Лингво сессия
Лингво сессия
There are 35178 named mountains in United Kingdom. The highest and the
most prominent mountain is Ben Nevis.
* Scafell Pike.
* Helvellyn.
* Great Gable.
* Blencathra.
* Red Pike.
* Old Man Of Coniston.
* Cross Fell.
* Great Dun Fell.
10. The Roman invasion and results
The invasion of Britain was one of the ways Claudius set out to prove himself.
His imperial predecessor, Caligula, had prepared for an invasion, but then
abandoned the enterprise, in AD 41. The army took this as a failure, and a
source of embarrassment and shame.
As a pretext for invasion, Claudius may have used the expulsion from Britain of
the pro-Roman king, Verica of the Atrebates, by the Catuvellauni. Hostile to
Roman influence, the Catuvellaunian brothers Caratacus and Togodumnus had
been leading attacks on the Atrebates and extending their area of influence
westwards from their homelands north of the Thames. This meant that a
powerful anti-Roman party was gaining wider control of southern Britain.
For Claudius, a successful invasion would bring glory and popularity. It
promised booty and access to the considerable natural resources of Britain, and
it would also satisfy the army.
Underpinning the prospect of invasion was the Romans’ innate belief in their
right to conquer non-Roman peoples. They were confident that the gods had
gifted them the known world and that it was their right and duty to rule it all in
their ‘civilised’ manner.
11. The first settlers on the British Isles
The first one took place in 400 BC when Celts armed with iron weapons
conquered Kent and much of Southern England. They spread north and imposed
their language on the natives. Celts were ancient people who lived in Central
and Western Europe and moved to the British Isles during the Iron Age.
12. The conversion of the Anglo-Saxons to Christianity
Pope Gregory I (590–604) sent a group of missionaries to the Anglo-Saxon
kingdoms, led by Augustine, who became the first archbishop of Canterbury.
They arrived in Kent in 597 and converted King Æthelberht (died 616) and his
court. Irish missionaries also helped convert the Anglo-Saxons to
Christianity.
13. The Norman invasion and results
14. The first king of England
15. The basis of feudal society in GB
16. The English Bourgeois Revolution (1642—1648)
17. Oliver Cromwell as a leader in the English Revolution
18. The industrial revolution and Chartism
19. The Queen Victoria and her contribution to the development of GB
20. Art, culture, and literature in Elizabethan era
21. Modern Cultural life in GB, cultural values
22. Folk, rock and pop music and world’s major theatre centers in GB.
British folk rock is a form of folk rock which developed in the United Kingdom
from the mid 1960s, and was at its most significant in the 1970s. British Folk
Artists - The Trees, John Jones, Fishermen's Friends, Vin Garbutt, Mike
Waterson
Rock. he period of the 20th century is the continuation of the rock debut in the
United States in the UK. The Beatles were a British pop and rock band from
Liverpool, composed of John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and
Ringo Starr. They are considered the most popular and influential rock band in
history. One of their biggest successes was to have five of their songs in the
Billboard Hot 100 singles chart of april 1964, the five of them at the top of the
singles chart. In ten years of existence and only eight years of record career
(from 1962 to 1970), the Beatles recorded twelve original albums and composed
more than 200 songs. Initially influenced by several musical genres (skiffle,
beat music and rock ‘n’ roll of the 1950s), they quickly changed their musical
style, addressing genres as varied as pop, Indian music, psychedelic rock and
hard rock.
Pop. Ed Sheeran is a musician born in Halifax, Yorkshire. The musical genres
he particularly likes are pop/folk-pop, folk, rock and grime. He masters several
instruments: the guitar (acoustic and electric), the drums, the violin, the cello
and the piano. It is thanks to his love and his talents for music that he is where
he is now. Like any musician, his musical style was influenced when he was
young.
Theatre of United Kingdom plays an important part in British culture.
National Theatre, London. Situated on the South Bank of the River Thames,
the National Theatre has a reputation for producing some of the best theatre the
UK has to offer. The varied programme offers a myriad of classic drama and
new plays by contemporary playwrights, alongside a wonderful selection of
bars and restaurants, exhibitions and a book shop. Since June 2009, the theatre
has also begun a programme of live-production broadcasts to local cinemas, as
well as to those further afield. National Theatre Live screens performances to
over 1,000 venues in 35 countries, so those unable to make it to London have
the opportunity to experience the best of British performing arts wherever they
are.
Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester. The Royal Exchange Theatre has been
hosting theatre productions since 1976 and is housed in one of Manchester’s
most-beautiful buildings in the heart of the city centre. The theatre itself sports a
stage ‘in-the-round’ and can seat an audience of up to 700, making it the largest
theatre of its kind in Britain. Annually, the Royal Exchange gives an average of
350 performances and puts on a programme that intertwines the classic
performance arts, revivals and contemporary writing.
Theatre Royal, Bath. At over 200 years old, the Theatre Royal in Bath is one of
England’s most reputable theatres with a seating capacity of over 900.
Alongside an extensive programme performed by touring troupes, the theatre
also hosts several events each year, such as the Shakespeare Unplugged festival.
As many productions begin their season at the Theatre Royal before their stints
in London, it is well worth a visit.
To talk about the Public schools in GB I can say there are Primary and
Secondary
At Infant Schools reading, writing and arithmetic are taught for about 20
minutes a day during the first year, gradually increasing to about two
hours in their last year. There is usually no written timetable. Much time
is spent in modelling from clay or drawing, reading or singing. By the
time children are ready for the Junior School they will be able to read and
write, do simple addition and subtraction of numbers.
Pupils are streamed, according to their ability to learn, into A-, B-, C- and
D-stream. Formerly towards the end of their fourth year the pupils wrote
their "Eleven Plus" Examination.The abolition of selection at "Eleven
Plus" Examination brought to life Comprehensive Schools where pupils
of all abilities can get secondary education.
Grammar schools
Most big towns in Britain have both a university and a college of higher
education. There are 91 universities and 47 colleges of higher education
today.
I want to tell you about Sir David Wilkie. He is leader of the genre
school
There are about 2,000 museums and galleries in Britain which include
the chief national collections, and a great variety of independently or
privately owned institutions.
9. Madame Tussaud's,
There are national museums and art galleries in Scotland, Wales and
Northern Ireland
Thx
1. Van Dyck,
2. Rubens,
3. Vermeer,
4. Holbein,
5. El Greco,
6. Goya,
7. Velasquez,
8. Gainsborough
9. Leonardo da Vinci
In 1724 he produced his first set of engravings entitled "The Talk of
the Town“
•"The Marriage Contract" is the first of the series of his pictures forming
the famous
•Hogarth was the first great English artist - "the Father of English
Painting".
- the first President of the Royal Academy of Arts, was not only a painter
Painters:
•He loved the country-side of his childhood and often said that the
Suffolk country-side had made him a painter.
•One of the most famous of his late landscapes is "The Market Cart"
painted two years before he died.
His notable works are The Boy in Blue, Mr. and Mrs. Andrews, Cornard
Wood.e.t.c
41. Geography of the USA. The nicknames of the states: official and non-
official
The highest court of the United States is the Supreme Court. The
Supreme Court has great power. In addition, members of the court are
elected for life with the exception of extremely rare cases. There are 9
members in the court, its chairman, the Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme
Court, has small additional powers. Members of the court are nominated
by the president and approved by the Senate.
Economic disagreements,
All the country's industry was concentrated in the North, while cotton, sugar
cane, tobacco and other industrial crops were harvested in the South. For a long
time, the Southern States supplied raw materials to the North, where local
manufacturers were engaged in its processing and export of goods. However, at
some point, planters realized that trading with Europe without intermediaries
was much more profitable. Owners of factories of the North risked being left
without supplies, and their goods in the South were replaced by European ones.
Wishing to protect the domestic market, the government imposed huge taxes on
trade with Europe, causing discontent among the Southerners.
Attitude to slavery
All agriculture in the South was based on slave labor, while the use of unskilled
slaves in factories was ineffective. Industrialists of the North needed free
workers and advocated the abolition of slavery. For the Southern Planners, this
would mean the collapse of the entire economic system built on free labor.
The American Civil War was the bloodiest conflict in the history of the nation:
600,000 dead and 400,000 missing
The main outcome of the war was the famous 13th Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution, which abolished slavery throughout the country. This was the
most important step towards equality of American society.