History
512 cards covering the KS3 History curriculum. Written at the right level for Y7–Y9 — the foundations that make GCSE History feel familiar when it arrives.
Y7 · Y8 · Y9 · No board filter
512
Cards in the bank
Written for KS3 — age-appropriate language, right depth, no GCSE jargon.
36/36
DfE subtopics
Norman England, Magna Carta, the Reformation, Industrial Revolution, World Wars, Civil Rights, and more — every subtopic at substantive depth (≥10 cards).
3
Minutes a day
Spaced repetition surfaces the cards they're about to forget. Not a lecture — a loop.
What's covered
The full KS3 History curriculum.
Board-agnostic — maps to the DfE National Curriculum programme of study.
Norman & Medieval England
- ✓The Norman Conquest and 1066
- ✓Medieval Church and Crown
- ✓Magna Carta and Parliament
- ✓The Black Death and social change
Tudor & Stuart Britain
- ✓The Tudor Reformation
- ✓Elizabethan England
- ✓The English Civil Wars
- ✓Restoration and the Glorious Revolution
The Industrial Revolution
- ✓Life in industrial Britain
- ✓Factories, towns and change
- ✓Working and living conditions
- ✓Reform and protest
Empire & the Slave Trade
- ✓The British Empire
- ✓The transatlantic slave trade
- ✓Abolition
- ✓End of empire and decolonisation
Reform, Democracy & Rights
- ✓The fight for the vote
- ✓Women's suffrage
- ✓The welfare state
- ✓Post-war Britain
The World Wars
- ✓The First World War
- ✓The Second World War
- ✓The Holocaust
- ✓The home front
Russia & Revolution
- ✓Tsarist Russia
- ✓The 1917 revolutions
- ✓Lenin and the Bolsheviks
- ✓The USSR
20th-Century USA
- ✓The 1920s boom
- ✓The Great Depression
- ✓Civil rights
- ✓Modern America
The same engine as GCSE, tuned for KS3. Every card is written at the right level for Y7–Y9. When students reach GCSE the periods aren't new — just deeper. Names, dates, and key turning points all land faster when students have already practised them.
Try it for four weeks. Free.
One school. Unlimited classes. No card limit. No teacher limit. If your students aren't practising daily by the end of the trial, you owe us nothing.
