the national flag of england

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The national Flag of England - The national day of England is St George's Day - 23 April . St George's emblem was adopted by Richard The Lion Heart and brought to England in the 12th century. The king's soldiers wore it on their tunics to avoid confusion in battle.

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- The national day of England is St George's Day - 23 April . St George's emblem was adopted by Richard The Lion Heart and brought to England in the 12th century. The king's soldiers wore it on their tunics to avoid confusion in battle. The national Flag of England. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The national Flag of England

The national Flag of England

- The national day of England is St George's Day - 23 April .

St George's emblem was adopted by Richard The Lion Heart and brought to England in the 12th century. The king's soldiers wore it on their tunics to avoid confusion in battle.

Page 2: The national Flag of England

The emblem of England

• The national flower of England is the rose. The flower has been adopted as England’s emblem since the time of the Wars of the Roses - civil wars (1455-1485) between the royal house of Lancaster (whose emblem was a red rose) and the royal house of York (whose emblem was a white rose).

Page 3: The national Flag of England

 

.

                                                                                                  

                          The Union Flag, known as the *Union Jack, is the national flag of the United Kingdom.

It symbolises the administrative union of the countries of the United Kingdom.

Page 4: The national Flag of England

Timeline of the Kings and Queens of Englandand the UK

• 1066 - 1154 The Normans• 1154 - 1399 Plantagenets• 1399 - 1461 The House of Lancaster• 1461 - 1485 The House of York• 1485 -1603 The Tudors• 1603 - 1649 and 1660 - 1714 The Stuarts• 1714 -1901 The House of Hanovarians• 1901 -1917 and 1917 - Today

Saxe-Coburg-Gotha and The Windsors•  

Page 5: The national Flag of England

The Normans (1066-1154)

• The first Norman on the English throne -William the Conqueror 1066 – 1087

• The last Norman on the English throne- King Stephen, the grandson of William the Conqueror (1135-1154)

Page 6: The national Flag of England

The Plantagenets (1154 – 1399)

• a huge powerful family throughout Europe. The first Plantagenet kings were the Angevins, from Anjou, and later followed related families of Lancaster and of York.

• The first Plantagenet king in England was Henry II, great grandson of William the Conqueror and the son of the German Emperor ( who belonged to the House of Plantagenet).

• He ruled for thirty-four years, but spent only fourteen of them in England. Lived most of his time in France.

Page 7: The national Flag of England

The Plantagenets 1154 - 1399

• There were 8 Plantagenet kings in England.

• Richard I the Lionheart (1189 – 1199)

• spent in England only 10 months. He spoke very little English.

• spent most of his time fighting in the Crusades.

• Was killed in a battle.

Page 8: The national Flag of England

The House of Lancaster (1399-1461)( 3 Kings)

• The first Lancastrian Henry IV came to the English throne by force. He made his cousin Richard II Plantagenet, abdicate, then murdered him in prison and seized the crown himself.

• the first English king who could read and write easily in English was Henry V Lancaster

• During the rule of Henry VI, the War of Roses began between the Lancastrians and the Yorkists

Page 9: The national Flag of England

The House of York (1461-1485)

1461 - Edward IV (York) came to the throne after defeating Henry VI (Lancaster) at the Battle of Towton, in Yorkshire.

The House of Lancaster and the House of York were the branches of the same family, they both descended from Edward III Plantagenet.

• The Struggle for power between the two families was known as the War of the Roses because the Lancaster emblem was a red rose and the York emblem - a white rose. It lasted 30 years ( 1455- 1485).

Page 10: The national Flag of England

The War of Roses ( 1455- 1485).

• Richard III was the last English monarch to have been killed in battle.

• Henry Tudor, a Lancastrian, defeated King Richard III, a Yorkist at the battle of Bosworth Field on 22August

1485 .

Page 12: The national Flag of England

The war of Roses

The house The House

York of

Lancaster

• The House of TUDOR

Page 13: The national Flag of England

The Tudors(1485-1603) -6 kings and queens

• Most school children learn the following rhyme to help them remember the fate of each wife: "Divorced, Beheaded, Died: Divorced, Beheaded, Survived".

• Henry VIII(1491-1547), is that he had six wives!

• Argued with the Pope and made himself the head of the new 'Church of England'.

• United England and Wales under one system of Government

Page 14: The national Flag of England

The Tudors

• Elisabeth I (1558 - 1603) made England Protestant defeated the powerful

navy of Spain (Spanish Armada)

• Never married and was known as the Virgin Queen.

• Her rule is remembered as the Golden Age of English history. England advanced in such areas as foreign trade, exploration, literature, and the arts.

Page 15: The national Flag of England

The House of Stuarts (1603 -1714) • 7 Stuart Kings and Queens.• In 1603 James VI of Scotland (Mary Stuart’s son)

became also James I of England. He was the first monarch to rule both countries and the first to call himself 'King of Great Britain'.

• Civil (1642-1651) war between the supporters of Parliament and supporters of the King

• 1649 - Charles I the Stuart was tried and executed

• England became a Republic for eleven years from 1649 – 1660.

Page 16: The national Flag of England

The house of Stuarts • 1653 - 1658 - Oliver Cromwell, commander of the

army, became Lord Protector of England.

• 1660 - the Stuart line restored (Restoration)

• 1668 James II, a Catholic, was driven from his throne by his own daughter and her Dutch husband, Protestant William of Orange. William became king by Parliament’s election not by right of birth.

• 1707 1707 Queen Ann officially joined Scotland to England by The Act of Union

• During the Stuarts rule England had become a “parliamentary monarchy” controlled by a constitution.

Page 17: The national Flag of England

The House of Hanovarians(Ha 1714 -1901) Hanover)

In 1714 after Anne's death the succession went to the nearest Protestant relative of the Stuart line- George Louis, the leader of the German state of Hanover

6 British kings and Queens from the House of Hanover.

• Queen Victoria (1819-1901). Victorian period lasted 64 years(1837-1901)During her

reign Britain became the

most powerful and richest country in the world

Page 18: The national Flag of England

1901 – present day - Saxe-Coburg-Gotha and the Windsors

• The name Saxe-Coburg-Gotha came to the British Royal Family in 1840 with the marriage of Queen Victoria to Prince Albert, son of Ernest, Duke of Saxe-Coburg & Gotha. Queen Victoria herself remained a member of the House of Hanover.

• In 1917 George V changed the German family name Saxe-Goburg-Gotha to Windsor because of the strong negative feelings in Britain against Germany during World War I

Page 19: The national Flag of England

The Windsors

• . There have been 4 Windsor sovereigns. • George VI ( 1895-1952)(Windsor)• was greatly admired by the British people

during the World War II for staying an London when it was being bombed.

• was the last British King to be called “emperor” and the first head of the “Commonwealth”. Father of Elisabeth II.

Page 20: The national Flag of England

Elisabeth II

• (b. 1926 -…)  " • ascended the throne on 6th February 1952; crowned on 2nd June 1953)

• the 40th monarch since William the Conqueror obtained the crown of England in 1066.     

• the second-longest-serving head of state in the world, after King of Thailand.

Page 21: The national Flag of England

• The official Status : "Elizabeth the Second, by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and of Her other Realms and Territories Queen, Head of the Commonwealth, Defender of the Faith. "

Page 22: The national Flag of England

Elisabeth II

• Elisabeth II is also Queen of Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Jamaica, Barbados, the Bahamas, Grenada, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, and some other small states and territories with total population of about 128 million people.

• Head of the Commonwealth• Supreme Governor of the Church of England • commander-in Chief of the armed forces• Duke of Normandy, Lord of Mann, Paramount Chief

of Fiji.

Page 23: The national Flag of England

Functions of the sovereign

• opens Parliament,• approves the appointment of the Prime

Minister• gives her Royal Assent to bills,• gives honors such as peerages,

knighthoods and medals. • meets the Prime Minister every week and

receives copies of all Cabinet papers. • formally summons and dissolves Parliament • . 

Page 24: The national Flag of England

Elisabeth II

• Since 1947, has been married to Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.

• has four children ( Prince Charles, Princess Ann, Prince Andrew, Prince Edward)

• eight grandchildren. • The heir to the British throne is Elisabeth’s

eldest son Prince Charles. • His children Prince William and Prince

Harry occupy in the line to the crown the second and the third position.

Page 25: The national Flag of England

The Queen's children

• •

• CharlesPrince of Wales b. 1948 m. Lady Diana Spencer(divorced 1996)(d. 1997)m. Camilla Parker Bowles

Page 26: The national Flag of England

The Queen's children

• AnnePrincess Royal

• b.1950m. Captain Mark Phillips(divorced 1993) m. Commander Timothy Laurence

Page 27: The national Flag of England

The Queen's children

• AndrewDuke of York b. 1960

•m. Sarah Ferguson (divorced 1996)

• EdwardEarl of Wessex

• b. 1964 m. Sophie Rhys-Jones

Page 28: The national Flag of England

The Queen's Grandchildren

• Prince William of Wales

• b. 1982

• Prince Harry of Wales

• b. 1984

Page 29: The national Flag of England

• The monarchy is hereditary

• Succession is automatic on the death of the monarch

• the succession passes automatically to the oldest male child, or in the absence of males, to the oldest female offspring of the monarch.

• the monarch must be a Protestant.

Page 30: The national Flag of England

Test

• 1.What national flags make up the Union Jack?

• 2.What King began to establish Protestantism in England?

• 3. What monarch was the first to be given the title King of Great Britain?