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The Rise and Fall of the British Empire

The British Empire. Bilde
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The British Empire is without doubt the largest empire history has ever seen. In the early 1920s, it covered one fourth of the globe. Britain had colonies on all the continents - Europe, America and the Caribbean, Asia and Africa, and all the colonies had English as their official language.

Vocabulary

the Renaissance, singular, regain, empire, imperial, imperialistic, colonial, decolonialisation, triangular trade, expansionist, instability, infrastructure, disintegrating, dismantling, pivotal, commerce, commercial, mutiny, discourage, scramble

The Empire came about as a result of long historical processes, stretching from the Renaissance in the 16th century to 1997, when Hong Kong was given back to China. Hence, when we talk about the British Empire, we normally distinguish between the first Empire and the second Empire, although the British Empire in singular, often refers to the second Empire.

There is a correlation between the Empire and the contemporary composition of British society. Mass immigration to the United Kingdom began in the decades when most of the colonies were in the process of regaining their independence in the latter part of the 20th century. (See texts on Multiculturalism in Britain and Post-War Immigration to Britain).

Before doing the tasks below, read more about the different stages of the British Empire in these articles.

The First Empire – From Queen Elizabeth I to Queen Victoria

The Second Empire - From Queen and Empress Victoria to Queen Elizabeth II

The Dismantling of the Empire

The Legacy of an Empire

Relatert innhald

Moving into the 20th century, the world was about to go through many changes that would affect Britain’s position in the world.

In Britain's former colonies we can still find visible traces of British influence in language, education, politics and culture.

CC BY-SASkrive av Jan Erik Mustad.
Sist fagleg oppdatert 09.03.2018

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UK History