GENERAL INFORMATION
Life
in England
The United Kingdom of Great Britain
(England, Scotland, Wales) and Northern Ireland
lies northwest of the rest of Europe. It is separated
from the Continent on the south and east by the
English Channel, the Strait of Dover, and the North
Sea. At the Channel's narrowest point France and
England are only twenty-two miles apart. No point
in England is more than 75 miles from salt water.
England occupies the southeastern
three-fifths of the island of Great Britain. Scotland
lies to the north of England, and Wales joins it
on the west. Northern Ireland lies across the Irish
Sea to the west, sharing the island of Ireland with
the Republic of Ireland.
Great Britain covers about 94,200 square miles (slightly
less than the state of Oregon), while England itself
has a land area of 50,871 square miles.
The Highlands of England are part of Europe's oldest
mountain chain (called the Caledonian system), extending
from the Lake District across Ireland, northern Wales
and Scotland, and into Scandinavia.
Lowlands, rolling and broken by hills and low cliffs,
are predominant landscape features in England. The
Lowlands contain both agricultural land and a densely
populated industrial region. The most heavily industrial
regions are the plains of Central England called the
Midlands, the coal-bearing areas of the North, and
the London area.
The climate in Great Britain is generally mild and
temperate due to the prevailing southwesterly winds.
The weather is subject to frequent changes, however.
Temperatures range from a mean of about 40 degrees
Fahrenheit during the winter months to about 60 degrees
in the summer.
Britain's incorporation into the Roman Empire after
the Roman invasion in 55 B.C. drew Britain into her
first active relationship with the Continent. With
the fall of the Roman Empire, Britain was vulnerable
to periodic attacks until the Norman Conquest of 1066.
The development of London as a political, administrative,
cultural, and economic center began during this period
of Norman rule.
Wales, Scotland, and Ireland were all originally
independent kingdoms. English rule over Wales was
established in 1282; the practice of naming the Crown
Prince of England the Prince of Wales was instituted
in 1301 in order to appease the Welsh. The union between
the two nations was completed in 1536. England and
Scotland were united under one crown in 1603 when
James VI of Scotland became James I of England, succeeding
his cousin Elizabeth I. In 1707 England and Scotland
took the common name of Great Britain, and the Union
Jack became the national flag. Dissension between
the English and the Irish began in the twelfth century,
but the legislative union between Great Britain and
Ireland was finally completed in 1801 under the name
of the United Kingdom. In 1921 the Anglo-Irish treaty
established the Irish Free State, while the six northern
and predominantly Protestant Irish counties remained
a part of the United Kingdom.
Britain's influence was expanding not only close
to home but world wide. The defeat of the Spanish
Armada in 1588 firmly established Britain as a major
sea power, enabling her not only to protect British
trade, but to open up new trade routes. Britain's
interest was first attracted to the Far East by the
spice trade. It was the search for a better trade
route which brought John Cabot to the North American
continent in 1498. The British Empire has established
most of her territory by the time of the American
Revolution. The years of growth following the end
of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815 brought the United
Kingdom to the peak of her power and influence. World
War I drastically depleted British resources and undermined
the United Kingdom's ability to maintain her dominant
role of the previous century. In 1926 the British
Commonwealth of Nations was founded when Australia,
Canada, and New Zealand gained complete independence,
and in 1947 the United Kingdom began an orderly withdrawal
from her former colonies.
The British constitution is unwritten, based partially
on statute, partially on common law, and on traditions
going back to the Magna Carta of 1215.
Executive power is exercised by cabinet ministers
selected primarily from among members of the House
of Commons, though occasionally from the House of
Lords. The Prime Minister is the leader of the majority
party in the Commons.
Parliament represents the whole country and enacts
legislation for the entire country or for any part
of it. The maximum term is five years, but the Prime
Minister can dissolve Parliament and call for a general
election at any time. There are 635 members in the
House of Commons which is the focus of all legislative
power and controls all financial legislation. The
House of Lords has little real power, though it can
review, amend, or delay legislation except bills concerning
finance. One of its most important functions is to
debate public issues.
The judiciary acts independently of the legislative
and executive branches of the government, but it has
no power equivalent to that of our Supreme Court to
review the constitutionality of legislation.
The Labour Party led by Prime Minister Tony Blair
is currently the majority party.
The Conservative Party is the Labours' opposition.
The Liberal Party offers itself as a moderate alternative
to the two leading political parties.
City of Birmingham Facts
Birmingham is Britain’s second largest city,
with over 1 million people. It is rich in history
and is also one of Europe’s most modern cities.
Birmingham was an important military camp during Roman
times. It has been a market center since the twelfth
century and an industrial hub since the sixteenth
century, when it was already known for its wool processing
and metal working. England’s Industrial Revolution
took root here, and by 1850 many of the city’s
250,000 people toiled in foundries and workshops.
Birmingham’s industrial heritage is based
around engineering and the skills of making jewelry,
guns, swords, buckles and buttons. Many of these crafts
still form a part of Birmingham’s economy with
the addition of major industries such as food and
drink production through Cadbury and automobile component
manufacture with the Rover Group at Longbridge.
The city has successfully diversified its economic
base, however, and no longer relies solely on heavy
industry. The International Convention Centre which
opened in 1991 is Britain’s first purpose-built
conference complex and is one of the largest in Europe.
The city hosts a number of national and international
events annually. The National Indoor Arena (NIA) is
Britain’s premier sports arena, where world
athletic events, as well as rock concerts and other
musical events, are held. The National Exhibition
Centre (NEC) hosts such events as Britain’s
annual automobile show and the annual international
Crufts dog show. The world-class Symphony Hall is
the home of the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra.
Ballet, opera, musicals, and a wide range of theatre
productions abound in Birmingham.
Other attractions include the Birmingham Museum and
Art Gallery which has an outstanding collection, Sea
World Aquarium, a working Railway Museum, the National
Motorcyle Museum, and Cadbury World which traces the
history of chocolate and the Bournville Cadbury factory.
The 1991 census showed Birmingham to have an ethnic
minority population of just over 20%. This number
has grown significantly in the last decade. The largest
group has its roots in Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh;
another large group is African or Afro-Caribbean in
origin. This diversity lends itself to a wealth of
cultural opportunities in Birmingham including abundant
ethnic restaurants, cultural festivals, and a wide
variety of arts and musical events.
For more information on Birmingham, check its official
website at http://www.birmingham.gov.uk.
The University of Birmingham
(adapted from the information in its website at http://www.bham.ac.uk)
The University of Birmingham was founded in 1900
by the citizens of Birmingham who wanted their own
university to train and educate the people who would
create and manage the burgeoning businesses and industries
of the Midlands. It was natural, given the nature
of Birmingham's industry, that the University should,
from the start, teach the major scientific and engineering
disciplines. It was also the first British university
to establish a Faculty of Commerce and incorporate
a medical school. The modern university is equally
distinguished in the humanities, education, social
sciences and law. It is recognized as one of the leading
research-based universities in the United Kingdom.
The main university campus at Edgbaston is outstanding
among British universities. It is spacious and attractive
with lawns, trees, a lake and pleasant spaces between
the different buildings. It was one of the first 'redbrick'
universities and is said to be the origin of the term.
The buildings, which reflect changing architectural
styles through the twentieth century, are grouped
around the central Chancellor's Court with the 100
metre high Chamberlain clock tower which honours the
University's first Chancellor, Joseph Chamberlain.
The spectacular Great Hall and Aston Webb Crescent
are buildings of self confidence and majesty.
The Barber Institute of Fine Arts on the Edgbaston
campus houses an important collection of works of
art. Its contents range from the 13th to 20th centuries
and include paintings, sculpture, furniture and objects
d'art. The institute is open to the public and has
a concert hall where there are lunchtime and evening
concerts. The large university orchestra and choir
give regular concerts. There are many public drama
performances, recitals and lectures throughout the
year.
The university has some of the best sports facilities
in the United Kingdom. These include a swimming pool,
sports halls, athletics track, gymnasia and squash
courts, as well as state of the art water based hockey
pitches. There are playing fields and a golf driving
range. At Coniston in the Lake District, the University
has an outdoor pursuits centre.
The nearby Selly Oak campus is situated on a beautiful
‘garden' site just five miles from the City
centre. The spacious eighty acre site is green and
leafy, with an interesting mix of old and new buildings,
including the state of the art Orchard Learning Resources
Centre. Originally the site of Westhill College, it
became a part of the University in 1999.
Westhill (http://www.westhill.ac.uk)
was founded in 1907 by George Hamilton, a Canadian
Presbyterian, with the full support of the local Quaker
benefactor, chocolate manufacturer George Cadbury,
who gave the land. George Cadbury played a major part
in the creation and development of both Westhill and
the University, and Cadbury Trusts continue to play
a major part in education at Selly Oak today.
At the start the two institutions performed very
different functions but, as Westhill became more and
more concerned with professional training, its work
developed more and more like that of the university.
In 1947 Westhill became a founder member of the University
of Birmingham Institute of Education, formed by all
the teacher training agencies in the area. Rather
later Westhill became a validated college, and in
1994, it became a college fully accredited by the
university.
In such ways the two institutions have increasingly
been working together, leading up to the establishment
of a strategic alliance on 1 August 1999 with both
staff and students at Westhill becoming staff and
students of the university. The alliance reinforces
and renews the academic strengths of both institutions;
provides a major development for the benefit of Birmingham
and the Midlands region; facilitates initiatives in
continuing education, work experience placements,
new part time programmes, and other access initiatives,
alongside existing degree programmes. This campus
is now know as the Selly Oak Campus of the University
of Birmingham.
THIS ARTICLE IS BEING REPRINTED, WITH PERMISSION FROM
THE ROTARIAN MAGAZINE, FOR USE BY THE UNIVERSITY OF
MINNESOTA, DULUTH.
This Article by Jo Nugent appeared in the January,
1984, edition of The Rotarian. While outdated in some
minor details, it gives the reader a good introduction
to the Birmingham.
HEART OF ENGLAND
In defining "English Traits" in 1847, Ralph
Waldo Emerson called the Englishman "the man
of all men who stands firmest in his shoes"...a
man of "pluck" who had applied machinery
"to all work ... mines, forges, mills, breweries,
railroads". . giving "a mechanical regularity"
to all. But he also saw a man of "aplomb,"
whose self assurance resulted from "a good adjustment
of moral and physical nature."
In essence, Emerson was describing the men of Birmingham,
the 19th century giants who were making their city
and the "Heart of England" the forge of
the Industrial Revolution and the "Workshop of
the World." Birmingham's great industry had lured
such inventive geniuses as Joseph Priestley, the chemist
who discovered oxygen; the printer John Bask erville;
the Cadburys, whose famous chocolate is still manufactured
here; William Murdock, the inventor of gas lighting;
James Watt, who perfected the steam engine; John Austin,
the automotive pioneer; and Matthew Boulton, who brought
new concepts to manufacturing.
But along with the roar of industrial progress and
the smoke and dust had come the inevitable by product,
the overpopulated misery of the city slum. Here is
where the men of Birmingham displayed their well adjusted
"moral and physical nature" and, with inspired
reformers like Joseph Chamberlain at the helm, initiated
an ambitious program of slum clearance, setting up
school and fire boards and other municipal improvements.
In 1890, following the building of the city's famous
Law Courts, another American observer called Birmingham
"the best governed city in the world," and
in 1911, the city fathers introduced England's first
townplanning scheme.
Modern Birmingham is still a business and manufacturing
giant, but if you come here today expecting a smoke
grimed cauldron of industry, you are in for a happy
enlightenment. This clean, modern city of more than
a million inhabitants bears little trace of its sooty
beginnings. Modern technology and judicious planning
and rebuilding have brought the city high quality
of life as well as high standards of achievement.
"Forward" is Birmingham's motto and it is
an objective that fits. This is a progressive city
in every way with an eye on the arts as well as the
sciences. Its symphony orchestra is one of the best
in the country and its museum system is unusual and
varied, combining pride in the past with the promise
of the future. As befits its history, Birmingham has
the finest industrial history collections to be found
anywhere. Its Museum of Science and Industry houses
one of the world's best records of industrial development,
from steam engines to computers. Its Railway Museum
is another treasure, as is the Sarehole Mill an 18th
century waterpowered corn mill, now restored to working
order. J.R.R. Tolkien played there as a boy and his
"Lord of the Rings" trilogy reflects his
boyhood fascination with the mill.
Birmingham's City Museum and Art Gallery has the
world's prime collection of Pre Raphaelite paintings
and drawings, including the works of native son Edward
Coley Burne Jones. The city also boasts such architectural
masterpieces as Aston Hall, a Jacobean mansion containing
examples of 17th , 18th , and 19th century furniture,
and ceilings of exquisite plaster work. Aston Hall
is undergoing complete restoration and will be in
mint condition by convention time.
Another treasure well perserved from the region's
industrial past is the network of canals which opened
in Birmingham in 1786 and out of which grew an extensive
waterways system connecting the city with the Thames,
the Trent, the Humber, the Mersey, and the Severn.
Today the canal network offers a wide choice of holidays
afloat to vacationers. All told, the region has more
canals than Venice.
On the futuristic side, nothing could be more technically
avant garde than Birmingham's new exhibition complex,
which of course will be the venue for Rotary's convention,
3 6 June. In addition to its truly "state of
the art" meeting and program facilities, the
National Exhibition Centre offers adjacency to large
hotels, an international railway station, and a new
international airport terminal. The latter will be
open just in time for the convention. A unique feature
of the new terminal is the Maglev "people mover,"
an elevated device which will whisk you from the airport
to the convention complex or the railway station in
a matter of minutes by means of a frictionless magnetic
suspension system.
The rolling hills and meadowlands surrounding Birmingham
and the villages nestled among them are visual delights.
Visitors are enchanted by the village names, most
of AngloSaxon and wool trade ancestry: Wootton Wawen,
Chipping Campden, Great Alne, Ross on Wye which sound
to the non-British ear like words from a magical language
concocted by an imaginative sprite.
Finding one's way through the circular maze of roads
is a challenge, but the beauty and serenity of the
passing scene makes getting lost good sport. Besides,
there's usually a good natured bicyclist or a family
out for a stroll who will be glad to put you right.
There are no garish billboards inviting you to lunch,
but just 'round the next bend or two you may find
a friendly pub where you can enjoy a "ploughman's
lunch" or a shephard's pie and a pint of the
local brew. Many of the pubs in the region and the
elegant restaurants as well are controlled by the
local brewers, such as Mitchells & Butlers and
Ansellts.
The countryside can be seen at its best in the Cotswold
and Malvern Hills. The distinguishing feature of the
Cotswolds is the pale as honey limestone which roams
everywhere, facing the walls of manor houses, churches,
cottages, barns, ancient mills, and curving along
the roads and hills in hundreds of mortarless fences,
fitted like intricate jigsaw puzzles by local stone
masons. Many of the fences date from medieval times
when the Cotswolds were the center of the wool trade
and thus England's wealthiest region.
The Malverns are a long ridge of peaks and hollows
whose moorlike tops afford one of England's most spectacular
views.
As soon as you set foot in Warwickshire, you realize
that you are in "Shakespeare's Country."
The very atmosphere is romantic, dramatic, inspirational
in the shadow of the grand castle, along the quiet
river paths, in the gently wooded hills. Here is Warwick
Castle with its mighty battlements, its regal staterooms;
and private chambers (some newly peopled by Madame
Tussaud's), its green lawns and flamboyant peacocks,
and its terrible dungeons and torture chambers.
Built in 1068 as a fortress to guard the Midlands
against their enemies to the north, this most romantic
of English castles even has a "ghost tower."
It is haunted by Sir Fulke Greville, who occupied
the castle in the 1600's. Sir Fulke was stabbed by
a disgruntled servant who didn't make a very clean
job of it. It took the poor fellow a month to die,
giving him plenty of time to coach his spirit in the
art of revenge.
The town of Coventry is famous for its magnificent
modern cathedral, consecrated in 1962, which stands
beside the bombed out hull of its medieval predecessor.
The contrast is awesome.
Equally famed is Coventry's graceful sculpture of
Lady Godiva. The Lady is shown mounted on her splendid
horse, herself "clothed on with chastity"
and nothing else as she rides to intercede with her
husband, Leofric, Earl of Mercia, in behalf of the
poor.
Coventry is also known for its Museum of British
Road Transportation, a monument to the British car
industry which has on display some 400 cars, cycles,
and commercial and military vehicles.
The heart of Shakespeare's country is Stratford upon-Avon,
where the great bard lived and wrote and is buried,
and where his matchless plays are still performed.
Modern Stratford is a mecca for Shakespearean visitors
and scholars from all over the world. The new Shakespeare
Centre is most impressive, and failure to see a play
at the Royal Shakespeare Theatre would be like going
to Agra without glimpsing the Taj Mahal.
A necessary stop for visitors interested in industrial
archaeology is the "Black Country," so called
because it owes its prosperity to its coal fields
and other mineral deposits. In the early days of the
Industrial Revolution, the Black Country became "a
hellish nightmare of fiery furnaces and smoking chimneys."
Today it has been transformed again, into a clear
aired center of new technology. But the traditions
remain and are being carefully preserved in great
outdoor museums showing how people lived and worked
during the days of smoke and flame. Here the first
iron rails were made, the first locomotive built,
and the chains forged for the world's largest steamships.
At the restored Victorian township of Blist's Hill,
you can visit stores and homes where men, women, and
children in period dress carry out the daily routines
of yesteryear. You can also see the great Ironbridge
Gorge with its famous bridge over the Severn and its
blast furnace, and the factories where England's exquisite
china and crystal are produced.
Yes, pleasures abound in the Heart of England, including
plenty of intellectual stimulation. Although the countryside
may be almost fictional in its beauty, the people
are very real warm, friendly, helpful, and intensely
interested in a guest's every want and need.
So when you travel here in June, first enjoy Birmingham
itself to the hilt, then take the advice of an earlier
visitor named Washington Irving: "The stranger'who
would form a correct opinion of the English character
must not confine his observations to the Metropolis.
He must sojourn in villages and hamlets ... visit
castles, villas, farmhouses...wander through parks
and gardens ... The English ... possess a quick sensibility
to the beauties of nature." Truer words were
never written.
American and British Words and Phrases
Although it is generally assumed that the Americans
and English speak the same language, when you meet
a true Brummie for the first time or ask a Cockney
for directions, you may question whether that assumption
is correct. The following is a list of words and phrases
and their standard British counterparts:
| American |
British |
| apartment |
flat/digs (refers to where you live) |
| baked potato |
jacket potato |
| ball point pen |
biro |
| Band-Aid |
plaster |
| bar |
pub ("free house" pub serves a variety
of brands) |
| barrette |
hair slide |
| bathroom (toilet) |
loo or toilet |
| bath |
room with a bathtub/shower |
| beef and potato pie |
Cornish pasty |
| beer |
lager closest to our beer
bitter dark ale
mild dark ale, sweeter than "bitter"
ale not as sweet as our beer |
| brochure |
leaflet |
| bus |
coach |
| busy signal (phone) |
engaged |
| candy |
sweets |
| check (restaurant) |
bill |
check room (train) |
left luggage |
| cigarettes |
fags |
| cookies |
biscuits |
| dentist's office |
surgery |
| dessert |
sweets |
| diaper |
nappy |
| dinner (evening meal) |
supper or tea |
| direction signals (blinkers) |
winkers |
| divided highway |
dual motorway or dual carriageway |
| doctor's office |
surgery |
| drugstore |
chemist |
| editorial (news) |
leader |
| eggplant |
aubergine |
| elevator |
lift |
| eraser |
rubber |
| excellent |
brilliant |
| "excuse me" |
sorry |
| exit |
way out |
| faucet |
tap |
| fender of a car |
wing |
| first floor |
ground floor |
| for hire |
to let |
| four lane highway |
dual carriage way |
| freeway/interstate |
motorway |
| french fries |
chips |
| garage/yard sale |
jumble sale |
| garbage/trash |
rubbish |
| garbage can |
dustbin |
| gasoline |
petrol |
| goodbye |
cheers/cheerio |
| ground meat |
mince |
| ground beef and mashed potatoes |
Shepherd's pie |
| guy |
bloke/geezer |
| highway intersection (circular) |
roundabout |
| hood of a car |
bonnet |
| jello |
jelly |
| jelly |
jam |
| jumper (dress) |
pinafore |
| kerosene |
paraffin |
| line of people |
queue ("q") |
| line up |
queue up |
| liquor store |
off license |
| long distance call |
trunk call |
| lunch |
dinner |
| mailbox |
pillar box/post bo |
| make fun of |
piss (take the piss out of) |
| mashed potato and cabbage |
bubble and squeak |
| meatball |
faggot |
| mom |
mum |
| movies |
pictures |
| napkin |
serviette |
| nosh |
food |
| nylons/pantyhose |
tights |
| nylons (knee highs) |
pop sox |
| one room apartment |
bedsit |
| one way ticket |
single ticket |
| orchestra tickets |
stalls |
| pamphlet |
leaflet |
| pants or slacks |
trousers |
| parking lot |
car park |
| pedestrian crossing |
zebra crossing |
| pedestrian passage (underground) |
subway |
| police officer |
bobby/cop/copper |
| potato chips |
crisps |
| pound (money) |
quid |
| problematic |
dicey/dodgy |
| pullover sweater |
jumper |
| pumps (women's shoes) |
court shoes |
| quilted vest |
body warmer |
| railroad car |
coach/carriage |
| raincoat |
mackintosh |
| rent ("to rent") |
to let |
| rental (car rental) |
hire (car hire) |
| restroom |
toilet/loo/W.C. (water closet) |
| roadside stop |
lay by |
| round trip |
return |
| sausage |
banger |
| second floor |
first floor |
| sedan (car) |
saloon |
| shopping bag |
carrier bag |
| shrimp (regular) |
prawn |
| shrimp (large) |
scampi |
| sidewalk |
pavement |
| "silverware"/flatware |
cutlery |
| sneakers |
trainers/plimsoles |
| station wagon |
estate |
| steal |
nik |
| stove |
cooker |
| subway |
underground/tube |
| sweater |
jumper |
| telephone (to call someone) |
ring up |
| telephone booth |
phone box/callbox |
| television |
telly |
| tennis shoes |
training shoes/trainers |
| thank you |
ta/cheers |
| tired/worn out |
knackered |
| to call someone on the phone |
to ring them |
| to visit someone at home |
to call |
| toilet |
loo/W.C. |
| toilet paper |
loo roll |
| trash can |
dustbin |
| truck |
lorry |
| trunk of the car |
boot |
| turn signal |
winker/indicator |
| two lane highway |
dual carriageway |
| two weeks |
a fortnight |
| ugly person |
minger |
| umbrella |
brolly |
| underground walkway |
subway |
| underpants (women's) |
knickers |
| undershirt |
vest |
| underwear (men's) |
pants |
| value added tax |
VAT (Nat'l sales tax) |
| vest |
waistcoat |
| visit |
knock up/to call |
| washcloth |
flannel |
| windbreaker |
wind cheater |
| windshield |
windscreen |
| wrench |
spanner |
| yield |
give away |
| z (the letter) |
zed |
| zucchini |
courgettes |
| 7 up or Sprite |
lemonade |
16 oz = 1 pint
20 oz = 1 pint |
128 oz = 1 gallon
160 oz = 1 gallon |
14 pounds (weight)
=1 stone |
Note: some of these terms are used solely in Birmingham.
You will find that each region has its own dialect.
Who said you didn't need a foreign language to enroll
in this programme?
When writing the date use day month year: (12 February,
1995)
Spoken times: 7:30 = "half seven"
1:15 = "quarter past one"
