ADVT:

  Home   Astrology   Business   Indiafocus   Lifestyle   Movies   News   Parenting   Online Exam   Sports   Travel

News HomeWorldEurope
British schools to teach history of British India
Wednesday, August 27, 2008 16:47 [IST]

 

Venkata Vemuri

London: Secondary school students in Britain are to be taught history of Mughal and British India and black slavery as part of the government's move to make students better appreciate modern issues related to immigration and ethnic minorities.

The two subjects, aimed at highlighting the influence of ethnic minorities, will join the two world wars and the Holocaust as periods that must form part of the history syllabus from September.

Schoolchildren will learn about the roles of William Wilberforce, the MP who campaigned for the abolition of slavery, and Olaudah Equiano, a former slave who drew attention to the horrors of the trade after buying his freedom and writing an autobiography. They will also be taught about the origins of the empire, with one unit looking at rise and fall of the Mughals in India and the arrival of the British.

Another is titled "How was it that, by 1900,Britain controlled nearly a quarter of the world?" Key figures in Indian ethnic minority history identified in the new history curriculum include Mughal emperor Akbar, nawab of Bengal Siraj-ud-Dawlah and Queen Victoria.

The three persons are introduced in the new curriculum as: Akbar - regarded as one of the greatest rulers in Indian history, who presided over an empire that included almost all of northern India when he died in 1605; Siraj-ud-Dawlah - nawab of Bengal whose attack on Calcutta in 1756 resulted in the "Black Hole" incident in which scores of English captives died in a cramped dungeon; Queen Victoria - became Empress of India after government of India was transferred from East India Company to Crown in the aftermath of the Indian Mutiny.

Kevin Brennan, the children minister, said: "Although we may be ashamed to admit it, the slave trade is an integral part of British history. It is inextricably linked to trade, colonisation, industrialisation and the British Empire. Mick Waters, director of curriculum at the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority, said: "Black history is not just about slavery - it is much broader than that. It is about the contribution that black and Asian people have made throughout history.


Source : IANS

Add To

digg.com

del.icio.us

stumbleupon.com

My Yahoo

reditt.com

newsvine.com

fark.com
 Post Your Feedback   
Name
Email ID
Comments
 Other Features
News today
Screen Sever
Gallery
WallPaper
Print this page
Mail this page
Archives


  
More News
Mamta defends hefty salaries
A rare love story!
Lok Sabha adjourned over...
Liberhan report in this...
China coal mine blast: 104...
China mine blast death toll 104
Govt to help obese woman in...
Red alert at Guj Kandla oil...
Three Mile Island Nuke plant...
Who should I deal with in Pak?:...
LeT's Google Earth link to...
Who should I deal with in Pak?:...
Four held for misbehaving with...
20 arrested in Orissa for...
No fear of ties suffering under...
Pak not serious on Mumbai...
Assam twin blast toll rises to...
Open gateways to dual use...
Dalai Lama doesn't want to...
Mumbaikars don't about security
Sikh groups seek justice for...