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Boardworks History Age 14–16 coverage of Edexcel History IGCSE (4380)
SPECIFIED SUBJECT CONTENT
Papers 1F and 2H (Section A): Themes
A4: The Road to War in Europe, 1870–1914
(a) The Alliance System
The impact of the Franco-Prussian War
Relations between Germany and Russia
The Congress of Berlin
The Creation of the Triple Alliance
The Creation of the Triple Entente
(b) International Rivalry
Weltpolitik
The Naval Arms Race
The Moroccan crises
July–August 1914
A5: Reform and Reaction in Russia
(a) Reform
Russia in 1855
The Emancipation of the Serfs
Reform of local government and central government
Alexander II’s policies 1870 to 1881
Attempts at change 1906–14
(b) Reaction
Opposition to Tsarist rule
BOARDWORKS HISTORY AGE 14–16
History Age 14–16: International Relations
Not covered in detail
Not covered in detail
Not covered in detail
1. Imperialism and the Alliance System
1. Imperialism and the Alliance System
History Age 14–16: International Relations
Not covered in detail
2. Increasing Tension 1900–1914
2. Increasing Tension 1900–1914
2. Increasing Tension 1900–1914
3. Why did the Assassination in Sarajevo Lead to War?
History Age 14–16: Russia
Not covered in detail
Not covered in detail
Not covered in detail
Not covered in detail
1. Why was Russia so Difficult to Govern?
2. The 1905 Revolution – Causes and Consequences
History Age 14–16: Russia
1. Why was Russia so Difficult to Govern?
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The growth of terrorism
Russia under Nicholas II
The 1905 Revolution
The impact of the First World War
A6: The USSR, 1917–64
(a) The Soviet Union 1917–41
Russia under Lenin
Five Year Plans
Collectivization
Purges and Show Trials
Cult of personality and the revision of history
(b) The Soviet Union 1941–64
A7: The Rise of Fascism in Europe: Germany and Italy,
1919–39
(a) Germany
The importance of the Treaty of Versailles
The establishment of the Weimar Republic and its early problems
The recovery of Germany 1924–29
1. Why was Russia so Difficult to Govern?
1. Why was Russia so Difficult to Govern?
2. The 1905 Revolution – Causes and Consequences
2. The 1905 Revolution – Causes and Consequences
3. The February 1917 Revolution – Why did Nicholas II Fall from
Power?
4. The October 1917 Revolution – Why did the Bolsheviks Win?
History Age 14–16: Russia
4. The October 1917 Revolution – Why did the Bolsheviks Win?
5. The Civil War – How did the Bolsheviks Win?
6. How did the Bolsheviks Keep Control?
7. The Power Struggle after Lenin’s Death
7. The Power Struggle after Lenin’s Death
8. Stalin’s Rule 1927–57 – Collectivization and Industrialization
8. Stalin’s Rule 1927–57 – Collectivization and Industrialization
9. The Purges – How did Stalin Deal with Opposition?
Not covered in detail
Not covered
History Age 14–16: Nazi Germany
1. Germany and the End of World War I
(see also History Age 14–16 International Relations:
4a./4b. The Treaty of Versailles (parts 1 & 2)
6. German Reaction to the Treaty of Versailles)
2. The Weimar Republic and its Reasons for Failure
2. The Weimar Republic and its Reasons for Failure
3. Hitler’s Rise to Power
2
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The rise of Hitler and the Nazis
Life in Nazi Germany
(b) Italy
A8: International Relations 1919–39: Collective Security
and Appeasement
(a) Collective Security
The Versailles Settlement
The foundation of the League of Nations
Strengths and weaknesses of the League of Nations
Successes and failures of the League of Nations
Locarno and the Kellogg-Briand Pact
(b) Appeasement
Manchuria
The Disarmament Conference
Abyssinia
3. Hitler’s Rise to Power
4. How the Nazis Consolidated their Power
5. Hitler’s Role in the Development of the Nazi Party
12. Hitler’s Foreign Policy
6. The Economy Under the Nazis
7. Nazi Propaganda
8. Nazi Ideas about Society and the Treatment of Workers
9. Nazi Ideas about Women and Children
10. Nazi Ideas about Race and Religion
11. The Holocaust
12. Hitler’s Foreign Policy
13. Opposition to Nazism
Not covered
History Age 14–16: International Relations
4a./4b. The Treaty of Versailles (parts 1 & 2)
5. The Other Peace Treaties
6. German Reaction to the Treaty of Versailles
7. The League of Nations
7. The League of Nations
7. The League of Nations
8. How the League Dealt with International Conflicts
9. Hitler Challenges the League, 1933–38
11. Why did War Break Out in 1939?
8. How the League Dealt with International Conflicts
History Age 14–16: International Relations
8. How the League Dealt with International Conflicts
Not covered in detail
8. How the League Dealt with International Conflicts
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Hitler and the League
Appeasement in action
A17: International Relations and the Superpowers: Cold War
and Co-existence, 1945–62
(a) 1945–53
The impact of the Second World War on superpower relations
The Iron Curtain and the Truman Doctrine
Disagreements over Germany
NATO and East and West Germany
(b) 1953–62
The Warsaw Pact and the Secret Speech
Poland and Hungary in 1956
Peaceful Co-existence
Berlin 1958–61
The Cuban Missiles Crisis
Paper 2H (Section B): Special Topics
B5: Weimar Germany and its Challengers, 1919–24
German reactions to Versailles
The Weimar Constitution
9. Hitler Challenges the League, 1933–38
10. Appeasement and the Outbreak of the Second World War
10. Appeasement and the Outbreak of the Second World War
History Age 14–16: The Cold War
1. The Origins of the Cold War
2. The Beginnings of the Cold War
2. The Beginnings of the Cold War
2. The Beginnings of the Cold War
3. The Berlin Blockade and the Berlin Wall
4. NATO and the Warsaw Pact
History Age 14–16: The Cold War
4. NATO and the Warsaw Pact
Not covered in detail
Not covered in detail
3. The Berlin Blockade and the Berlin Wall
6. The Cuban Missile Crisis
History Age 14–16: Nazi Germany/
History Age 14–16: International Relations
History Age 14–16: Nazi Germany:
1. Germany and the End of World War I
History Age 14–16 International Relations:
4a./4b. The Treaty of Versailles (parts 1 & 2)
6. German Reaction to the Treaty of Versailles
History Age 14–16: Nazi Germany:
2. The Weimar Republic and its Reasons for Failure
4
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Opposition from left and right: Spartacists and Kapp Putsch
Reparations and hyperinflation
The early development of the Nazi party and the Beer Hall Putsch
The beginnings of recovery under Stresemann
B6: Russia in Revolution, 1914–24
Successes and failures: the First World War
The February Revolution
The Bolshevik seizure of power
Civil War
War Communism
New Economic Policy
B8: The Holocaust, 1939–45
The treatment of the Jews after Kristallnacht
Ghettos
The Einsatzgruppen
The Wannsee Conference
History Age 14–16 International Relations:
6. German Reaction to the Treaty of Versailles
History Age 14–16: Nazi Germany:
2. The Weimar Republic and its Reasons for Failure
History Age 14–16 International Relations:
6. German Reaction to the Treaty of Versailles
History Age 14–16: Nazi Germany:
3. Hitler’s Rise to Power
4. How the Nazis Consolidated their Power
5. Hitler’s Role in the Development of the Nazi Party
History Age 14–16: Nazi Germany:
2. The Weimar Republic and its Reasons for Failure
History Age 14–16: Russia
3. The February 1917 Revolution – Why did Nicholas II Fall from
Power?
3. The February 1917 Revolution – Why did Nicholas II Fall from
Power?
4. The October 1917 Revolution – Why did the Bolsheviks Win?
5. The Civil War – How did the Bolsheviks Win?
5. The Civil War – How did the Bolsheviks Win?
6. How did the Bolsheviks Keep Control?
Not covered in detail
(Reference to this can be found in 8. Stalin's Rule 1927–57 –
Collectivization and Industrialization)
History Age 14–16: Nazi Germany
11. The Holocaust
11. The Holocaust
Not covered in detail
11. The Holocaust
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The Final Solution
Auschwitz and the camps
Paper 3: Topics
C1: Medicine in the Nineteenth Century
Medical knowledge and understanding at the beginning of the
nineteenth century
Changes in the understanding of the causes of disease
Developments in surgery and hospital treatment
The work of Pasteur, Koch and Erhlich
Medical knowledge and understanding at the end of the
nineteenth century
C2: Medicine in the Twentieth Century
Medical knowledge and understanding at the beginning of the
twentieth century
The work of Pierre and Marie Curie and Fleming
The impact of AIDS and natural disasters
11. The Holocaust
11. The Holocaust
History Age 14–16: The History of Medicine
1. Introduction to Medicine
7. The Medical Renaissance
8. Medicine and the Industrial Revolution
10. Medicine Review
1. Introduction to Medicine
8. Medicine and the Industrial Revolution
10. Medicine Review
1. Introduction to Medicine
8. Medicine and the Industrial Revolution
10. Medicine Review
1. Introduction to Medicine
8. Medicine and the Industrial Revolution
10. Medicine Review
1. Introduction to Medicine
8. Medicine and the Industrial Revolution
10. Medicine Review
History Age 14–16: The History of Medicine
1. Introduction to Medicine
8. Medicine and the Industrial Revolution
9. Medicine in the 20th Century
10. Medicine Review
1. Introduction to Medicine
9. Medicine in the 20th Century
10. Medicine Review
Not covered in detail
6
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Developments in antibiotics, laser treatments and high-tech
medicine
Medical knowledge and understanding at the end of the twentieth
century
(References can be found in:
1. Introduction to Medicine
9. Medicine in the 20th Century
10. Medicine Review)
Not covered in detail
(References can be found in:
1. Introduction to Medicine
9. Medicine in the 20th Century
10. Medicine Review)
Not covered in detail
(References can be found in:
1. Introduction to Medicine
9. Medicine in the 20th Century
10. Medicine Review)
7
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