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Recent
History
The Act of
Union of 1801 formally assimilated Ireland within the
British political process, and created a new country "The United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland", uniting England, Wales,
Ireland and Scotland.
Since then England has not existed as an independent political
entity, but as a region it has remained highly dominant in the
United Kingdom. The majority of the political and economic leadership
the UK is English. London has remained the economic and centre
of Britain and one of the world's great cities.
During the early 1800s, the working classes began to find a voice.
Concentrations of industry led to the formation of guilds and
unions, which, although at first suppressed, eventually became
powerful enough to resist.
Chartism is thought to have originated from the passing of
the 1832 Reform Bill, which gave the vote to the majority of the
(male) middle classes, but not to the 'working class'. Many people
made speeches on the 'betrayal' of the working class and the 'sacrificing'
of their 'interests' by the 'misconduct' of the government. In
1838, six members of Parliament and six workingmen formed a committee,
which then published the People's Charter.
The revolutions which spread like wildfire throughout mainland
Europe during the 1840s did not occur in England and Queen
Victoria's reign was largely one of consensus, despite huge disparities
in living standards between the few rich and the multitudinous
poor.
The Anglo-Irish treaty of 1921 established the Irish Free
State (now the Republic of Ireland) as a separate nation,
leaving Northern Ireland as part of the United Kingdom; its
official name became "The United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Northern Ireland".
England bore the full brunt of German bombing during the Second
World War, many of its cities were badly damaged and huge amounts
of infrastructure destroyed. England rapidly recovered after the
war, while internationally the relative wealth and power and Britain
has faded England still remains paramount in the British Isles.
While in 1999 Scotland and Wales were given local parliaments,
England does not have one. In part this is a reflection of the
hold England has on the British government.
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