Overview
The island’s story is one of successive arrivals — Romans, Anglo-Saxons, Vikings, Normans — each layer reshaping language, law, and kingship. From the seventeenth century Britain built a maritime empire and pioneered the Industrial Revolution, and its parliament, common law, and language left marks far beyond the island.
The major eras
Prehistory raised Stonehenge; Rome ruled the south for nearly four centuries; Anglo-Saxon kingdoms became England, conquered by the Normans in 1066. The medieval centuries produced Magna Carta and Parliament, the Tudors the break with Rome, the Stuarts civil war and constitutional monarchy, and the Georgian and Victorian eras industry and empire, before two world wars and the postwar transformation into modern Britain.