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From Settler Colonies to Imperialism Take notes for the following slides!
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Settler Colony Occurred when European family units moved into a region in large numbers Intent is to replace native population with a new population of people Key resource (pull factor) is the availability of land & economic opportunities Push Factors Overpopulation back in Europe Non-Settler Colony A colony with very few white European settlers
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Originally settled by farmers and ranchers from the Netherlands ( Boers/Afrikaners) Contact with native Xhosa tribes led to near extinction of the Africans, who didn’t have resistance to disease from the Dutch Europeans British take control of the tip of Africa in 1806 Abolition of slavery in 1833 leads to eastward migration of Afrikaners who would fight against the Zulu people under their leader, Shaka Zulu Diamonds and Gold Discovery of diamonds (1867) and gold (1886) deposits lead to British miner migrations Led to South African War b/t British and Dutch Afrikaners Reconciliation b/t Afrikaners and British was reached and the Union of South Africa was formed which had whites control all native black Africans. SETTLER COLONIES: Case Study 1
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Native Aborigine population was a foraging/fishing society Considered savages by the British 1770, James Cook claims Australia for Britain on his voyages Originally settled as a penal colony 200 free settlers 800 convicts Decline of Aboriginal Population Infectious disease Forced resettlement Removal of children Destruction of culture As number of white British settlers increased, Aboriginal population was forced off land and pushed into the interior (the Outback) SETTLER COLONIES: Case Study 2
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Coastal region was considered an integral part of France Natives (largely Ottoman Muslims) pushed out as Europeans moved in Colonized by peasants/working-class poor from Italy, Spain, and France political exiles and convicts from France Napoleon III Respected natives and tried to prevent contact/exploitation by limiting settlement to the coast French officials disagreed Continued to grant land to colons Goal was to provide land for wheat production Tribal leaders sold land to turn a quick profit SETTLER COLONIES: Case Study 3
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Colonized under King Leopold II – forced local chiefs to sign treaties giving up power at gunpoint Non settlement colony (in 1900, just over 1,000 Belgians lived in Congo, whose territory was 80x larger than all of Belgium itself) Based on resource/labor exploitation Rubber tree plantations Forced labor Cruel treatment of natives, high taxes As many as 4-8 million native Congalese died as a result Belgian Congo Non-settler Colony: Case Study 1
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