| width="140pt" bgcolor=#CEE3F6| [[Great Chain of Being]]
| width="150pt" bgcolor=#CEE3F6| [[George III]]
| width="170pt" bgcolor=#CEE3F6| [[The King's Two Bodies]]
| width="170pt" bgcolor=#CEE3F6| [[George IV]]
| width="170pt" bgcolor=#CEE3F6| [[Divine Right]]
| width="180pt" bgcolor=#CEE3F6| [[William IV]]
| width="170pt" bgcolor=#CEE3F6| [[Touching for the King's Evil]]
| width="170pt" bgcolor=#CEE3F6| [[Victoria]]
|-bgcolor=#CEE3F6
|-bgcolor=#CEE3F6
| '''Power Contested'''
| '''Middle Class Values'''
| bgcolor=#FFFFFF|
| bgcolor=#FFFFFF|
| [[Charles I]]
| [[Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha|Prince Albert]]
| [[Civil War]]
| [[Osborne House]]
| [[Oliver Cromwell]]
| [[Victoria and Albert Museum]]
| [[Commonwealth of England]]
| [[Angel in the House]]
|-bgcolor=#CEE3F6
|-bgcolor=#CEE3F6
| '''Arts'''
| bgcolor=#FFFFFF|
| bgcolor=#FFFFFF|
| [[Percy Bysshe Shelley]]
| [[William Turner]]
| [[John Constable]]
| [[Alfred Tennyson]]
|-bgcolor=#CEE3F6
| '''Democratisation?'''
| bgcolor=#FFFFFF|
| bgcolor=#FFFFFF|
| [[James II]]
| [[Peterloo Massacre]]
| [[Glorious Revolution]]
| [[Suffrage]]
| [[William III]] and [[Mary II]]
| [[First Reform Bill]]
| [[Parliament]]
| [[Chartism]]
|-bgcolor=#CEE3F6
|-bgcolor=#CEE3F6
| bgcolor=#FFFFFF|
| bgcolor=#FFFFFF|
| bgcolor=#FFFFFF|
| bgcolor=#FFFFFF|
| [[Bill of Rights]]
| [[Second Reform Bill]]
| [[Act of Settlement]]
| [[Ballot Act]]
| [[Catholicism#Catholicism_in_England|Catholicism in Britain]]
| [[Third Reform Bill]]
| [[The British Constitution]]
| [[Local Government Act]]
|-bgcolor=#CEE3F6
|-bgcolor=#CEE3F6
| '''Modern Monarchy'''
| '''Industrial Revolution'''
| bgcolor=#FFFFFF|
| bgcolor=#FFFFFF|
| [[Monarchy today]]
| [[George Stephenson]]
| [[Great Exhibition]]
| [[Great Exhibition]]
| [[Victoria and Albert Museum]]
| [[Factory Acts]]
| [[State Opening of Parliament]]
|-bgcolor=#CEE3F6
| bgcolor=#FFFFFF|
| bgcolor=#FFFFFF|
| [[Black Rod]]
| [[Yeomen of the Guard]]
| [[Trooping the Colour]]
| [[Royal prerogative]]
|}
|}
==Landmarks in the History of the British Monarchy==
* <span style="background-color: rgb(224, 255, 255); color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">'''1485''': End of the [[War of the Roses]]. '''[[Henry VII]]''' becomes king: '''House of Tudor'''. </span>
* <span style="background-color: rgb(224, 255, 255); color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">'''1534''': [[Act of Supremacy]]. [[Reformation]]. The monarch becomes Head of the [[Church of England]]. </span>
* <span style="background-color: rgb(224, 255, 255); color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"> '''1588''': [[Armada|The Spanish Armada]] and the threat of invasion. Elizabeth gives the [[Tilbury Speech]]. </span>
* <span style="background-color: rgb(250, 250, 210); color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">'''1603''': The Scottish king James VI inherits the English throne as '''[[James I]]''' of England : '''House of Stuart'''. </span>
* <span style="background-color: rgb(250, 250, 210); color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"> '''1642''': Struggles for power between King and [[Parliament]] lead to the English [[Civil War]].
* <span style="background-color: rgb(250, 250, 210); color: rgb(0, 0, 0);"> '''1649''': '''[[Charles I]]''' is tried and executed. A republic, the '''[[Commonwealth|Commonwealth of England]]''', is established. </span>
* <span style="background-color: rgb(255, 218, 185); color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">'''1721''': [[Robert Walpole]] becomes Britain's first Prime Minister.
* <span style="background-color: rgb(255, 218, 185); color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">'''1743''': [[Battle of Dettingen]]. '''[[George II]]''' is the last British monarch to lead his troops into battle. </span>
* <span style="background-color: rgb(255, 218, 185); color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">'''1837''': '''[[Victoria]]''' becomes queen. Her reign lasts until 1901, longer than that of any other British monarch. </span>
* <span style="background-color: rgb(230, 230, 250); color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">'''1901''': '''[[Edward VII]]''' becomes king: '''House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha'''. </span>
* <span style="background-color: rgb(230, 230, 250); color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">'''1917''': '''[[George V]]''' changes the name of the royal house to "'''Windsor'''", reacting to anti-German sentiment during WWI. </span>
* <span style="background-color: rgb(230, 230, 250); color: rgb(0, 0, 0);">'''12 June 2010''': [[Trooping the Colour]]. The [http://www.royal.gov.uk/RoyalEventsandCeremonies/TroopingtheColour/TroopingtheColour.aspx official celebration] of the Queen's birthday, held annually, reflects the modern role of the monarch as a focus of national identity and a moral example ([http://www.royal.gov.uk/MonarchUK/HowtheMonarchyworks/HowtheMonarchyworks.aspx The Role of the Monarchy]) as well as the emotional appeal of monarchy.</span>
For an article to count toward the 3 CP tasks, however, it will have to be a substantial and new entry (no double entries under a new heading and no mere revisions, whereas significant expansions of one-sentence stubs are fine). Furthermore, every article will need a bibliography that consists of at least two sources and conforms to the citation guide in the Academic Style Sheet. All verbatim quotes must be identified as such (quotation marks, source incl. the page number) and all other sources need to be acknowledged at the end of the article.
These rules are necessary for reasons of fairness and academic soundness. However, do not let that keep you from enjoying writing for an audience and from experimenting with the wiki system. The neat thing is: you gain both in writing (by boiling down a topic to its important elements) and in reading, as this wiki is well on the way to being an encyclopaedia of British history and culture, marked by its reliability and its relevance for the Cultural Studies lecture courses.
Troubleshooting, help and your feedback: Discussion Board on Blackboard or via e-mail.
Looking for inspiration? Short articles whose expansion counts as a valid contribution to the wiki task are listed under Category:Expansion.
In the menu on the left, use the search box to find a specific article, or click on "Random page" to read a surprise article.
Wiki articles are cross-linked; thus you can choose one article as an entry point and explore your topic by moving through the pages.
The "What links here" feature in the toolbox on the left allows you to see a list of the articles that link to the page you're currently reading, helping you to put information in context.
"Recent changes" will allow you to keep track of all modifications and new articles.