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File:Non-Self-Governing.png
Color coded chart of current non-self-governing territories (primarily islands) with their sovereign states (Template:As of)

A colony is a territory subject to a form of foreign rule,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> which rules the territory and its indigenous peoples separated from the foreign rulers, the colonizer, and their metropole (or "mother country").<ref name="i561">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> This separated rule was often organized into colonial empires, with their metropoles at their centers, making colonies neither annexed or even integrated territories, nor client states. Particularly new imperialism and its colonialism advanced this separated rule and its lasting coloniality. Colonies were most often set up and colonized for exploitation and possibly settlement by colonists.<ref name="Overseas"/>

The term colony originates from the ancient Roman {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, a type of Roman settlement. Derived from colonus (farmer, cultivator, planter, or settler), it carries with it the sense of 'farm' and 'landed estate'.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Furthermore, the term was used to refer to the older Greek apoikia (Template:Langx), which were overseas settlements by ancient Greek city-states. The city that founded such a settlement became known as its metropolis ("mother-city"). Since early-modern times, historians, administrators, and political scientists have generally used the term "colony" to refer mainly to the many different overseas territories of particularly European states between the 15th and 20th centuries CE, with colonialism and decolonization as corresponding phenomena.

While colonies often developed from trading outposts or territorial claims, such areas do not need to be a product of colonization, nor become colonially organized territories. Territories furthermore do not need to have been militarily conquered and occupied to come under colonial rule and to be considered de facto colonies, instead neocolonial exploitation of dependency or imperialist use of power to intervene to force policy, might make a territory be considered a colony, which broadens the concept, including indirect rule or puppet states (contrasted by more independent types of client states such as vassal states). Subsequently, some historians have used the term informal colony to refer to a country under a de facto control of another state. Though the broadening of the concept is often contentious.

Contemporarily colonies are identified and organized as not sufficiently self-governed dependent territories. Other past colonies have become either sufficiently incorporated and self-governed, or independent, with some to a varying degree dominated by remaining colonial settler societies or neocolonialism.

ConceptEdit

The word "colony" comes from the Latin word {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, used for ancient Roman outposts and eventually for cities. This in turn derives from the word {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, which referred to a Roman tenant farmer.

Settlements that began as Roman {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} include cities from Cologne (which retains this history in its name) to Belgrade to York. A telltale sign of a settlement within the Roman sphere of influence once being a Roman colony is a city centre with a grid pattern.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

With a long and changing history of use colonies have been distinguished from "settler colonies", which are the more particular type of a settlement or community and not so much territorial.<ref name="Overseas">Template:Cite book</ref>

Ancient examplesEdit

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More modern historical examplesEdit

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|CitationClass=web }}</ref> After 1511, Britain established colonies and trading ports on the Malay Peninsula; Penang was leased to the British East India Company. The Dutch Empire encountered Malaysia when it was looking for spices to trade with.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

|CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>"Let Puerto Rico Decide How to end its Colony Status: True Nationhood Stands on the Pillar of Independence." Template:Webarchive Rosalinda de Jesus. The Allentown Morning Call. Republished by The Puerto Rico Herald. July 21, 2002. San Juan, Puerto Rico. Retrieved 13 September 2021.</ref> That year, the United States advised the United Nations (UN) that the island was a self-governing territory.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>Template:Efn The United States has been "unwilling to play in public the imperial role... it has no appetite for acknowledging in a public way the contradictions implicit in frankly colonial rule."<ref>Sidney W. Mintz. Three Ancient Colonies. Harvard University Press. 2010. pp. 135-136.</ref>Template:Efn The island has been called a colony by many,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> including US Federal judges,<ref>Juan Torruella, Groundbreaking U.S. Appeals Judge, Dies at 87. Template:Webarchive Sam Roberts. The New York Times. 28 October 2020. Accessed 13 September 2021.</ref> US Congresspeople,<ref>Can't We Just Sell the World's Oldest Colony and Solve Puerto Rico's Political Status? Template:Webarchive Luis Martínez-Fernández. 16 July 2020. Accessed 13 September 2021.</ref><ref>Hopes for DC, Puerto Rico statehood rise. Template:Webarchive Marty Johnson and Rafael Bernal. The Hill. 24 September 2020. Accessed 13 September 2021.</ref> the Chief Justice of the Puerto Rico Supreme Court,<ref>José Trías Monge. Puerto Rico: The trials of the oldest colony in the world. Yale University Press. 1997. p.3. Template:ISBN</ref> and numerous scholars.<ref>Angel Collado-Schwarz. Decolonization Models for America's Last Colony: Puerto Rico. Syracuse University Press. 2012. Template:ISBN</ref>Template:Efn

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> The precolonial (pre-1624) inhabitants of Taiwan are the ethno-linguistically Austronesian Taiwanese indigenous peoples, rather than the vast majority of present-day Taiwanese people, who are mostly ethno-linguistically Han Chinese. Twice throughout history, Taiwan has served as a quasi rump state for Chinese governments, the first instance being the Ming-loyalist Kingdom of Tungning (1662–1683) and the second instance being the present-day Republic of China (ROC), which officially claims continuity or succession from the Republic of China (1912–1949), having retreated from mainland China to Taiwan in 1949 during the final years of the Chinese Civil War (1927–1949). The ROC, whose de facto territory consists almost entirely of the island of Taiwan and its minor satellite islands, continues to rule Taiwan as if it were a separate country from the People's Republic of China (consisting of mainland China, Hong Kong, and Macau).

  • The Template:Flag was formed from a union of thirteen British colonies. The Colony of Virginia was the first of the thirteen colonies. All thirteen declared independence in July 1776 and expelled the British governors.

Current coloniesEdit

File:Dependent territories.svg
Dependent territories and their sovereign states. All territories are labeled according to ISO 3166-1Template:Efn or with numbers.Template:Efn Colored areas without labels are integral parts of their respective countries. Antarctica is shown as a condominium instead of individual claims.

The Special Committee on Decolonization maintains the United Nations list of non-self-governing territories, which identifies areas the United Nations (though not without controversy) believes are colonies. Given that dependent territories have varying degrees of autonomy and political power in the affairs of the controlling state, there is disagreement over the classification of "colony".

See alsoEdit

Settlements & outposts (civilian & military)
Roads and road stops
Trade & manufacturing areas
Frontiers & extraterritorial areas

NotesEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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Further readingEdit

  • Aldrich, Robert. Greater France: A History of French Overseas Expansion (1996)
  • Ansprenger, Franz ed. The Dissolution of the Colonial Empires (1989)
  • Benjamin, Thomas, ed. Encyclopedia of Western Colonialism Since 1450 (2006).
  • Ermatinger, James. ed. The Roman Empire: A Historical Encyclopedia (2 vol 2018)
  • Higham, C. S. S. History Of The British Empire (1921) online free
  • James, Lawrence. The Illustrated Rise and Fall of the British Empire (2000)
  • Kia, Mehrdad, ed. The Ottoman Empire: A Historical Encyclopedia (2017)
  • Page, Melvin E. ed. Colonialism: An International Social, Cultural, and Political Encyclopedia (3 vol. 2003)
  • Priestley, Herbert Ingram. (France overseas;: A study of modern imperialism 1938) 463pp; encyclopedic coverage as of late 1930s
  • Tarver, H. Micheal and Emily Slape. The Spanish Empire: A Historical Encyclopedia (2 vol. 2016)
  • Wesseling, H.L. The European Colonial Empires: 1815–1919 (2015).

External linksEdit

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