ddt
Mafia Penguin
The first or the second time?I think things like that should be taught in schools, but they aren't and thus the average British citizen has no idea about these things.
When was the Magna Carta signed and what was its significance?
After a Dutch invasion.When was the Bill of Rights passed by Parliament, and what is the name of the political turmoil preceding it?
(sorry, couldn't resist after that thread on "10 most important battles in history" where the author asserted that Hastings was the only invasion from Roman times until now).
John Lackland resp. William and Mary (they were both monarchs in their own right, another bit of special trivia in that episode).Who were the respective monarchs during the time in which each document was written?
The bare facts like dates maybe don't tell you much, but the episodes tell you much more about how Britain and its institutions came to be as it is now than a stupid question like the history and traditions one. They're actual examples of that.The average citizen has no idea and prospective citizens probably don't even need to know. Much of the provisions in each document are now irrelevant as they have been superseded by later legislation.
I got 21/24; had no idea who Richard Arkwright is, got the magistrates wrong and clicked one wrong before I realised it. I wonder what a resident of Akrotiri or Dekeleia would answer at question 18.
I've played before US and German tests and passed them with flying colours. Personally, I prefer the format with concrete questions about the law, the state and the institutions and your rights and responsibilities as a citizen, and not wishy-washy questions about "culture" or "values". The Dutch citizenship test goes, AFAIK, even further in that direction. I tried the Dutch example test that was published and failed. Several times.
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