Singapore’s new history textbook will include material on the country’s archaeology, rather than start its establishment as an British colony in the 19th century.

In New Textbook, the Story of Singapore Begins 500 Years Earlier
New York Times, 11 May 2014
Singapore has rewritten the history taught in secondary school to expand the story of the island state’s birth.
While earlier generations learned a narrative that essentially started in 1819 with the British colonial administrator, Sir Stamford Raffles, stumbling upon a sleepy Malay fishing village, 13-year-olds now learn of a golden age that started 500 years earlier.
The new story, introduced in January, brings into focus a 300-year period, from 1300 to 1600, when Singapore was a thriving multinational trading hub, with an estimated population of 10,000.
An education ministry official who declined to be named, in line with government policy, called the change a “shift” rather than a rewrite, saying it allowed students to “explore Singapore’s origin as a port of call and her connections to the region and the world.”
Behind the revision is the work of John N. Miksic, an American archaeology professor at the National University of Singapore, or N.U.S., who advised the government on the new school text, “Singapore: The Making of a Nation-State, 1300-1975.”
Full story here.
I thought Singapore was a British colony. I didn’t know England had colonies then
Good point! I was trying to distinguish between British vs English, and not England vs Britain. Edited!