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The%20British%20Empire

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Title: The%20British%20Empire


1
The British Empire
2
Introduction
  • The British Empire came together over 300 years
    through a succession of phases of expansion by
    trade, settlement or conquest, interspersed with
    intervals of pacific commercial and diplomatic
    activity or imperial contraction
  • Its territories were scattered across every
    continent and ocean, and it was described with
    some truth as "the empire on which the sun never
    sets."
  • At its height in the 1930s, the British Empire
    encompassed nearly a third of the earth's land
    mass and nearly half of the world's population.
  • It was the largest industrialized power in the
    world, the largest economy it had the largest
    army, navy, and air force.

3
Introduction (Contd)
  • Thoroughly decimated by the two world wars, and
    aided by the developments of the beginning stages
    of the Cold War, the British Empire divested
    itself of colonies over a 20 year period between
    1947 and 1970.
  • The Empire facilitated the spread of British
    technology, commerce, language, and government
    around much of the globe.
  • In all, the British Empire now consists only of
    13 colonies.
  • The truth is, the British Empire is obviously
    gone the concept has lost all meaning since the
    loss of India (1947), and it is now succeeded by
    a nebulous Commonwealth of Nations, a voluntary
    association of Britain and many of its former
    possessions for mutual and political benefit.

4
History
  • The First British Empire (Pre-1800)
  • England began seeking new sources of trade and
    treasure in the 15th century. This lead to the
    addition of new territory and establishment of an
    empire.
  • By 1583, England acquired its first overseas
    possession (Newfoundland).
  • From the early 17th century England and later
    Great Britain established colonies in continental
    North America and the islands of the Caribbean
    such as Jamaica and Barbados.
  • During the Seven Years War the British defeated
    the French at the Plains of Abraham (1759) and
    captured all of New France in 1760, giving
    Britain control over almost all of North America.
  • However, the most populous American colonies were
    lost in the Revolutionary War (1775-83).
  • The success of the American Revolution marked the
    end of the first British Empire.

5
History (Contd)
  • The Second British Empire (Post-1800)
  • The voyages of Capt. James Cook to Australia and
    New Zealand in the 1770s and new conquests in
    India after 1763 opened a second phase of
    territorial expansion.
  • The victories of the Napoleonic Wars added
    further possessions to the empire such as
    colonies from the French and Dutch.
  • The end of the old colonial and slave systems
    (Britain outlawed the slave trade in 1807) were
    accompanied by the adoption of free trade,
    culminating in the repeal of the Corn Laws
    (import tariffs designed to "protect" British
    farmers and landowners) and Navigation Acts
    (restricted foreign shipping) in the 1840s.
  • As the only industrialized country in the world,
    Britain could prosper through free trade alone
    without having to resort to formal rule.

6
History (Contd)
  • Pax Britannica
  • By the 1870s, British manufactures in the staple
    industries of the Industrial Revolution were
    beginning to experience real competition abroad.
  • Rapid industrialization abroad allowed other
    countries to outstrip over the "old" British and
    French capitalisms.
  • Britain was losing out not only in trades and the
    markets of newly industrializing countries, but
    also against third-party competition in
    less-developed countries.

7
History (Contd)
  • The "Long Depression" of 1873-96 saw Britain's
    economic dominance threatened by competition from
    Germany and led to the widespread abandonment of
    free trade among Europe's powers.
  • During this period, Europe's powers added nearly
    23,000,000 km² to their overseas colonial
    possessions due to the scramble for formal
    powers.
  • As it was mostly unoccupied by the Western powers
    as late as the 1880s, Africa became the primary
    target of the "new" imperialist expansion.

8
History (Contd)
  • The Impact of the First World War
  • This saw the last major extension of British
    rule, with Britain gaining control through League
    of Nations Mandates in Palestine and Iraq after
    the collapse of the Ottoman Empire
  • But the heavy costs of the war undermined the
    capacity to maintain the vast empire. Nationalist
    sentiment grew in both old and new Imperial
    territories.
  • The 1920s saw a rapid transformation of the
    status of the self-governing colonies
  • This lead to the 1926 Balfour Declaration and the
    1931 Statute of Westminster, which provided
    formal equality of the dominions with Britain,
    which is seen as the beginning of the British
    Commonwealth.

9
History (Contd)
  • Decolonization
  • The Second World War (1939 - 45) left Britain all
    but exhausted, with its former allies disinclined
    to support the colonial status quo.
  • The bloody partition and independence of India in
    1947 deprived the Empire of its heart and marked
    the beginning of the end for the British Empire.
  • Britain's withdrawal following the Suez Crisis of
    1956 (war over Suez Canal) from its colonies in
    Asia, Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific was
    carried out with great rapidity through the
    1960s, 70s and 80s.
  • The last populous colony was decolonized in 1997,
    with the handover of Hong Kong to China.
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