2023 Syllabus
2023 Syllabus
2023 Syllabus
Cambridge IGCSE™
History 0470
Use this syllabus for exams in 2023.
Exams are available in the June and November series.
Exams are also available in the March series in India only.
Version 2
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Key benefits
Cambridge IGCSE is the world’s most popular international qualification for 14 to 16 year olds, although it can be
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Students can choose from 70 subjects in any combination – it is taught by over 4800 schools in over 150 countries.
Our programmes balance a thorough knowledge and understanding of a subject and help to develop the skills
learners need for their next steps in education or employment.
Cambridge IGCSE History offers the opportunity to study world history from the nineteenth century to the
beginning of the twenty-first century. It encourages learners to raise questions and to develop and deploy historical
skills, knowledge and understanding in order to provide historical explanations. Learners will explore history from a
diversity of perspectives, including social, economical, cultural and political, and are given the opportunity to:
• develop an interest in and enthusiasm for learning about and understanding the past
• explore historical concepts such as cause and consequence, change and continuity, and similarity and difference
• appreciate historical evidence and how to use it
• gain a greater understanding of international issues and inter-relationships
• learn how to present clear, logical arguments.
Cambridge
learner
‘The strength of Cambridge IGCSE qualifications is internationally recognised and has provided
an international pathway for our students to continue their studies around the world.’
Gary Tan, Head of Schools and CEO, Raffles International Group of Schools, Indonesia
Cambridge IGCSEs are accepted and valued by leading universities and employers around the world as evidence of
academic achievement. Many universities require a combination of Cambridge International AS & A Levels and
Cambridge IGCSEs or equivalent to meet their entry requirements.
UK NARIC, the national agency in the UK for the recognition and comparison of international qualifications and
skills, has carried out an independent benchmarking study of Cambridge IGCSE and found it to be comparable to
the standard of the reformed GCSE in the UK. This means students can be confident that their Cambridge IGCSE
qualifications are accepted as equivalent to UK GCSEs by leading universities worldwide.
‘Cambridge IGCSE is one of the most sought-after and recognised qualifications in the world. It
is very popular in Egypt because it provides the perfect preparation for success at advanced level
programmes.’
Managing Director of British School in Egypt BSE
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2 Syllabus overview
Aims
The aims describe the purposes of a course based on this syllabus.
Content overview
All candidates study all the Core Content in either:
Option A
The nineteenth century: the development of modern nation states, 1848–1914
The content focuses on the following Key Questions:
• Were the Revolutions of 1848 important?
• How was Italy unified?
• How was Germany unified?
• Why was there a civil war in the United States and what were its results?
• Why, and with what effects, did Europeans expand their overseas empires in the nineteenth century?
• What caused the First World War?
or:
Option B
The twentieth century: international relations since 1919
The content focuses on the following Key Questions:
• Were the peace treaties of 1919–23 fair?
• To what extent was the League of Nations a success?
• Why had international peace collapsed by 1939?
• Who was to blame for the Cold War?
• How effectively did the United States contain the spread of Communism?
• How secure was the USSR’s control over Eastern Europe, 1948–c.1989?
• Why did events in the Gulf matter, c.1970–2000?
In addition, all candidates must also study at least one of the following Depth Studies:
• The First World War, 1914–18
• Germany, 1918–45
• Russia, 1905–41
• The United States, 1919–41
• China, c.1930–c.1990
• South Africa, c.1940–c.1994
• Israelis and Palestinians since 1945
Assessment overview
All candidates take three components. All candidates take Paper 1 and Paper 2, and choose either Component 3 or
Paper 4. Candidates will be eligible for grades A* to G.
Assessment objectives
The assessment objectives (AOs) are:
AO1
An ability to recall, select, organise and deploy knowledge of the syllabus content.
AO2
An ability to construct historical explanations using an understanding of:
• cause and consequence, change and continuity, similarity and difference
• the motives, emotions, intentions and beliefs of people in the past.
AO3
An ability to understand, interpret, evaluate and use a range of sources as evidence, in their historical context.
3 Subject content
This syllabus gives you the flexibility to design a course that will interest, challenge and engage your learners.
Where appropriate you are responsible for selecting topics, subject contexts, resources and examples to support
your learners’ study. These should be appropriate for the learners’ age, cultural background and learning context as
well as complying with your school policies and local legal requirements.
In addition, all candidates must also study at least one of the Depth Studies.
The Core Content is structured by Key Questions and Focus Points. The Focus Points provide guidance on what
is involved in addressing each Key Question. There are times when a Focus Point is used to set the scene for a Key
Question, but without apparently bearing on the Key Question itself. This helps to indicate what is required for the
Key Question itself to be addressed adequately.
Candidates will be expected to demonstrate an understanding of the Key Questions and Focus Points, using
knowledge of relevant historical examples.
The following description of content is not intended to be rigidly prescriptive of a school course.
4 Why was there a civil war in the United States and what were its results?
Focus Points Specified Content
• How far did slavery cause the Civil War? • Causes and consequences of the American Civil
• What was the significance of Lincoln’s election as War, 1820–77:
president? – differences between North and South
• Why was the North able to win the war? – slavery, slave states and free states
• Did the war change anything? abolitionism
– the 1860 election and secession of the
Southern states
– reasons for the North’s victory
– the role of Lincoln
– reconstruction
– how successful was reconstruction?
5 Why, and with what effects, did Europeans expand their overseas empires in the nineteenth century?
Focus Points Specified Content
• What were the motives behind European • Reasons for imperialism: economic, military,
imperialism? geopolitical, religious and cultural motives
• How varied were the impacts of European • E uropeans in Africa: case studies of French,
imperialism on Africans? British and Belgian imperialism, and their impacts
• Why, and with what effects, did Indians resist on Africans:
British rule? – the French model of assimilation and direct
• Why, and with what effects, did the Chinese rule; Faidherbe and Senegal
resist European influence? – the British model of indirect rule; Lugard and
Nigeria
– the Belgians and private imperialism; Leopold II
and the Congo
• The British in India: the Mutiny, and changes it
brought to British rule
• Europeans and China: the Opium Wars, the Boxer
Rising and their results
5 How effectively did the United States contain the spread of Communism?
Focus Points Specified Content
This Key Question will be explored through case • Events of the Cold War
studies of the following:
• Case studies of:
• The United States and events in Korea, 1950–53 – American reactions to the Cuban revolution,
• The United States and events in Cuba, 1959–62 including the missile crisis and its aftermath
• American involvement in Vietnam. – A
merican involvement in the Vietnam War,
e.g. reasons for involvement, tactics/strategy,
reasons for withdrawal
– A
merican reactions to North Korea’s invasion
of South Korea, involvement of the UN,
course of the war to 1953
6 How secure was the USSR’s control over Eastern Europe, 1948–c.1989?
Focus Points Specified Content
• W
hy was there opposition to Soviet control in • Soviet power in Eastern Europe:
Hungary in 1956 and Czechoslovakia in 1968, and – resistance to Soviet power in Hungary (1956)
how did the USSR react to this opposition? and Czechoslovakia (1968)
• How similar were events in Hungary in 1956 and – the Berlin Wall
in Czechoslovakia in 1968?
– ‘Solidarity’ in Poland
• Why was the Berlin Wall built in 1961?
– Gorbachev and the collapse of Soviet control
• W
hat was the significance of ‘Solidarity’ in over Eastern Europe
Poland for the decline of Soviet influence in
Eastern Europe?
• H
ow far was Gorbachev personally responsible
for the collapse of Soviet control over Eastern
Europe?
Depth Studies
Candidates must study at least one of the following Depth Studies:
A The First World War, 1914–18
B Germany, 1918–45
C Russia, 1905–41
D The United States, 1919–41
E China, c.1930–c.1990
F South Africa, c.1940–c.1994
G Israelis and Palestinians since 1945
Specified Content
• The Schlieffen Plan in operation
• The Battles of Mons, the Marne and Ypres:
– the reaction to the ‘stalemate’
– the nature and problems of trench warfare
• The main battles of the war including the Somme and Verdun:
– the leadership and tactics of Haig at the Battle of the Somme
– the nature and problems of trench warfare
– the use and impact of new methods of warfare
• The war at sea:
– the Battle of Jutland and its consequences
– the use of convoys and submarines and the U-boat campaign
• The reasons for, and results of, the Gallipoli campaign
• The impact of war on civilian populations
• Events on the Eastern Front and the defeat of Russia
• The German offensive and the Allied advance:
– the impact of American entry into the war
• Conditions in Germany towards the end of the war:
– the Kiel Mutiny and German Revolution
– the abdication of the Kaiser
• The armistice
Specified Content
• The Revolution of 1918 and the establishment of the Republic
• The Versailles Settlement and German reactions to it
• The Weimar Constitution, the main political divisions, the role of the army
• Political disorder, 1919–23:
– economic crises and hyper-inflation
– the occupation of the Ruhr
• The Stresemann era
• Cultural achievements of the Weimar period
• The early years of the Nazi Party:
– Nazi ideas and methods
– the Munich Putsch
– the roles of Hitler and other Nazi leaders
• The impact of the Depression on Germany:
– political, economic and social crisis of 1930–33
– reasons for the Nazis’ rise to power
– Hitler takes power
– the Reichstag Fire and the election of 1933
• Nazi rule in Germany:
– the Enabling Act
– the Night of the Long Knives
– the death of Hindenburg
– the removal of opposition
– methods of control and repression
– use of culture and the mass media
• Economic policy including re-armament
• Different experiences of Nazi rule:
– women and young people
– anti-Semitism
– persecution of minorities
– opposition to Nazi rule
• Impact of the Second World War on Germany:
– the conversion to a war economy
– the Final Solution
2 How did the Bolsheviks gain power, and how did they consolidate their rule?
Focus Points
• How effectively did the Provisional Government rule Russia in 1917?
• Why were the Bolsheviks able to seize power in November 1917?
• Why did the Bolsheviks win the Civil War?
• How far was the New Economic Policy a success?
Specified Content
• The main features of Tsarist rule and Russian society before the First World War:
– the 1905 Revolution and its aftermath
– attempts at reform
• The First World War and its impact on the Russian people
• The March Revolution of 1917
• The Provisional Government and the Soviets, the growing power of revolutionary groups
• Reasons for the failure of the Provisional Government
• The Bolshevik seizure of power, the role of Lenin
• The main features of Bolshevik rule, the Civil War and War Communism, and reasons for the Bolshevik
victory
• The Kronstadt Rising and the establishment of the New Economic Policy
• Lenin’s death and the struggle for power
• Reasons for Stalin’s emergence as leader by 1928
• Stalin’s dictatorship:
– use of terror
– the Purges
– propaganda and official culture
• Stalin’s economic policies and their impact:
– the modernisation of Soviet industry
– the Five-Year Plans
– collectivisation in agriculture
• Life in the Soviet Union:
– the differing experiences of social groups
– ethnic minorities and women
3 What were the causes and consequences of the Wall Street Crash?
Focus Points
• How far was speculation responsible for the Wall Street Crash?
• What impact did the Crash have on the economy?
• What were the social consequences of the Crash?
• Why did Roosevelt win the election of 1932?
Specified Content
• The expansion of the US economy during the 1920s:
– mass production in industries for cars and consumer durables
– the fortunes of older industries
– the development of credit and hire purchase
– the decline of agriculture
• Weaknesses in the economy by the late 1920s
• Society in the 1920s:
– the ‘Roaring Twenties’
– film and other media
– Prohibition and gangsterism
– restrictions on immigration, the ‘Red Scare’, religious intolerance
– discrimination against black Americans
– the Ku Klux Klan
– the changing roles of women
• The Wall Street Crash and its financial, economic and social effects
• The reaction of President Hoover to the Crash
• The presidential election of 1932; Hoover’s and Roosevelt’s programmes
• Roosevelt’s inauguration and the ‘Hundred Days’
• T he New Deal legislation, the ‘alphabet agencies’ and their work, and the economic and social changes they
caused
• Opposition to the New Deal:
– the Republicans
– the rich
– business interests
– the Supreme Court
– radical critics like Huey Long
• T he strengths and weaknesses of the New Deal programme in dealing with unemployment and the
Depression
3 What was the impact of Communist rule on China’s relations with other countries/regions?
Focus Points
• What have been China’s changing relationships with neighbouring states?
• Why did China try to improve relations with the USA after 1970?
• How far was China established as a superpower by the time of Mao’s death?
• How far have China’s relations with other powers improved since Mao’s death?
Specified Content
• Kuomintang and Communist conflict:
– the Shanghai Massacre and the five extermination campaigns
– the Long March
– life in Yenan
– impact of Japanese incursions on the Nationalist government and the Communists
– Xian Incident, 1936
– causes and events of the civil war
• The nature of Chinese Communism
• Communist rule in the 1950s and 1960s:
– agrarian reform from 1950
– people’s courts and the treatment of landlords
– the establishment of collectives and communes
• Industrial developments:
– the Five-Year Plans
– the Great Leap Forward
• Social change:
– the role of women
– health
– education
– propaganda and the destruction of traditional culture
• China’s relations with other countries/regions:
– changing relations with the USSR
– relations with other neighbouring countries/regions: India, Taiwan, Vietnam
• Closer relations with the USA from 1970
• Hong Kong
• Impact of China’s relations with the rest of the world on its economic liberalisation since 1976
• The Communist Party dictatorship:
– repression of political opposition
– the Hundred Flowers campaign
– treatment of minority groups
– the Cultural Revolution
– the role and status of Mao
– the issue of leadership after Mao’s death and the re-emergence of Deng
– the social and political consequences of economic change in the 1980s and 1990s
3 To what extent did South Africa change between 1966 and 1980?
Focus Points
• How significant were the policies of the National Party governments from 1966 to 1980?
• To what extent did black opposition change in this period?
• How far did economic factors improve lives by 1980?
• What was the impact of external opposition to apartheid?
Specified Content
• Existing policies and social, economic and political effects of:
– pass laws
– black ‘locations’
– colour-bar on employment
– land acts
– restrictions on political rights
• Developments in mining, manufacturing and agriculture; state involvement
• Impact of the Second World War on South Africa
• British and Afrikaner regional differences and the 1948 election
• Legislation and methods of enforcement after 1948
• Effects on employment, families, location, education, coloureds
• Response of white population
• Development and effects in South Africa of:
– ANC aims and campaigns
– women’s resistance
– ANC and PAC split
– Umkhonto we Sizwe and Rivonia Trial
– Sharpeville and Langa
• International effects; 1961 South African Republic
• Changes in methods of suppression and effects from 1966
• Divisions in ANC and PAC in exile; significance of Black Consciousness
• Differing effects of economic developments
• Organisation for African Unity and bases; UN sanctions; government response
• ‘Total strategy’ and reforms; social and political effects
• The role and motives of:
– President de Klerk
– ANC leaders
– Desmond Tutu
– Chief Buthelezi
• School boycotts and township unrest
• White extremism
• Economic and international factors
• Power-sharing aims and responses
• 1994 general election
2 How was Israel able to survive despite the hostility of its Arab neighbours?
Focus Points
• Why was Israel able to win the wars of 1956, 1967 and 1973?
• How significant was superpower involvement in Arab–Israeli conflicts?
• How important was oil in changing the nature of the Arab–Israeli conflict?
• By the 1990s, how far had problems which existed between Israel and her neighbours been resolved?
Specified Content
• The Arab and Jewish peoples of Palestine:
– different cultures, races, languages
• The aftermath of the Second World War:
– Jewish immigration
– Jewish nationalism and the ending of the British mandate
– the declaration of the state of Israel and the war of 1948–49
• Israel and its Arab neighbours:
– the Suez War (1956)
– the Six-Day War (1967)
– the Yom Kippur War (1973) and Israeli incursions into Lebanon
– the oil weapon: changes in US and Western thinking
• The Palestinians to c.1992:
– the refugee problem
– Palestinian nationalism and the formation of the PLO
– activities of the PLO, and international acceptance
– the role of Arafat
– relations between the PLO and Arab states
– relations with Israel and moves towards the creation of a Palestinian state
• Moves towards peace:
– United Nations: resolutions, aid and peacekeeping duties
– Camp David meetings; the Oslo Accords
– the establishment of the Palestinian Authority, 1994
• Divisions that restricted progress towards peace:
– political parties: Likud, Labour
– how elections in Israel affected the peace process
– religious issues
• Rivalries among Palestinians:
– the nature of the PLO at its founding
– Intifada, and the rise of Hamas
– Hezbollah and Gaza
Candidates answer two questions from Section A and one question from Section B.
Section A contains eight questions: four questions will be set from the nineteenth century Core Content in Option
A and four questions will be set from the twentieth century Core Content in Option B. Candidates answer any two
questions.
Section B contains two questions on each of the seven Depth Studies. Candidates answer one question.
All questions are in the form of structured essays, split into three parts: (a), (b) and (c).
Candidates answer six questions on either the prescribed topic from the Core Content in Option A or the prescribed
topic from the Core Content in Option B.
Each option includes a range of source material relating to the prescribed topic, and the six questions are based on
the source material provided.
Component 3 Coursework
40 marks
Candidates produce one piece of extended writing, up to 2000 words in length, based on content taken from any
of the Depth Studies. Centres can devise a Depth Study of their own, if they want to cover the history of countries
not included in the current Depth Studies. The coursework should be based on a single question and should not
be broken down into sub-questions. The coursework must be focused on the issue of significance and must target
assessment objectives AO1 and AO2.
For guidance on developing suitable titles for coursework go to our School Support Hub
www.cambridgeinternational.org/support
For further information, see the Cambridge Handbook for the relevant year of assessment at
www.cambridgeinternational.org/eoguide
This paper contains two questions on each of the seven Depth Studies. Candidates answer one question. Questions
will focus on the issue of significance, testing assessment objectives AO1 and AO2.
Supervising coursework
Coursework may be produced in class or in the candidate’s own time. It is the centre’s responsibility to make sure
all coursework is the candidate’s original work. Any quotations and copied/paraphrased material must be fully
acknowledged.
A general discussion on the progress of coursework is a natural part of the teacher–candidate relationship, as it
is for other parts of the course. If plans and first drafts are completed under teacher supervision, you can be sure
of the authenticity of the final coursework. Candidates can draft and redraft work, but you should only give brief
summative comments on progress during this drafting phase.
Coursework must be a candidate’s own, unaided work. Unless there is subject-specific guidance that says
otherwise, you can support candidates by reviewing their work before it is handed in for final assessment. You can
do this orally or through written feedback. Your advice should be kept at a general level so that the candidate leads
the discussion and makes the suggestions for any amendments. You must not give detailed advice to individual
candidates or groups of candidates on how their work can be improved to meet the assessment criteria. You should
not correct or edit draft coursework.
For further information about supervising coursework, see the Cambridge Handbook for the relevant year of
assessment at www.cambridgeinternational.org/eoguide
Avoidance of plagiarism
It is the centre’s responsibility to make sure all assessed work is the candidate’s original work. Candidates must not
submit someone else’s work as their own, or use material produced by someone else without citing and referencing
it properly. You should make candidates aware of the academic conventions governing quotation and reference to
the work of others, and teach candidates how to use them.
A candidate taking someone else’s work or ideas and passing them off as his or her own is an example of
plagiarism. It is your responsibility as a teacher to prevent plagiarism from happening and to detect it if it does
happen. For more information, search for ‘Preventing plagiarism – guidance for teachers’ on our website at
www.cambridgeinternational.org/teachingandassessment
Coursework will be assessed using assessment objectives AO1 and AO2. These are weighted as follows:
AO1: 15 marks
AO2: 25 marks
However, coursework should be assessed holistically with one overall mark being awarded using the generic mark
scheme.
Marking of the coursework should be positive, rewarding achievement where possible but clearly differentiating
across the whole range of marks available.
Candidates do not have to meet all the requirements within a level before an answer can be placed in that level.
The question to be asked about an answer is ‘does it match, e.g. Level 4 better than it matches Level 3?’
The extent to which the statements within the level have been achieved will be crucial. For example, if a marker is
undecided between placing an answer in Level 2 or Level 3 but finally decides Level 3 is a better fit, the answer will
be placed at the bottom of that level. The following are the key elements to look for in an answer:
• relevance and focus
• a direct answer to the question
• command of the history and an ability to use this to support arguments and judgements.
Candidates’ marks for Paper 3 must be recorded on the Individual Candidate Record Card produced by Cambridge
International. The marks on this form must be identical to the marks you submit to Cambridge International.
You should record candidates’ marks for Component 3 Coursework on the Individual Candidate Record Card, which
you should download each year from the samples database at www.cambridgeinternational.org/samples. The
database will ask you for your country/territory and the syllabus code (i.e. 0470) and your centre number, after
which it will take you to the correct forms. Follow the instructions on the form when completing each form.
All coursework which is submitted for moderation must be kept in flat card files (not ring binders). They must be
marked with candidates’ names and numbers, and the centre name and number must be clearly visible.
Internal moderation
If more than one teacher in your centre is marking internal assessments, you must make arrangements to
moderate or standardise your teachers’ marking so that all candidates are assessed to a common standard.
You can find further information on the process of internal moderation on the samples database at
www.cambridgeinternational.org/samples
You should record the internally moderated marks for all candidates on the Coursework Assessment Summary
Form and submit these marks to Cambridge International according to the instructions set out in the Cambridge
Handbook for the relevant year of assessment.
External moderation
Cambridge International will externally moderate all internally assessed components.
• You must submit the marks of all candidates to Cambridge International.
• You must also submit the marked work of a sample of candidates to Cambridge International. The sample
you submit to Cambridge International should include examples of the marking of each teacher. The samples
database at www.cambridgeinternational.org/samples explains how the samples will be selected. The
samples database also provides details of how to submit the marks and work.
External moderators will produce a short report for each centre with feedback on your application of the mark
scheme and administration of the assessment.
Command words
Command words and their meanings help candidates know what is expected from them in the exams. The table
below includes command words used in the assessment for this syllabus. The use of the command word will relate
to the subject context.
Describe state the points of a topic / give characteristics and main features
Explain set out purposes or reasons / make the relationships between things evident / provide why
and/or how and support with relevant evidence
Additional guidance
Phrases such as ‘How far do you agree…?’ and ‘How significant…?’ may also be seen in the assessment for this
syllabus.
This section is an overview of other information you need to know about this syllabus. It will help to share the
administrative information with your exams officer so they know when you will need their support. Find more
information about our administrative processes at www.cambridgeinternational.org/eoguide
You can view the timetable for your administrative zone at www.cambridgeinternational.org/timetables
You can enter candidates in the June and November exam series. If your school is in India, you can also enter your
candidates in the March exam series.
Check you are using the syllabus for the year the candidate is taking the exam.
Private candidates can enter for this syllabus. Some components are not available to private candidates. For more
information, please refer to the Cambridge Guide to Making Entries.
Cambridge IGCSE, Cambridge IGCSE (9–1) and Cambridge O Level syllabuses are at the same level.
Making entries
Exams officers are responsible for submitting entries to Cambridge International. We encourage them to work
closely with you to make sure they enter the right number of candidates for the right combination of syllabus
components. Entry option codes and instructions for submitting entries are in the Cambridge Guide to Making
Entries. Your exams officer has a copy of this guide.
Exam administration
To keep our exams secure, we produce question papers for different areas of the world, known as administrative
zones. We allocate all Cambridge schools to one administrative zone determined by their location. Each zone has
a specific timetable. Some of our syllabuses offer candidates different assessment options. An entry option code
is used to identify the components the candidate will take relevant to the administrative zone and the available
assessment options.
Candidates cannot resubmit, in whole or in part, coursework from a previous series. To confirm if an option is
available to carry forward marks for this syllabus, refer to the Cambridge Guide to Making Entries for the relevant
series. Regulations for carrying forward internally assessed marks can be found in the Cambridge Handbook for the
relevant year at www.cambridgeinternational.org/eoguide
The standard assessment arrangements may present barriers for candidates with impairments. Where a candidate
is eligible, we may be able to make arrangements to enable that candidate to access assessments and receive
recognition of their attainment. We do not agree access arrangements if they give candidates an unfair advantage
over others or if they compromise the standards being assessed.
Candidates who cannot access the assessment of any component may be able to receive an award based on the
parts of the assessment they have completed.
Language
This syllabus and the related assessment materials are available in English only.
A* is the highest and G is the lowest. ‘Ungraded’ means that the candidate’s performance did not meet the
standard required for grade G. ‘Ungraded’ is reported on the statement of results but not on the certificate.
In specific circumstances your candidates may see one of the following letters on their statement of results:
• Q (PENDING)
• X (NO RESULT).
These letters do not appear on the certificate.
On the statement of results and certificates, Cambridge IGCSE is shown as INTERNATIONAL GENERAL
CERTIFICATE OF SECONDARY EDUCATION (IGCSE).
Grade descriptions
Grade descriptions are provided to give an indication of the standards of achievement candidates awarded
particular grades are likely to show. Weakness in one aspect of the examination may be balanced by a better
performance in some other aspect.
Grade descriptions for Cambridge IGCSE History will be published after the first assessment of the syllabus in 2020.
Find more information at www.cambridgeinternational.org/0470
You must read the whole syllabus before planning your teaching programme.
Other changes • This syllabus version is now for exams in 2023 only. Please refer to the
updated syllabus for exams in 2024, 2025 and 2026.
Changes to syllabus content • The prescribed topics for Paper 2 have been changed for 2023. Please see
section 4 of this syllabus for the prescribed topics for 2023.
Any textbooks endorsed to support the syllabus for examination from 2020 are still suitable for use
with this syllabus.