VOLUME Ⅰ The United Kingdom 3
CHAPTER ONE LAND AND PEOPLE 3
Section One The British Isles and Great Britain 3
1.Names and Position 3
2.Physiographic Features 8
3.Climate and Weather 11
4.Factors Influencing English Weather 14
5.Inland Water 14
6.The English Language 16
Section Two People and the State 20
1.People 21
2.Party Politics 23
3.Central Government 24
4.Local Governments 25
5.Law 27
6.Reform of the Law Court 28
7.Legal Profession 30
8.Police Force 30
9.Religion 31
10.Characteristics of the English People 34
11.Generation Gap 37
Section Three National Economy 40
1.General Survey 40
2.Company Law and Framework of Industry 41
3.Heavy and Light Industries 43
4.Textile Industries 45
5.Agriculture 46
6.Transportation and Communication 47
7.British Disease and Thatcher's Medicine 49
8.Cities 51
CHAPTER TWO ENGLISH HISTORY 59
Section One Origion of the English Nation 59
1.The Native Celts and the Anglo-Saxon Conquest 59
2.The Normans 65
3.The Norman Conquest 65
4.Influence of the Norman Conquest and Middle English 66
Section Two Beginning of Parliament and Decline of Feudalism 70
1.Henry II and His Reform 70
2.The Great Charter 73
3.Beginning of Parliament 76
4.The Hundred Years'War 78
5.The Black Death(1348—1349) 79
6.The Peasant Uprising(1368) 81
7.The Wars of the Roses(1455—1485) 82
Section Three The Tudor Monarchy and the Rising Bourgeoisie 84
1.The New Monarchy 84
2.Renaissance in England 85
3.The Three Major Churches of the World 88
4.The Catholic Church in the Middle Ages 89
5.Revolt of the Protestants 90
6.Reformation in England and the Church of England 91
7.Elizabeth I(1533—1603) 93
8.Culture and Social Life 96
Section Four The English Bourgeois Revolution and the Industrial Revolution 98
1.James I 98
2.Charles I 100
3.The Independents and Puritants 101
4.The Petition of Right 102
5.The Short Parliament and the Long Parliament 103
6.The Civil War 103
7.Restoration(1660) 106
8.The Glorious Revolution(1688) 107
9.Background of the Industrial Revolution 108
10.Process of the Industrial Revolution 109
11.Effect of the Industrial Revolution 111
12.The Chartist Movement(1836—1848) 113
13.Queen Victoria and Her Time(1837—1901) 115
Section Five The Rise and Fall of the British Empire 117
1.Foreign Expansion 117
2.The First World War and the Decline of the British Empire 122
3.Britain and the Second World War 123
CHAPTER THREE POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT AND EDUCATION 129
Section One The Monarchy 129
Section Two The Nobility and House of Lords 134
Section Three The House of Commons 138
Section Four The British Government 142
Section Five Political Pariles 144
Section Six Educational System and Schools 148
CHAPTER FOUR SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL 154
Section One Family and Life 154
Section Two Britain's Papers,Radio and Television 163
VOLUME Ⅱ The United States 169
CHAPTER ONE PANORAMIC VIEW 169
Section One The United States and the Americans 169
1.Name,Size and Position 169
2.Government Principles and System 170
3.The Federal Government 172
4.State Governments 175
5.Local Governments 176
6.Population 177
7.The Melting Pot 183
8.Distribution of People 185
9.Background of the Class Structure 187
10.The Upper,Middle and Lower Classes 188
Section Two Geographical Features,Climate and Natural Resources 194
1.The Atlantic Seacoast and the Appalachian Mountains 194
2.The Great Mississippi River Basin 195
3.The Rockies west to the Pacific Ocean 196
4.Climate and Weather 198
5.Rivers and Lakes 201
6.Forests 205
7.Mineral Resources 206
8.Land Resources 208
9.New Problems 209
Section Three National Economy and Cities 211
1.General Introduction 211
2.The Market Sector 212
3.The Corporate Sector 214
4.The Public Sector 215
5.Economic and Trade Relations with China 216
6.Industry and Cities 217
7.Agriculture and Husbandry 229
8.Transportation and Communication 233
9.Current Problems 235
CHAPTER TWO AMERICAN HISTORY 239
Section One The Thirteen English-American Colonies and the War of Independence 239
1.The Founding of the Colonies 239
2.The Early Immigrants 242
3.Life in the Colonies 244
4.Relation between England and Colonies 247
5.The Boston Tea Party 248
6.The First Continental Congress 249
7.The First Armed Clash 250
8.The Second Continental Congress 251
9.The Declaration of Independence 253
10.Military Struggle and Final Victory 254
Section Two Appearance of the American Constitution and Territorial Expansion 258
1.America Following Independence 258
2.The Constitutional Convention 260
3.The American Constitution 262
4.Washington as the First President 265
5.Jefferson and the Purchase of Louisiana 267
6.The Second War with England(1812) 268
7.The Monroe Doctrine(1823) 270
8.The Mexican War and Its Results(1846—1848) 272
9.Large Scale Expansion to the West 274
10.Frontiersmen's Influence on Politics 279
Section Three The Civil War 281
1.The Beginning of Slavery in America 281
2.Conflicts Arising from Slavery 283
3.Abraham Lincoln 286
4.Military Contest in the Civil War 288
5.The Emancipation Proclamation and Final Victory 290
6.Lincoln's Death and American Concept of a Hero 291
7.Effect of the Civil War 294
8.Economic Development 295
9.Appearance of Monopoly Businesses 298
10.Progressivism 300
11.The Federal Reserve Bank 302
12.Imperialist Foreign Policy and War with Spain 302
13.Aggression against China 304
Section Four America During and After World War Ⅰ 305
1.America's Neutrality 305
2.America Entering the War(1917) 305
3.America after World War(Ⅰ) 307
4.The Great Depression 311
5.President Roosevelt's"New Deal" 313
6.Comment on the"New Deal" 315
Section Five America During and After World War Ⅱ 317
1.Background and Outbreak of General War 317
2.Changes of the US Policy 319
3.The Lend-Lease Bill 320
4.America's Entry into the War 321
5.America after the War 324
6.Cold War and America's Containment 324
7.Red Scare and the MeCarthy Era 328
8.Demand for Reform 328
9.Counterculture and the Beat Generation 332
10.The Watergate Affair 334
11.Reagan Revolution and Clinton 336
CHAPTER THREE FORM OF GOVERNMENT AND SOCIAL LIFE 341
Section One Political Parties and Elections 341
Section Two The Federal Government and the President 347
Section Three The US Congress 354
Section Four The Judicial Branch 358
Section Five Education and Schools 365
Section Six Employment,Life and Family 374
CHAPTER FOUR SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIALS 384
Section One The US Radio and Television 384
Section Two The US Passport and Immigration Law 386
Section Three Investment:A Basic Glossary 390
Reference 394
Ⅰ.Kings and Queens of England and Great Britain 394
Ⅱ.The 50 States of America 400
Ⅲ.Presidents of the U.S 402
Ⅳ.Currency 404
Ⅴ.Bibliography 406