GAME !! walk through a Victorian House!Travel back in time to Victorian London!
Who were the Victorians?
(1837 to 1901)
The Victorian age in British history is named after Queen Victoria, who was Britain's queen from 1837 until 1901.(1837 to 1901)
What was life like for Victorian children? There were big differences in homes, schools, toys and entertainments. No TV, no computers, no central heating, no cars (until the last few years of Victoria's reign). No air travel - unless you went up in a balloon! Many children went to work, not to school.
The British Empire
Britain ruled the British Empire. Victoria was Empress of India as well as Queen of Britain, Canada (the biggest country in the Empire) and small countries such as Jamaica. Trade with the Empire helped make Britain rich. Some British children emigrated with their families to new homes in Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and Canada. Children were taught about the Empire in school.THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
The Industrial Revolution changed Britain from a land of small towns, villages and farms into a land of cities, large towns and factories. The population grew from 16 million in 1801 to over 41 million by 1901. Cities grew fast, as people moved from the countryside to work in factories.
Men, women and children worked in factories, and in coal mines. Factory and mine owners became rich, but most factory and mine workers were poor. They were paid low wages, and lived in unhealthy, overcrowded slums.
FAMOUS VICTORIANS
Victoria was born in 1819 in Kensington Palace in London. Her name was Alexandrina Victoria. When
Princess Victoria was 18 years old her uncle King William died and she
became queen. She was crowned at Westminster Abbey in 1838. Victoria
married her handsome cousin Albert a young prince from Germany. (She
had proposed to him). Albert didn't speak English very well and lots of
people didn't like him.
Lord Shaftesbury (1801-1885)
Anthony Ashley Cooper, the eldest son of the 6th Earl of Shaftesbury, was born on 28th April, 1801. He became the Earl of Shaftesbury in 1851.
Lord Shaftesbury was a politician who attempted to improve children's lives during the Victorian times
At the age of 25, he became a member of Parliament. He began to take an interest in the plight of poor children after reading newspaper reports about labour in industry.
1833 He proposed that children should work for a maximum of 10 hours a day
1834 the Factory Act was made law. It was now illegal for children under 9 to be employed in textile factories
1842 Coal Mines Act
No child or woman should work underground
He was also interested in education for working children. He was chairman of the Ragged Schools Union - an organisation that set up over a hundred schools for poor children
Lord Shaftesbury (1801-1885)
Anthony Ashley Cooper, the eldest son of the 6th Earl of Shaftesbury, was born on 28th April, 1801. He became the Earl of Shaftesbury in 1851.
Lord Shaftesbury was a politician who attempted to improve children's lives during the Victorian times
At the age of 25, he became a member of Parliament. He began to take an interest in the plight of poor children after reading newspaper reports about labour in industry.
1833 He proposed that children should work for a maximum of 10 hours a day
1834 the Factory Act was made law. It was now illegal for children under 9 to be employed in textile factories
1842 Coal Mines Act
No child or woman should work underground
He was also interested in education for working children. He was chairman of the Ragged Schools Union - an organisation that set up over a hundred schools for poor children
ALEXANDER GRAHAM BELL : (1847-1922)
He was the inventor of the telephone
CHARLES DARWIN (1809 -1882)
Darwin was born on February 12, 1809 in Shrewsbury, England. In 1831 he joined a scientific expedition bound for South America and the Pacific Ocean on a sailing ship called The Beagle (1831 - 36). He was to be the ship's naturalist, the expert on plants and animals.
In the Galapagos Islands Darwin noticed how the same species of birds, cut off from centuries on different islands, had developed in quite different ways. This and many other amazing discoveries led him to his theory of 'evolution by natural selection'. This theory lies behind all modern ideas on how different species of living things have become to be the way they are and how they will change in the future.
Charles Dickens 1812-1870
2012 : DICKENS BICENTENARY !
VISIT THE CHARLES DICKENS MUSEUM IN LONDON !!
http://www.dickensmuseum.com/
Celebrating the 200th birthday of Charles Dickens
http://www.dickens2012.org/
QUIZ
To revise your lessons , do the following quiz
http://www.funtrivia.com/playquiz/quiz29672121f8500.html
OLIVER TWIST
Test your knowledge on Oliver Twist : do this quiz:
http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/oliver/quiz.html