succeed

Upload: others

Post on 24-Feb-2022

2 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: KS4 GCSE HISTORY To Your Future - Whitworth Park

Norman England, c1066–1100

Military aspects:• Battle of Stamford Bridge

• Battle of Hastings

• Anglo-Saxon and Norman tactics

• military innovations, including cavalry and castles

Feudalism and government:

• the Anglo-Saxon and Norman aristocracies and societies

• military service

• justice and the legal

system such as ordeals

• ‘murdrum’

• Inheritance

• the Domesday Book.

Economic and social changes and their

consequences:

• Anglo-Saxon and Norman life

• including towns, villages, buildings, work, food,

roles and seasonal life

• Forest law

The Church

Historic Environment 2022

• location, function, structure, design

• how the design reflects the culture, values, fashions of the people at the time

• connected people

• connect important events & developments

Causes of

Norman Conquest

• including the death of Edward the Confessor,

• the claimants and claims

Establishing and maintaining control:

• the Harrying of the North

• Revolts, 1067–1075

• King William’s leadership and government

• William II and his inheritance

The Church

• Church-state relations

• William II and the Church

• the wealth of the Church

• relations with the Papacy

• the Investiture Controversy

Monasticism

• the Norman reforms, including the building of abbeys and monasteries

• monastic life

• learning; schools and education

• Latin usage and the vernacular

The Normans:

Conquest and Control

To Exams

Life under the Normans

Feudalism and government:

• roles, rights, and responsibilities

• landholding and lordship

• land distribution

• patronage

• Anglo-Saxon and Norman government systems

• the Anglo-Saxon Church before 1066

• Archbishop Lanfranc and reform of the English Church, including the building of churches and cathedrals

• Church organisation and courts

The Norman Church and monasticism

Castle Acre Priory, Norfolk

KS4 GCSE HISTORY To Your Future

Year 11 History

A Year to Succeed

Page 2: KS4 GCSE HISTORY To Your Future - Whitworth Park

Germany, 1890–1945: Democracy & Dictatorship

Impact of the First World War:

:• war weariness, economic problems

• defeat; the end of the monarchy

• post-war problems including reparations, the occupation of the Ruhr & hyperinflation

The Impact of the Depression:

• growth in support for the Nazis & other extremist parties (1928–1932)

• including the role of the SA

• Hitler’s appeal

The failure of

Weimar Democracy:• election results;

• the role of Papen and Hindenburg

• Hitler’s appointment as Chancellor

Economic changes:

• Goebbels, the use of propaganda & censorship

• Nazi culture

• repression & the police state & the roles of Himmler, the SS & Gestapo

• opposition & resistance, including White Rose group, Swing Youth, Edelweiss Pirates & July

1944 bomb plot

Kaiser Wilhelm & the difficulties of ruling Germany:

• the growth of parliamentary government

• the influence of Prussian militarism

• industrialisation

• social reform & the growth of socialism

• the domestic importance of the Navy Laws

Weimar Democracy: • political change and unrest,

1919–1923, including:

• Spartacists,

• Kapp Putsch

• the Munich Putsch;

The establishment of Hitler’s Dictatorship:

• benefits & drawbacks

• employment public works programmes

• rearmament

• self-sufficiency

• the impact of war on the economy & the German people, including bombing, rationing, labour shortages, refugees

Social policy & practice:

• reasons for policies, practices & their impact on women, young people & youth groups

• education

• control of churches & religion

• Aryan ideas, racial policy & persecution

• the Final Solution

Germany & the growth of democracy

To Exams

Germany & the Depression

Weimar Democracy:

• the extent of recovery

during the Stresemann era (1924–1929)

• economic developments including:

• the new currency,

• the Dawes Plan

• the Young Plan

• the impact of international agreements on recovery

• Weimar culture

• the Reichstag Fire

• the Enabling Act

• elimination of political opposition

• Elimination of trade unions

• Rohm & the Night of the Long Knives

• Hitler becomes Führer

The

experiences of

Germans under

the Nazis

Control:

KS4 GCSE HISTORY

Year 10 HistoryA Year to Lead

To Year 11

Page 3: KS4 GCSE HISTORY To Your Future - Whitworth Park

Conflict and Tension: The First World War, 1894–1918

The Alliance System:

:• the crises in Morocco (1905 & 1911)

• the crises in the Balkans (1908–1909), & their effects on international relations

The Schlieffen Plan:

• the reasons for the plan, its failure,

• including the Battle of Marne & its contribution to the stalemate

The Western Front:

• military tactics &

technology, including trench warfare

• the war of attrition

• key battles, Verdun, the Somme and Passchendaele, the reasons for, the events & significance of these battles

Changes in the

Allied Forces

• impact of the blockade

• abdication of the Kaiser

• armistice

• the contribution of Haig and Foch to Germany’s defeat

The Alliance System:

• the Triple Alliance

• Franco-Russian Alliance

• relations between the ‘Entente’ powers

Anglo-German rivalry:

• Britain & challenges to

Splendid Isolation

• Kaiser Wilhelm’s aims in foreign policy, including Weltpolitik

• colonial tensions

• European rearmament, including the Anglo-German naval race

The Wider War

• consequences of the Bolshevik Revolution & the withdrawal of Russia on Germany strategy

• the reasons for & impact of the entry of the USA into the war

Military developments in 1918 & their contribution to

Germany’s defeat

• the evolution of tactics & technology

• Ludendorff the German Spring Offensive

• the Allied advance during The Hundred Days

The causes of the

First World War

To Exams

The Stalemate

Outbreak of war:

• Slav nationalism & relations between Serbia & Austria-Hungary

• the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo & its consequences

• the July Crisis

• the Schlieffen Plan & Belgium

• reasons for the outbreak of hostilities & the escalation of the conflict

• the war on other fronts

• Gallipoli & its failure

• the events & significance of the war at sea, including Jutland, the U-Boat campaign and convoys

Ending the War

Germany surrenders:

KS4 GCSE HISTORY

Year 10 HistoryLead

Page 4: KS4 GCSE HISTORY To Your Future - Whitworth Park

• public health problems in industrial Britain;

• cholera epidemics;

• the role of public health reformers;

Improvements in Public Health:

Improvements in Public Health:

• local and national government involvement in public health improvement,

• the 1848 and 1875 Public Health Acts.

Modern treatment of disease:

• new diseases and treatments

• antibiotic resistance

• alternative treatments.

The impact of technology on

surgery:

• modern surgical methods including

• lasers

• radiation therapy

• keyhole surgery

Modern Public Health:

• the Beveridge Report & the Welfare State

• creation and development of the National Health Service

• costs, choices and the issues of healthcare in the 21st century

The development of Germ Theory & impact

on the treatment of disease in Britain

Modern treatment of disease:

• the development of the pharmaceutical industry; penicillin

• its discovery by Fleming, its development

The impact of war on surgery:

• plastic surgery;

• blood transfusions;

• X-rays;

• transplant surgery;

Modern Public Health:

• the importance of Booth, Rowntree, and the Boer War

• the Liberal social reforms

• the impact of two world wars on public health, poverty and housing

To Exams

A revolution in medicine: Industrial Period

Modern Medicine:C20th & C21st

• the importance of Pasteur, Robert Koch and microbe hunting

• Pasteur and vaccination

• Paul Ehrlich and magic bullets

• everyday medical treatments and remedies

A revolution in surgery

• anaesthetics, including Simpson and chloroform;

• antiseptics, including Lister and carbolic acid;

• surgical procedures; aseptic surgery.

KS4 GCSE HISTORY

Britain Health & the People

Year 9 HistoryAspire

To Year 10

Page 5: KS4 GCSE HISTORY To Your Future - Whitworth Park

Medical progress:

• the contribution of Christianity to medical progress and treatment

• hospitals

Public Health in the Middle Ages:

• towns and monasteries

• the Black Death in Britain, beliefs about the causes, treatment and prevention

The impact of the Renaissance on Britain:

• challenge to medical authority in anatomy physiology and surgery

• the work of Paré

• opposition to change

Dealing with disease

• traditional and new methods of treatments

• quackery

• methods of treating disease, plague

Prevention of disease

• inoculation

• Edward Jenner

• Vaccination

• opposition to change

Medieval medicine:

• natural &supernatural approaches to medicine

• Hippocratic & Galenic ideas, methods and treatments

• the medieval doctor training, beliefs about cause of illness

Medical progress:

• the nature and importance of Islamic medicine and surgery

• surgery in medieval times, ideas and techniques

The impact of the Renaissance on

Britain:

• challenge to medical authority in anatomy, physiology and surgery

• the work of Vesalius

• opposition to change

The impact of the Renaissance on Britain:

• challenge to medical authority in anatomy physiology and surgery

• the work of William Harvey

• opposition to change

Dealing with disease

• the growth of hospitals

• changes to the training and status of surgeons and physicians

• the work of John Hunter

To Exams

Medicine stands still

Medieval Period

To a revolution in medicine: Industrial Period

The beginnings of change:Renaissance Period

KS4 GCSE HISTORY

Britain Health & the People

Year 9 HistoryA Year to Aspire

Page 6: KS4 GCSE HISTORY To Your Future - Whitworth Park

Enquiry 11: What was the British experience of the

Western Front?

• What was trench warfare?

• What were the weapons of war?

• Who were the soldiers of the Empire?

Enquiry 12: How did the WWI change Britain?

• What was the roaring Twenties?

• Why was Ireland divided in two in the 1920s?

• What were the Hungry Thirties?

Enquiry 14: How should we remember the

Holocaust?• What was the Holocaust?

• What was the Final Solution?

Enquiry 16: Why was there a Cold War?

• What is the difference between capitalism and communism?

• Why did USSR blockade Berlin?

• What was the Berlin Airlift?

Enquiry 18: Why did people emigrate to Britain after

the war?

• Why should we remember the Empire Windrush?

• What are the benefits of multiculturism to Britain?

Enquiry 10: Why did Britain go to war in 1914?

• Why did the First World War begin?

• Why did people join up?

How did countries try to avoid more war?

• What was the Treaty of Versailles?

• What was the League of Nations?

Enquiry 13: Why did War break out in 1939?

• What is the difference between a democracy and a dictatorship?

• What is fascism and communism?

• Who was Hitler?

• Why was the another war?

• What were the key turning points in the Second World War?

Enquiry 15: What was the atomic legacy in the

post war world?

• Why did Japan attack Pearl Harbour?

• Why did the war turn atomic?

• Why did the USA use the atomic bomb?

Enquiry 17: What were the Cold War Hot spots?

• What was the Korean War?

• What was the Cuban Missile Crisis?

• What was the Vietnam War?

To GCSE studies

Year 8 HistoryEndeavour

To Exams

To Year 9

Page 7: KS4 GCSE HISTORY To Your Future - Whitworth Park

Enquiry 2: What was the Industrial Revolution?

• How did we move from home to factory working?

• How did factories create towns?

• How were children treated in factories?

• How were factory working conditions improved?

Enquiry 3: What made Victorian towns stink?

• Who improved public health?

• How divided was society?

• How was law and order kept?

• How did the first police force begin?

• What did Elizabeth fry say about Durham prison?

Enquiry 5: What was the Age of Revolution?

• What was the American Revolution?

• What was the consequences of the French Revolution?

• What was the Battle of Trafalgar?

• What was the Battle of Waterloo?

Enquiry 7: How had Britain changed by the

Victorian times?

• How close was England to a revolution in 1848?

• Did the lives of women improve?

• What were Victorian schools like?

• How did the high street grow?

Enquiry 9: Did the suffragettes win the vote?

• Who were the suffragettes?

• Emily Davison: Martyr or protester?

• How did women win the vote?

Enquiry 1: Was the Glorious Revolution really a revolution?

• What was the Glorious Revolution?

• What was the consequences of the Glorious Revolution?

• Why did the Georgians rule Britain?

• Why was Bonnie Prince Charlie a threat to the Georgians?

What was the Industrial Revolution?

• What was black gold?

• How did industry change transport?

• How did the Feudal System work?

• Age of invention: What was the most significant?

Enquiry 4: Why did Britain abolish the

Slave Trade?

• What was the Slave Trade?

• What were conditions like on the slave ship?

• What was life like on the plantation?

• Why was slavery abolished?

Enquiry 6: How did Britain gain her

Empire?

• What was India like before the British Empire?

• How did Britain invade India?

• Was the Indian mutiny a war of independence?

• What was the jewel in the crown?

Enquiry 8: What did the new century bring?

• What was Britain like in 1901?

• How was poverty and public health tackled?

Further Year 8 studies

Year 8 HistoryA Year of Endeavour

To Exams

Page 8: KS4 GCSE HISTORY To Your Future - Whitworth Park

How did the British Empire begin?

• Why did the British Empire begin?

• How did the British Empire begin?

• Who were the key individuals in the growth of the Empire?

Who was William Shakespeare?

• What were Tudor theatres like?

• Why did Shakespeare become famous?

Enquiry 13: How can we explain the

English Civil War?

• Why did the English start fighting each other?

• Who fought in the Civil War?

• What was the New Model Army?

• Why was Charles I executed?

Enquiry 14: Who was the Merry Monarch?

• What was the Restoration

• Who was the Merry Monarch?

What happened in the Great Fire of London?

• Why did the Great Fire of London spread so quickly?

• How was London rebuilt after the fire?

Enquiry 10: How far was Elizabethan England a

‘golden age’?

• What happened in the Elizabethan Age?

• Why did Elizabeth execute Mary, Queen of Scots?

• Why did England cheer in 1588?

• What did Elizabeth look like?

Enquiry 11: What was life like in Tudor times?

• Who was in Tudor society?

• What were Tudor schools like?

• How did the Tudors have fun?

• Why were the poor punished?

Enquiry 12: Were the Stuarts really slimy?

• Why do we remember the 5th of November?

• Were there really witches in England?

• Why do Americans speak English?

What was the Interregnum?

• Why was Christmas banned during the Interregnum?

• Should there be a statue of Cromwell?

What was the Great Plague of London?

• What was the Great Plague of London?

• How did they try to stop the plague in 1665?

Year 7 HistoryDiscovery

To Year 8To Exams

Page 9: KS4 GCSE HISTORY To Your Future - Whitworth Park

Enquiry 2: How did an upstart French Duke

conquer England?

• What was the succession crisis?

• What happened at the Battle of Stamford Bridge?

• Why did the Normans win the Battle of Hastings?

Enquiry 3: How religious were people in the Middle Ages?

• What was life like for the Monks & Nuns?

• What were the Crusades?

• What was the impact of the Crusades

Enquiry 5: How powerful was the King? Rule Makers & Breakers

• Why was Becket murdered?

• Why is the Magna Carta important?

• How did Parliament begin?

• Why did the Peasants Revolt in 1381?

Enquiry 7: Why was England at war with her

neighbours in the Middle Ages?

• How did England try to conquer Wales & Scotland?

• How did England try to control Ireland?

• Why was England at war with France?

Enquiry 9: What was the Age of Discovery?

• What was the Age of Discovery?

• What was the Renaissance?

• How did new discoveries and inventions change Britain?

Enquiry 1: What do we know about Britain's

early history?• What is the Story of Britain?

• What do we know about Britain’s early history?

• Who settled in Britain?

How did William secure the crown?

• Why did William build castles?

• How did William crush the Harrying of the North?

• How did the Feudal System work?

• What was the purpose of the Domesday Book?

Enquiry 4: What was life like in the Middle

Ages?• How did castles change?

• What was village life like?

• What was town life like?

Enquiry 6: Was it all muck and misery in the

Middle Ages?

• How dirty was the Middle Ages?

• What was the Black Death?

• Who healed the sick?

Enquiry 8: Why was there a crisis in Christendom?

• What did Protestants protest about?

• Why did Henry VIII break with Rome?

• What was the Mid-Tudor Crisis?

Further Year 7 studies

Year 7 HistoryA Year of Discovery