yes
The capital city of England before London was Winchester. In 827, King Alfred the Great kept Winchester as the capital of the newly unified England. Soon after the Norman conquest, two and a half-centuries later, the capital city was moved to London.
Netherlands
france
17th century (1600s)
in england, they were first introduced during the reign of king henry VIII (15th-16th century), but that's only england
The capital city of England before London was Winchester. In 827, King Alfred the Great kept Winchester as the capital of the newly unified England. Soon after the Norman conquest, two and a half-centuries later, the capital city was moved to London.
No. Canterbury had been the capital of England in the middle ages and still hosts the head of the Anglican Church. Winchester was the capital of England between the 10th and 11th centuries. London is the de facto capital of England and UK since the 12th century.
The Industrial Revolution began in England in the late 18th century.
The Netherlands.
Netherlands
the Netherlands
The Dutch
Taxes of the 14th century, and part of the 15th century, were high in England and France because of the Hundred Years' War.
During turn-of-the-century London, England. I don't know the year, but it's sometime during the 19th century.
During the 16th century, the Protestant Reformation led to the establishment of the Church of England and several other denominations. There was a rivalry between Catholic Spain and Protestant England.
KING henrry 2nd was responsible for establishing local courts to hear legal cases in England during the twelfth century
france