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About England



Welcome to our Mission in England!
Our Communities in England PDF Print E-mail

1. FI London, England



Marian Friary of "Our Lady Coredemptrix"

Brief History:

At the invitation of the parish priest Fr. Robert Copsey, of St. Mary Magdalen of London, the friars arrived to help in the parish and there manage a bookstore. The Friars were recognized officially in the diocese of Southwark in 2004. The bookstore was closed on December 31 2005 and then transferred to the Holy Cross Bookshop in Catford, London. In March 2006, the Franciscan Sisters of the Immaculate began the management of the Bookshop where a chapel can be found public to use.




2. FI Cornwall, England


Marian Friary of "St. Joseph and St. Anne"

Brief History:

In the beginning of 2001, the Discalced Carmelite Nuns decided to leave Lanherne and offered the used of the convent to the Franciscan Sisters of the Immaculate. On December 11, 2001, the Mother General and two sisters came to Lanherne and were immediately followed by other sisters, who would begin the contemplative life in there. Shortly afterwards, the friars came and started their new community in assist the sisters in their spiritual needs.

 
People and Society in England PDF Print E-mail

B
ritain has a diverse population that includes people with connections to every continent of the world. The ethnic origins of this population have been complicated by immigration, intermarriage, and the constant relocation of people in this highly developed industrial and technological society. Nevertheless, a few particulars about the historical formation of the population are noteworthy.

A. Early Ethnic Groups

Britain’s predominant historical stock is called Anglo-Saxon. Germanic peoples from Europe—the Angles, the Saxons, and the Jutes—arrived in Britain in massive numbers between the 5th and 7th centuries AD (see Ancient Britain).These people tended to be tall, blond, and blue-eyed. Their language became the foundation of the basic, short, everyday words in modern English. These groups invaded and overwhelmed Roman Britain, choosing to settle on the plains of England because of the mild climate and good soils. Native Britons fought the great flood of Germanic peoples, and many Britons who survived fled west to the hill country. These refugees and native Britons were Celts who had absorbed the earliest peoples on the island, the prehistoric people known as Iberians. Celts tended to be shorter than Anglo-Saxons and have rounder heads. Most had darker hair, but a strikingly high percentage of Celts had red hair.

After the Anglo-Saxon conquest, the Celts remained in Wales, Scotland, Ireland, and the West Country (the southwestern peninsula of Britain), where Celtic languages are still used to some extent and Celtic culture is still celebrated. This geographic separation between the Germanic Anglo-Saxons and the Celts has broken down over the centuries as people have migrated and intermarried.

A substantial number of Scandinavians raided and settled in Great Britain and Ireland during the 9th century. By then the Anglo-Saxons had established agricultural and Christian communities, and eventually they succeeded in subduing and integrating the Scandinavians into their kingdoms. In 1066 the Normans, French-speaking invaders of Norse origin, conquered England, adding yet another ethnic component. Although the Normans were the last major group to add their stock to the British population, waves of other foreigners and refugees have immigrated to Britain for religious, political, and economic reasons. Protestant French (see Huguenots) sought refuge in the 17th century, sailors of African ancestry came in the 18th century, and Jews from central and eastern Europe immigrated in the late 19th century and during the 1930s and late 1940s.

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United Kingdom PDF Print E-mail

I. Introduction

U
nited Kingdom, constitutional monarchy in northwestern Europe, officially the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Great Britain is the largest island in the cluster of islands, or archipelago, known as the British Isles. England is the largest and most populous division of the island of Great Britain, making up the south and east. Wales is on the west and Scotland is to the north. Northern Ireland is located in the northeast corner of Ireland, the second largest island in the British Isles. The capital of the United Kingdom is the city of London, situated near the southeastern tip of England.

People often confuse the names for this country, and frequently make mistakes in using them. United Kingdom, UK, and Britain are all proper terms for the entire nation, although the term Britain is also often used when talking about the island of Great Britain. The use of the term Great Britain to refer to the entire nation is now outdated; the term Great Britain, properly used, refers only to the island of Great Britain, which does not include Northern Ireland. The term England should never be used to describe Britain, because England is only one part of the island. It is always correct to call people from England, Scotland, or Wales British, although people from England may also properly be called English, people from Scotland Scottish, and people from Wales Welsh.

The United Kingdom is a small nation in physical size. At 244,110 sq km (94,251 sq mi), the United Kingdom is roughly the size of Oregon or Colorado, or twice the size of New York State. It is located as far north in latitude as Labrador in North America, but, like the rest of northern Europe, it is warmed by the Gulf Stream flowing out of the North Atlantic Ocean. The climate, in general, is mild, chilly, and often wet. Rain or overcast skies can be expected for up to 300 days per year. These conditions make Britain lush and green, with rolling plains in the south and east and rough hills and mountains to the west and north.

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Facts and Figures


Playing: National Anthem

Official name
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

Capital London
Area 244,110 sq km
94,251 sq mi

People
Population 60,776,238 (2007 estimate)

Largest cities, with population
London 7,172,036 (2001)
Birmingham 976,400 (2001 estimate)
Leeds 715,500 (2001 estimate)
Glasgow 578,700 (2001 estimate)
Sheffield 513,100 (2001 estimate)

Ethnic groups
White 91.3 percent
Indian 2.0 percent
Pakistani 1.4 percent
Black or Black British 2.2 percent
Mixed and Other 3.1 percent

Languages
English (official), Welsh, Scottish Gaelic

Religion
Anglican 47.0 percent
Other Christians 24.6 percent
Muslim 2.7 percent
Hindu, Sikh, Jewish, Buddhist 2.4 percent
Nonreligious 15.5 percent
Other and not stated 7.8 percent

Literacy rate
Total 99 percent (1995)

Government
Form of government Constitutional monarchy
Head of state Monarch
Head of government Prime minister
Legislature Bicameral legislature
House of Commons: 646 members
House of Lords: 713 members (595 life peers and 118 hereditary members)

Constitution
Unwritten; partly statutes, partly common law and practice
Highest court House of Lords, High Court of Justiciary, (Scottish criminal cases only)

Economy
Gross domestic product (GDP, in U.S.$) $2.2 trillion (2005)
GDP per capita (U.S.$) $36,508.70 (2005)

GDP by economic sector
Agriculture, forestry, fishing 1 percent (2005)
Industry 26.2 percent (2005)
Services 72.8 percent (2005)

Employment
Number of workers 30,644,965 (2005)

Workforce share of economic sector
Agriculture, forestry, fishing 1.4 percent (2005)
Industry 22 percent (2005)
Services 76.3 percent (2005)

Unemployment rate 4.6 percent (2004)

National budget (U.S.$)
Total revenue $902,897 million (2005)
Total expenditure $834,928 million (2005)

Monetary unit
1 pound sterling (£), consisting of 100 pence

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