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     Volume 4 Issue 41 | April 8, 2005 |


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Education

In AD42 Britain, from the Humber River to the Firth of Forth, was ruled by a coalition of Celtic tribes called the Brigantes. In AD43 the Romans invaded. Eighteen years later the Roman governor of Britain, Quintus Petillius Cerialis invaded Brigantia and established a camp, which, after subduing the Brigantes, became a permanent fortress. This was called Eboracum, and it was based where the Rivers Ouse and Foss meet - where modern York is now.

At the height of Roman power, the fortress enclosed 50 acres and housed a garrison of 6000 soldiers. The civilian town grew steadily and Eboracum became one of the major cities of the Roman Empire. The Romans stayed for over 300 years before moving all their troops to Gaul around AD400. Eboracum became Eoforwic and it was ruled by the Anglo-Saxons until the arrival, in AD866, of Ivar the Boneless and his Danish Vikings.

While the Anglo-Saxons were in the middle of a civil war, Ivar the Boneless and his Vikings captured York on the 1st November 866. Halfdan, the Viking King renamed the city, Jorvik. The Viking warriors slowly settled down and became farmers and the city became an important river port and part of the Viking trading routes of northern Europe. The city was redesigned and the city walls were extended. Eric the Bloodaxe, Jorvik's final ruler, was chased from the city by King Eadred of Wessex in 954, who united Wessex and Northumbria. The Viking period was over. King Harold II of England defeated a Norwegian army at Stamford Bridge (about 8 miles from York) in 1066, unfortunately for Harold he was killed three weeks later by William the Conqueror's Norman invasion at the Battle of Hastings. England had a new King.

York continued to develop, its fortunes rose and fell, but it wasn't until the advent of the railways that York again became a place of importance. George Hudson, an entrepreneur, connected the city to the emerging railways in east and west Yorkshire in 1839. He was responsible for promoting the idea of railways and generating the interest and capital needed to get them built. Within ten years York was a major railway centre and by the start of the twentieth century the railways employed nearly six thousand people. The railways helped promote other industries notably Terry's Confectionary Works and Rowntree's Cocoa Works.

Today York still has a manufacturing industry, and is also one of the biggest tourist attractions in the region. The Jorvik Viking Centre and the National Railway Museum are two of the biggest attractions for the thousands of visitors, mainly from Europe, East Asia and North America. The Jorvik museum was built on the site of the largest Viking find to be excavated from the city in the mid 1980's. The city walls, which were rebuilt during Victorian times, still ring circle quarters of the city, which now houses all the modern shopping facilities you would expect to find. Most of the residents of York live in the outskirts of the city, where you can also find York Racecourse. This is now one of the best racecourses in Britain, with the Ebor meet every summer, it will host Royal Ascot this summer. York may no longer be the capital of Britain, or even the capital of the North, but it's still a great city.

Try to answer the following questions about York.
1. Where is York?
2. What was the name of York's last Viking ruler?
3. When did the railways arrive in York?
4. How many different names has York had?
5. What special event is York hosting this year?
Note down different periods in the history of your hometown.
What were the main features of these periods?

Write sentences about your town using the following useful expressions:
the main…area of the town lies within walking distance of
built on the site on the outskirts well worth a visit/visiting
tend to be cater for those who enjoy

In English, some words often occur together. They can be nouns and adjectives, nouns or verbs and prepositions, or verbs and adverbs. Look at the two columns of words in the below. Match two words that appear together in the article.

a manufacturing 1 war
b grew 2 facilities
c tourist 3 features
d ruled 4 cities
e responsible 5 attractions
f civil 6 industry
g major 7 by
h main 8 steadily
I well 9 for
j shopping 10 worth



Towns can be convenient places to live because they have many facilities. They also have their own special problems. What are the following words, problems or facilities? Which does your town benefit/suffer from? Check in a dictionary.

vandalism sports nightlife cultural
educational catering transport traffic jams
slums overcrowding pollution crime

Use you dictionary to check on any other words in the text that are new to you. Look up how to pronounce it and how to use it in a sentence. Can the word be used in other forms, as a verb, as a noun, as an adjective?

Can you think of three words that would go with each of the nouns below? Make words for things you would find in a town. The first one has been done for you as an example.

When you have finished check in a dictionary.

a . .........National..............................................
..........Liberation War Museum
Ethnological
b) ..........................................................
.......................................................... centre
..........................................................
c) ..........................................................
..........................................................club
..........................................................
d) ..........................................................
..........................................................college
..........................................................
e) ..........................................................
..........................................................court
..........................................................
f) ..........................................................
..........................................................agency
..........................................................

Useful weblinks: http://www.nrm.org.uk/html/home_pb/menu.asp
http://www.britainexpress.com/History/battles/stamford-bridge.htm

Answers
1. The north of England.
2. Eric the Bloodaxe
3. 1839
4. Four
5. Royal Ascot
a-6, b-8, c-5, d-7, e-9, f-1, g-4, h-3, i-10, j-2

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