British people
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1707 CE to 2215 CE
British people, or Britons, are the citizens of the United Kingdom, British Overseas Territories, and Crown dependencies.
British nationality law governs modern British citizenship and nationality, which can be acquired, for instance, by descent from British nationals.
When used in a historical context, "British" or "Britons" can refer to the Celtic Britons, the indigenous inhabitants of Great Britain and Brittany, whose surviving members are the modern Welsh people, Cornish people and Bretons.
Although early assertions of being British date from the Late Middle Ages, the creation of the united Kingdom of Great Britain in 1707 triggers a sense of British national identity.
The notion of Britishness is forged during the Napoleonic Wars between Britain and the First French Empire, and develops further during the Victorian era.
The complex history of the formation of the United Kingdom creates a "particular sense of nationhood and belonging" in Great Britain and Ireland; Britishness becomes "superimposed on much older identities", of English, Scots, Welsh and Irish cultures, whose distinctiveness still resists notions of a homogenized British identity.
Because of longstanding ethno-sectarian divisions, British identity in Northern Ireland is controversial, but it is held with strong conviction by Unionists.
Modern Britons are descended mainly from the varied ethnic groups that settled in the British Isles in and before the eleventh century: Prehistoric, Brittonic, Roman, Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Normans.[
The progressive political unification of the British Isles facilitates migration, cultural and linguistic exchange, and intermarriage between the peoples of England, Scotland and Wales during the late Middle Ages, early modern period and beyond.
Since 1922 and earlier, there has been immigration to the United Kingdom by people from what is now the Republic of Ireland, the Commonwealth, mainland Europe and elsewhere; they and their descendants are mostly British citizens, with some assuming a British, dual or hyphenated identity.
The British are a diverse, multinational and multicultural society, with "strong regional accents, expressions and identities"
The social structure of the United Kingdom has changed radically since the nineteenth century, with a decline in religious observance, enlargement of the middle class, and particularly since the 1950s increased ethnic diversity.
The population of the UK stands at around 62.5 million, with a British diaspora of around one hundred and forty million concentrated in Australia, Canada, South Africa, Hong Kong, New Zealand, United States, Ireland, France and Spain.
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Northern South Asia (820–1971 CE): Empires, Colonialism, and the Birth of Modern Nations
Medieval Empires and Dynastic Rule
From the early medieval period onward, Northern South Asia experiences significant dynastic changes. Islamic empires begin exerting influence from the 11th century with the Ghaznavids and later the Delhi Sultanate, reshaping cultural and political landscapes through trade, conquest, and cultural exchanges. Simultaneously, Afghanistan becomes a crucial frontier region, witnessing invasions and rule by various Turkic and Persian dynasties, including the Timurids and the early Mughals.
Nepal and Bhutan remain largely isolated, developing distinctive Himalayan cultures and systems of governance. In Nepal, the medieval period is characterized by the rule of various dynasties, such as the Mallas, who foster rich cultural and architectural traditions.
Mughal Ascendancy and Cultural Synthesis
The rise of the Mughal Empire in the 16th century under rulers like Babur, Akbar, and Aurangzeb marks a pinnacle of political and cultural achievement. The Mughals integrate diverse traditions, fostering a unique synthesis of Persian, Indian, and Central Asian cultures. Monumental architecture flourishes, exemplified by the Taj Mahal and the Red Fort. Administrative systems established under Akbar provide stability and governance across the empire, extending influence into modern-day Pakistan, Bangladesh, and parts of Afghanistan.
British Colonial Expansion
The weakening Mughal Empire in the 18th century facilitates the expansion of the British East India Company, climaxing with the pivotal Battle of Plassey in 1757. British dominance consolidates rapidly, leading to direct British rule following the Indian Rebellion of 1857–58. Afghanistan, however, remains fiercely independent, becoming a contested region between British India and Imperial Russia, sparking several Anglo-Afghan wars.
Meanwhile, Nepal under the Shah Dynasty and Bhutan under the leadership of the Wangchuck Dynasty maintain autonomy, though both engage diplomatically and militarily with British India. Bhutan eventually signs treaties with Britain, securing internal sovereignty while ceding some frontier territories.
Rise of Nationalist Movements
Nationalist movements emerge by the late 19th century, notably with the establishment of the Indian National Congress in 1885. Parallel to this, Sir Syed Ahmad Khan spearheads educational reforms for Muslims, founding the Muhammadan-Anglo Oriental College in 1875 (later Aligarh Muslim University), laying the foundation for Muslim political activism.
Afghanistan sees modernization and centralization efforts under leaders like Amir Abdur Rahman Khan (1880–1901), who solidifies borders and establishes the Durand Line with British India, a source of enduring tension.
Independence, Partition, and the Emergence of Modern States
Intense nationalist struggles, notably under Mahatma Gandhi and Muhammad Ali Jinnah, culminate in independence and the partition of British India in 1947, creating the independent dominions of India and Pakistan. The partition triggers massive migrations and communal violence, significantly reshaping the region.
Afghanistan navigates neutrality during this period, balancing relations between emerging global powers, while Nepal and Bhutan maintain independent monarchies, cautiously opening diplomatic relations with neighboring nations and beyond.
Post-Independence Challenges and Conflicts
The new states face immediate challenges, including economic stabilization, integration of princely states, and border disputes, notably over Kashmir. Pakistan experiences internal turmoil, leading to the separation of East Pakistan and the birth of Bangladesh in 1971, following a violent liberation struggle. India maintains democratic governance, embarking on industrialization and social reforms.
Afghanistan becomes a focal point of Cold War rivalry, undergoing rapid modernization, yet experiencing deep internal divisions, leading to instability that intensifies in subsequent decades.
Nepal and Bhutan cautiously engage in modernization while striving to preserve traditional identities. Bhutan introduces controlled development policies under the monarchy, and Nepal gradually opens to external influence.
Legacy of the Epoch
The epoch from 820 to 1971 profoundly shapes Northern South Asia, witnessing transitions from medieval empires to colonial subjugation, culminating in complex realities of independent nation-states. Legacies include cultural syncretism, unresolved regional tensions (particularly over Kashmir and the Durand Line), and socio-political structures inherited from colonial rule. These dynamics continue influencing contemporary geopolitics and societal developments across Northern South Asia.
South Asia (1684 – 1827 CE)
Imperial Fragmentation, Maritime Rivalry, and the Foundations of Colonial Rule
Geography & Environmental Context
South Asia stretched from the Hindu Kush and Pamirs to the Deccan Plateau, and from the Arabian Sea to the Bay of Bengal. It encompassed the Indus and Ganges river basins, the Himalayan highlands of Nepal and Bhutan, the rice deltas of Bengal and Arakan, the Deccan uplands, and the islands of Sri Lanka, the Maldives, and Chagos. The subcontinent’s position—linking Central Asia, the Indian Ocean, and Southeast Asia—made it both the heart of Asian trade and the prize of rival empires.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
The waning Little Ice Age introduced alternating droughts and floods across the monsoon belt. Bengal endured recurrent famine, culminating in the catastrophic 1770 famine. Himalayan glacial advance modulated river flow; Afghan winters intensified; coastal cyclones and tidal surges devastated the Bengal–Arakan littoral. Yet elaborate canal, tank, and embankment systems buffered many agrarian zones, while island ecologies in the Maldives and Lakshadweep adapted to storm and salt through diversified fishing and coconut economies.
Subsistence & Settlement
Agrarian regimes sustained the densest populations on earth:
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Indus–Gangetic plains: Wheat, rice, sugarcane, and pulses underpinned Mughal-era prosperity. Irrigation networks, though decaying, still supported Punjab’s fertile canal colonies.
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Deccan and southern India: Millet, cotton, and pepper dominated; Coromandel weavers supplied global markets.
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Bengal delta: Rice abundance alternated with disaster under East India Company revenue extraction and coerced indigo and opium cultivation.
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Afghan highlands: Wheat, fruit orchards, and transhumant herding structured mountain economies.
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Himalayan kingdoms: Nepal and Bhutan maintained terrace rice and barley cultivation, salt–grain exchange, and yak pastoralism.
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Sri Lanka and the atolls: Cinnamon, pepper, coconuts, and fisheries supported dense littoral societies, while interior Kandy preserved upland rice autonomy.
Technology & Material Culture
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Agrarian infrastructure: Persian wheels, tanks, and Mughal canals persisted; Deccan irrigation tanks and Malabar spice terraces displayed local ingenuity.
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Manufacture: Bengal’s muslins, silk, and indigo; Coromandel chintz and calico; Malabar pepper and Ceylon cinnamon—each integrated local craft into global commerce.
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Maritime architecture: Dutch and British forts lined Cochin, Galle, and Madras; dhows, baghalas, and European East Indiamen crowded Indian Ocean lanes.
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Artistic expression: Mughal miniature and marble architecture endured in Lahore and Delhi; temple sculpture, bhakti music, and Sufi calligraphy proliferated; Newar bronzes, Bhutanese dzongs, and Kandy’s temple murals symbolized sacred power.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
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Overland gates: The Khyber and Bolan passes funneled invasions and caravans between Kabul and Delhi.
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Riverine and coastal arteries: The Ganges–Brahmaputra delta became a lattice of Company barges and local craft exporting grain, jute, and indigo.
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Maritime routes: VOC ships monopolized Malabar pepper and Ceylon cinnamon; the EIC expanded from Madras, Bombay, and Calcutta, tying India to Southeast Asia and the Atlantic.
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Himalayan trade: Nepal and Bhutan moved salt, copper, and wool to Bengal and Tibet.
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Island networks: The Maldives exported cowries and tuna; Chagos and Diego Garcia linked the Mascarenes and India through plantation provisioning.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
South Asia’s pluralism deepened amid political fragmentation:
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Islamic & Persianate culture: The waning Mughal court still radiated refinement in poetry, miniature painting, and mosque architecture; Sufi shrines knit communities through pilgrimage and music.
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Bhakti & Sikh movements: Vernacular devotion flourished; Guru Gobind Singh’s Khalsa (1699) forged Sikh martial identity, later embodied in Ranjit Singh’s kingdom at Lahore.
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Hindu & Buddhist renewals: Temple festivals in the south, Vaishnava bhakti in Bengal, and Buddhist monastic reform in Sri Lanka reaffirmed local sovereignty.
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Himalayan states: Nepalese and Bhutanese monarchs consolidated power through Buddhist rituals and architecture.
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Island Islam: The Maldives and Lakshadweep nurtured coral-stone mosques and dynastic chronicles; enslaved Africans and South Indians in Chagos created creole religious and musical traditions.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
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Irrigation and water management moderated drought in Punjab and the Deccan.
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Crop diversification: American introductions—maize, tobacco, potatoes—joined traditional grains.
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Island sustainability: Maldivians rotated fishing grounds, protected coconut groves, and stored dried tuna for famine insurance.
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Famine coping: Temple and mosque endowments, grain stores, and pilgrim networks offered relief, though colonial requisition eroded many safeguards.
Political & Military Shocks
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Mughal decline: After Aurangzeb’s death (1707), provincial nawabs of Bengal, Awadh, and Hyderabad asserted autonomy.
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Afghan & Maratha wars: Nadir Shah’s sack of Delhi (1739) and Ahmad Shah Durrani’s raids (1748–1767)devastated the north; the Third Battle of Panipat (1761) broke Maratha expansion and left Punjab contested.
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Sikh consolidation: By 1799, Ranjit Singh unified Punjab, creating a modernized Sikh kingdom.
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European ascendancy:
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British East India Company victories at Plassey (1757) and Buxar (1764) secured Bengal; Delhi fell under Company protection (1803).
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The Anglo-Mysore and Maratha wars dismantled southern powers.
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Ceylon (1815) passed from the Dutch to Britain after the fall of Kandy.
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First Anglo-Nepalese War (1814–1816) and Treaty of Sugauli reduced Nepal’s territory; Bhutan lost its Duars.
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First Anglo-Burmese War (1824–1826) brought Arakan and Assam under British rule.
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Dutch decline: The VOC collapsed (1799); its possessions, including the Malabar and Ceylon trade posts, shifted to British hands.
Transition
Between 1684 and 1827 CE, South Asia shifted from a constellation of Mughal-successor and regional states to the nucleus of British imperial power. The Mughal world fractured into Afghan, Sikh, Maratha, and nawabi domains even as the East India Company built an oceanic empire linking Bengal to Bombay, and Ceylon to Singapore.
From Kabul’s mountain passes to the coral atolls of the Maldives, local societies adapted through irrigation, trade, and faith, yet the new imperial infrastructure of forts, ports, and plantations began to bind them into a single economic orbit. By 1827, the subcontinent stood transformed: its sovereignty divided, its resources globalized, and its cultural vitality undiminished amid the first full wave of the modern colonial age.
Upper South Asia (1684–1827 CE)
Mughal Strain, Afghan Ascendancy, and Colonial Entrenchment
Geography & Environmental Context
The subregion includes Afghanistan, Pakistan, northern India, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh, and northwestern Myanmar (the Arakan/Rakhine littoral and the Chindwin valley). Anchors: the Hindu Kush with the Khyber–Bolan passes; the Indus and Ganges–Yamuna basins; the Brahmaputra–Ganges delta; Himalayan terraces and Tarai(Nepal, Bhutan); and the Arakan littoral–Chindwin uplands linking the Bay of Bengal to Burma’s interior. From Afghan valleys to Bengal’s rice plains, this corridor bridged Central and South Asia to the Indian Ocean and Southeastern Asia.
Climate & Environmental Shifts
The later Little Ice Age brought instability. Afghan winters were bitter, straining herders. Erratic monsoons produced Bengal flood years (notably catastrophic Brahmaputra floods in the 1780s) and droughts across the Gangetic and Deccan plains. The Bengal famine (1770)—drought compounded by exploitative Company policies—killed millions. Slight Himalayan glacial advance modulated river flows. Cyclones periodically struck Bengal and the Arakan coast, sweeping away crops and villages.
Subsistence & Settlement
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Indus & Gangetic plains: Wheat, barley, pulses, sugarcane, and rice remained staples; in Punjab, irrigation sustained canal colonies even as Mughal oversight waned.
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Afghanistan: Valley wheat and orchard crops; sheep, goat, and horse herding on steppe margins.
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Bengal delta: Rice thrived in normal years, but famine and coerced indigo/opium regimes under Company dominance undermined food security.
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Nepal & Bhutan: Terrace rice in the Tarai; barley and buckwheat in higher valleys; yak and sheep pastoralism; salt–grain exchange sustained frontiers.
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Arakan/Rakhine & Chindwin valley: Wet-rice expansion under Burmese (and later British) rule; Arakanbecame a rice-exporting frontier; Chindwin uplands supplied timber and forest goods.
Technology & Material Culture
Mughal canals and Persian wheels endured despite declining maintenance. Firearms proliferated—matchlocks, later flintlocks. Bengal muslins and silks remained world-renowned via European factories. Afghan and Sikh smiths produced swords and artillery. Newar artisans in Nepal crafted temples, bronzes, and paubha paintings; Bhutan raised massive dzongs (fortress–monasteries). In Arakan and Chindwin, Buddhist temples, rice mills, and logging systems marked Burmese expansion.
Movement & Interaction Corridors
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Afghanistan–Punjab corridor: Invasions by Nadir Shah (1739) and Ahmad Shah Durrani (1748–1767)devastated Delhi and Punjab, funnelling loot and captives north.
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Indo-Gangetic trunk roads: Continued to bind Lahore–Delhi–Agra–Patna–Calcutta, though less securely guarded.
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Bengal waterways: Became arteries for Company extraction of grain, jute, and indigo.
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Himalayan passes: Nepal and Bhutan exchanged salt, wool, and copper with Tibet and Bengal.
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Arakan & Chindwin: Incorporated into the Burmese kingdom after 1784; rice and teak flowed to coastal ports. By the First Anglo-Burmese War (1824–1826) these corridors drew Britain into war, culminating in the cession of Arakan and Assam to the Company.
Cultural & Symbolic Expressions
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Mughal heartland: Under Aurangzeb (r. 1658–1707), Islamic orthodoxy sharpened; mosques like Badshahi(Lahore) embodied grandeur. After his death, court culture fragmented, but Persianate art and literature persisted.
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Bhakti & Sikh traditions: Bhakti poets spread vernacular devotion. The Khalsa founded by Guru Gobind Singh (1699) forged martial Sikh identity through scripture and community institutions.
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Sufi shrines: Continued to anchor towns and villages, bridging Hindu–Muslim devotional life.
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Himalayan kingdoms: Nepal and Bhutan monarchs used festivals and temples to consolidate legitimacy.
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Bengal: Vaishnava devotionalism thrived alongside Muslim pir shrine cults.
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Arakan/Rakhine: Buddhist temples at Mrauk U remained cultural centers even after Burmese conquest (1784), which dispersed Arakanese and Muslim communities.
Environmental Adaptation & Resilience
Canal and tank irrigation buffered droughts in Punjab and the Gangetic plains. Bengal farmers rotated rice with pulses and jute—yet famine laid bare the fragility of agrarian systems under coercive Company revenue. Afghan herders diversified herds and shifted valleys; Nepalese terraces and Bhutanese dzongs stabilized alpine communities. In Arakan, embankments and polders expanded rice; in Chindwin, shifting cultivation adapted to forest clearings and timber demand.
Technology & Power Shifts (Conflict Dynamics)
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Mughal decline: After Aurangzeb, succession wars and fiscal strain eroded authority; provincial nawabs (Awadh, Bengal, Hyderabad) grew autonomous.
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Afghan states: Nadir Shah’s sack of Delhi (1739) shattered Mughal prestige; Ahmad Shah Durrani built the Durrani Empire, raiding Punjab and Delhi.
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Sikh ascendancy: Eighteenth-century misls coalesced, culminating in Ranjit Singh’s kingdom at Lahore (1799–1839).
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Marathas: Pressed into Malwa and Delhi, clashing with Afghans at Panipat (1761)—weakening both.
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British conquest: Plassey (1757) and Buxar (1764) secured Bengal for the East India Company; by 1803, Delhi was under Company control. Nepal lost the Anglo-Nepalese War (1814–1816), ceding Terai lands (Treaty of Sugauli). Bhutan lost Duars in conflicts with the Company. In 1826, Britain annexed Arakan after defeating Burma in the First Anglo-Burmese War.
Transition
By 1827 CE, Upper South Asia was a mosaic: declining Mughal centers, rising Sikh and Afghan states, and expanding Company rule. Bengal was firmly under the EIC; Delhi a pensioner’s court. Afghanistan balanced Durrani succession and foreign intrigue. Nepal and Bhutan endured as Himalayan monarchies but were treaty-bound to the Company. Arakan and the Chindwin valley had already drawn Britain into Burmese conflicts, setting up the 1826 annexations. The Indo-Gangetic core—once Mughal—was becoming the centerpiece of a new British empire in Asia.
Americans have developed an ideology of "republicanism" asserting that government rests on the will of the people as expressed in their local legislatures.
They demand their rights as Englishmen and "no taxation without representation".
The British insist on administering the empire through Parliament, and the conflict escalates into war.
Following the passage of the Lee Resolution, on July 2, 1776, which is the actual vote for independence, the Second Continental Congress adopts the Declaration of Independence on July 4, which proclaims, in a long preamble, that humanity is created equal in their unalienable rights and that those rights are not being protected by Great Britain, and declares, in the words of the resolution, that the Thirteen Colonies are independent states and have no allegiance to the British crown in the United States.
The fourth day of July is celebrated annually as Independence Day.
In 1777, the Articles of Confederation establish a weak government that operates until 1789.
New Brunswick is split from Nova Scotia as part of a reorganization of Loyalist settlements in the Maritimes.
To accommodate English-speaking Loyalists in Quebec, the Constitutional Act of 1791 divides the province into French-speaking Lower Canada (later Quebec) and English-speaking Upper Canada (later Ontario), granting each its own elected legislative assembly.
Events in Spain in the early 1700s are to have long-lasting repercussions in Nicaragua.
The War of the Spanish Succession (1701-14) results in the Bourbons replacing the Habsburgs on the Spanish throne.
The Habsburgs had supported strict trade monopolies, especially in the Spanish colonies.
The Bourbons are proponents of more liberal free-trade policies.
Throughout the captaincy general, groups are hurt or helped by these changes; the factions supporting changes in trading policy come to be known as liberals while those who had profited under the old rules are known as conservatives.
Liberals generally consist of growers with new crops to sell, merchants, or export interests.
Conservatives were generally composed of landowners who had profited under the old protectionism and who resist new competition.
In time, conservatism also becomes associated with support for the Roman Catholic Church; the liberals take a more anticlerical stand.
Weakened by the French invasion in 1794 and internal upheaval, Spain tries to hold onto its richest colonies, which lead to even further neglect of its poorer Central American territories.
Resentment toward the Spanish-born elite (peninsulares—those born in Spain and the only persons allowed to administer Spanish colonies) grows among Nicaraguan Creoles.
The first local movements against Spanish rule in Central America occurs in 1811, when the Province of El Salvador stage a revolt.
Peninsular authorities are deposed and replaced by Creoles, who demand less repressive laws.
Although the Province of Nicaragua officially refuses to join the rebellion, a popular uprising soon breaks out.
Violence and political rivalry prevail in all of the Central American colonies during the ensuing decade.
The other provinces in the captaincy general, and later the successor nations, have similar liberal and conservative factions.
Each faction does not hesitate to support its compatriots, often with armed force, in another province.
After independence, the intercountry interference continues unabated; conservatives or liberals in each of the five successor states frequently send troops to support like factions in neighboring countries.
This constant intervention and involvement in its neighbors' affairs is a second and equally pernicious characteristic of Nicaraguan politics throughout its independent existence.
Typically, each of the five provinces of the captaincy general has one city that champions the liberal cause and another that spoke for the conservatives.
In Nicaragua, Leon is primarily involved in exporting animal products such as leather and tallow and soon becomes the center for free-trading liberalism.
The conservative elite in Granada, however, had made their fortunes under the old protectionist system and resist change.
Competition between the two cities over influence on colonial policy becomes violent at times, and each city supports armed groups in order to defend itself and its ideas.
In time, the hatred and violence between the two cities and the two factions becomes institutionalized, and often the original ideological difference is forgotten.
Independence in the next century only exacerbates the struggle as it eliminates Spain as a referee.
The violent rivalry between liberals and conservatives is one of the most important and destructive aspects of Nicaraguan history, a characteristic that will last until well into the twentieth century.
Politicians frequently choose party loyalty over national interest, and, particularly in the 1800s, the nation is often the loser in interparty strife.
Although Spain is allied with France during the Napoleonic Wars, in 1808 Napoleon Bonaparte forces the Spanish king to abdicate and puts a Bonaparte on the Spanish throne.
In response, Spanish people erupt in revolt in Madrid and throughout Spain, setting off a chain of uprisings in Latin America.
In Honduras, resentment against rule by the exiled Spanish king increases rapidly, especially because increased taxes for Spain's struggle against the French threaten the cattle industry.
In 1812 disturbances that break out in Tegucigalpa are more linked to long-standing rivalry with Comayagua, however, than to opposition to Spanish rule.
The disturbances are quickly controlled, and, to appease local discontent, the municipal government of Tegucigalpa is reestablished.