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AQA AS HISTORY 7041/1A The Age of the Crusades, c1071–1204 Component 1A The Crusader states and Outremer, c1071–1149 Version: 1.0 Fina IB/M/Jun23/E3 7041/1A AS HISTORY $9.40   Add to cart

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AQA AS HISTORY 7041/1A The Age of the Crusades, c1071–1204 Component 1A The Crusader states and Outremer, c1071–1149 Version: 1.0 Fina IB/M/Jun23/E3 7041/1A AS HISTORY

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AQA AS HISTORY 7041/1A The Age of the Crusades, c1071–1204 Component 1A The Crusader states and Outremer, c1071–1149 Version: 1.0 Fina IB/M/Jun23/E3 7041/1A AS HISTORY The Age of the Crusades, c1071–1204

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AQA

A-level


HISTORY


7042/1G


Component 1G Challenge and transformation: Britain,

c1851–1964


Version: 1.0 Final

,A-level
HISTORY
Component 1G Challenge and transformation: Britain, c1851–1964


Wednesday 24 May 2023 Morning Time allowed: 2 hours 30 minutes
Materials
For this paper you must have:
• an AQA 16-page answer book.

Instructions
• Use black ink or black ball-point pen.
• Write the information required on the front of your answer book. The Paper Reference is
7042/1G.
• Answer three questions.
In Section A answer Question 01.
In Section B answer two questions.

Information
• The marks for questions are shown in brackets.
• The maximum mark for this paper is 80.
• You will be marked on your ability to:
– use good English
– organise information clearly
– use specialist vocabulary where appropriate.

Advice
• You are advised to spend about:
– 1 hour on Question 01 from Section A
– 45 minutes on each of the two questions answered from Section B.




IB/M/Jun23/E4 7042/1G

, 2


Section A

Answer Question 01.




Extract A

In the years 1866 to 1894, Gladstone performed an immense political service to the
country and to the Liberal Party by integrating new working-class voters into the political
system. The ‘People’s William’ was the first prime minister the masses could identify with
and adore. As a result, there was no mass revolutionary socialist movement committed
to the overthrow of the state, as in other European countries. Instead, British politics 5
became more settled. The old political world was not totally overthrown, yet room was
made peacefully for the new. The triumph of free trade ensured cheap food and rising
living standards, which, for most ordinary Britons in the 1880s and 1890s, was of great
benefit. Furthermore, Gladstone implanted in the Liberal Party, and the political left in
general, a moral dimension to British politics. He showed that the language of morality 10
was a powerful political weapon when wielded by a master.

Adapted from M Pearce and G Stewart, British Political History 1867–1990, 1992




Extract B

In the 1860s and 1870s, Gladstone’s reputation for radicalism was exaggerated. His
radical followers expected their support for him to be translated into precise reforms, yet
their expectations were to be disappointed. In 1880, the Liberals swept home in the
general election on a wave of moral righteousness against Disraeli’s foreign policy, but
little else. The Midlothian strategy and subsequent election victory, seemed unrelated to 5
the issues of radical politics, and the new administration staggered on without
achievement. However, by 1895, the Liberal Party had substantially resolved the
problems of the previous decades, having shaken free from the upper-class control that
had undermined its position as an opponent of privilege. Yet Gladstone’s role in all this is
ambiguous. Many of the changes in the party had come about in spite of Gladstone not 10
because of him. It had emerged that the Gladstonian formula based on low government
spending and low taxation would not work in the long run. In fact, Chamberlain’s
programme offered a more realistic way forward.

Adapted from M Pugh, The Making of Modern British Politics 1867–1939, 1993




IB/M/Jun23/7042/1G

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