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ALL ABOUT BRITAIN This book tells the story of the people who have lived in the British Isles, and is packed with fascinating facts and f un tales. The British Isles is a group of islands that consists of two main islands Great Britain and Ireland and lots of smaller islands, including the Isle of Man, the Orkney Islands, the Shetland Islands, the Isles of Scilly, the Isle of Wight and the Channel Islands. The UNITED KINGDOM is made up of Great Britain (England, Scotland, and Wales) and Northern Ireland. SCOTLAND Edinburgh NORTH SEA NORTHERN IRELAND Belfast IRISH SEA Dublin THE REPUBLIC OF IRELAND ENGLAND WALES Cardiff London The Republic of Ireland is a separate nation from the United Kingdom. Before and After ENGLISH CHANNEL Some of the dates in this book have the letters BC or AD written beside them. BC means Before Christ and is used to describe the time before the birth of Jesus (the Christian son of God). AD stands for Anno Domini, a Latin phrase meaning in the year of our Lord. It is used to describe the time after the birth of Christ. In this book, all dates after AD 400 are written without AD. 7

PREHISTORIC TIMES I SAID THE CUPBOARD IS BARE, NOT KILL A BEAR!

PREHISTORIC TIMES THE ANCIENT BRITONS 500,000 BC 700 BC The term prehistoric means the time before people wrote down accounts of what happened. This isn t because they were lazy, but because writing hadn t been invented yet. To discover what life was really like, historians have to rely on archaeology (the study of remains from the past). Today, archaeologists agree that prehistoric Britain can be divided up into four main Ages. The Ice Age Around 700,000 years a go, the area we now call Europe was a big, icy land mass. People moved around on it, following animals which they hunted for food. When the ice started to melt, the sea levels rose and the islands of Britain were formed. The people who arrived on these islands are called ancient Britons. The Stone Age From around 12,000 years ago, the ancient Britons began using stones to make axes and animal skins to make shelters. Groups of people began to settle in one spot, and from around 6,000 years ago they began to plant crops and breed animals. The Bronze Age From around 3000 BC, bronze metal was used to make tools and weapons, instead of stone and flint. The Iron Age From around1000 BC, bronze tools and weapons were replaced by stronger, iron ones. More effective weapons meant that groups of people formed into tribes led by a powerful chief, and built hilltop forts to live in. 9

OFF WITH THEIR HEADS! BUILDING STONEHENGE Built 3100 BC 1100 BC The early Britons were so good at building structures from stone that some are still standing today. No one really knows what these strange structures were used for, but many archaeologists believe they were made to celebrate the changing seasons or to worship the sun. Stonehenge is a prehistoric structure, found in Wiltshire, that is made up of a ring of vertical slabs of stone. Here is a brief history of the three main phases of its construction. Stonehenge I By around 3100 BC, people using deer antlers to break the e arth dug a ditch about 2 metres deep and roughly 6 metres wide, forming a circle 98 metres across. Two tall stones marked the entrance on the northeast side of the circle. A wooden henge (which means a circular area) may also have been built at this time. Stonehenge II A bigger and better henge was built around 2300 BC. About 80 stones, each weighing up to four tonnes, were placed upright in the centre of the site, forming another two circles. The stones were brought about 380 kilometres from a quarry in Wales but no one really knows how. Many of the stones were carefully angled to line up with the position of the sun at different times of the year. Stonehenge III Around 2000 BC, more work was carried out and a new circle, with a horseshoe-shape of large stones, was created. A ring of 10

OFF WITH THEIR HEAD SPREADS_OFF WITH YOUR HEAD SPREADS 02/01/2013 12:26 Page 11 PREHISTORIC TIMES 30 upright stones, weighing up to 50 tonnes each and standing up to 9 metres tall, were added, and these were connected by a ring of stones that were laid on top. For the next thousand years, people continued adding to the structure. Today the whole site is about 5 kilometres across, and includes routes along which processions took place and several barrows (which are ancient burial sites). Stonehenge is probably the most famous structure that survives from prehistoric times, but there are others. Silbury Hill, in Wiltshire, England, is the largest prehistoric mound of earth in Europe, and would have taken over ten years to build. NO, HE S NOT WORSHIPPING. HE JUST DROPPED A STONE SLAB ON HIS TOE. 11