Thursday, 19 March 2026

Not so British

Just for a laugh I thought I'd try the British citizen test, which you have to take if you're applying for British citizenship or settlement in the UK.

I didn't do very well. The pass mark is 75 per cent or 18 correct answers out of 24. I only got 79 per cent. But that's quite good considering the questions are ridiculously obscure and have little to do with everyday life in Britain.

For example, some of the questions:

  • When did the Habeus Corpus Act become law|?
  • What was called the Glorious Revolution?
  • When was the first Prime Minister in power?
  • Who had important ideas about economics during the Enlightenment?
  • Which two countries took part in the Battle of Agincourt?
  • Does Scotland have its own banknotes?
  • Who supported King Charles 1st during the Civil War?
  • Where was Anne Boleyn executed?
  • Who developed radar?
As far as I'm concerned these questions completely miss the everyday reality of living in Britain. It would be more relevant to test the person's knowledge of the health service, childcare, education, transport or any number of things that directly affect people's lives in 2026. Who on earth needs to know about the Habeus Corpus Act or the Glorious Revolution?

Oh and just to show me up, Jenny did the test and got 92 per cent. Smartass.

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