British Empire .
Publié le 03/05/2013
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B1 The Seven Years’ War
During the Seven Years’ War in Europe (1756-1763), Britain made large imperial gains at the expense of France.
The North American segment of the Seven Years’ Warwas known as the French and Indian War.
It was launched by the British against French possessions in North America in 1754, and in 1758 the British captured theFrench fortress of Louisbourg, which gave them access to French territory in the St.
Lawrence Valley.
In the following year Québec was captured, marking the end ofthe French presence in Canada.
In the Caribbean, British forces captured many of the French possessions, including the large sugar-producing islands of Martinique andGuadeloupe.
At the Treaty of Paris in 1763, which ended both the Seven Years’ War and the French and Indian War, the British handed Guadeloupe and Martinique back to France,but retained control of Canada.
This was especially important to the British in guaranteeing the security of the New England colonies.
B2 The American Revolution
For the British, an expanded empire meant new responsibilities and new costs.
The British government wanted to tap American revenues to pay for Americannecessities, and consequently increased taxation with the Stamp Act (1765).
Although the British considered the act to be perfectly fair, many American colonists saw itas a violation of their rights.
After riots in the colonies, the Stamp Act was repealed, but other taxes soon replaced it, setting off a controversy in which the coloniesunited against Britain in the Continental Congress.
A skirmish at Concord, Massachusetts, in April 1775 deteriorated into general fighting, and in July 1776 the Congressissued the Declaration of Independence.
During the American Revolution that followed, the Congress controlled most of the land area, but the British were secure intheir stronghold in New York until their position was weakened by a defeat at Saratoga (1777), which encouraged France to intervene on behalf of the rebelliouscolonists.
British resistance ended when General Charles Cornwallis surrendered with his army at Yorktown, Virginia, in October 1781.
This defeat marked not only the end of the American war, but also the end of the First British Empire.
Yet because France had not been able to challenge Britishsupremacy at sea, Britain’s losses did not extend beyond the American colonies themselves.
At the same time, the British presence in Canada was reinforced by theestablishment of the colony of New Brunswick, resulting from the migration northwards of over 30,000 citizens of the American colonies who were still loyal to Britain.
III THE SECOND BRITISH EMPIRE
After the loss of the American colonies, British commerce turned from the Americas to the east in its search both for spices for re-export and, increasingly, for marketsto sell ever-growing amounts of British manufactured goods.
The Industrial Revolution had transformed the British economy from a primarily agricultural one to onebased much more on mechanized manufacturing, and as a result had drastically increased the amount of British products available for export.
The quest for newmarkets for international trade was the economic incentive behind the Second British Empire.
Free trade, the belief that international trade should not be restricted byany one nation, replaced the old colonial system, which had relied on mercantilist ideas of protected commerce.
The Second British Empire, focused more on Asia and Africa, continued to expand in the 1800s and early 1900s and reached its apex at the end of World War I.However, a growing nationalism among the British colonies gradually weakened the power of the empire, and Britain was eventually forced to grant independence tomany of its former colonies.
A 18th Century
A1 India
Although the first empire was centered in the Americas, the English were also active in India in the 17th century.
The English East India Company founded trading postsknown as factories at Surat (1612) and Madras, now Chennai, (1639) under the auspices of the native Mughal Empire.
Rapid expansion followed, and in 1690 thecompany set up a new factory further up the River Hugli, on a site that became Calcutta (now Kolkata).
By 1700 the company was extending its commercial activities inBengal and had established itself as a leading player in Indian politics.
After the death of the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb in 1707, the Mughal Empire in India entered a period of instability.
During this time the East India Company—whileremaining above all a commercial organization—entered more directly into politics in order to preserve its position.
Then, during the 1740s and 1750s, the East IndiaCompany fought the French Compagnie des Indes for primacy in India during the Carnatic Wars.
A series of engagements culminated in the Battle of Plassey in June1757, in which the British defeated their Indian and French rivals and established the East India Company as the dominant power in the important region of Bengal.
A2 Australia
Though English expeditions had landed in Australia in the late 1600s, original assessments of the usefulness of the continent were not enough to motivate a large-scaleinterest in colonization.
It was the more thorough explorations of Captain James Cook in the 1770s, coupled with the loss of the American colonies around the sametime, that changed this.
Though remote, Australia became important to the British, both as a strategic port near East Asia, and as a destination for British convicts afterthe loss of the American colonies.
As a result, a British fleet composed mainly of convicts was dispatched to Botany Bay in the Australian region of New South Wales,resulting in the foundation of Sydney in 1788.
A3 Consolidation
In the years following the American Revolution, the British government attempted to consolidate and tighten control over its territory in India and Canada.
The India Actof 1785 subjected the East India Company’s administration to the scrutiny of a board of control.
Under the governor-generalship (1786-1793) of Lord Cornwallis, Britainput administration in India into the hands of a professional civil service within the East India Company, though the company itself remained a trading concern.
TheCanada Act of 1791 attempted to ease tensions between French and British inhabitants in Canada somewhat by separating the region into Upper Canada, primarilyEnglish speaking, and Lower Canada, primarily French speaking.
B 19th Century
B1 The Napoleonic Wars
Britain’s involvement in wars with France after 1793 gave a fresh spur to the growth of its empire.
In 1794 Britain again captured the French sugar-producing islands inthe Caribbean.
This resulted in a glut of sugar on the British market and contributed indirectly to British legislation in 1807 abolishing the slave trade, by virtue of thefact that production was so high that few new slaves were needed..
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