1 / 15

Agenda 3-12

Agenda 3-12. BW – Define CW – Other British Colonies HW – Study for Test Friday QOTD – “If war comes upon us, it will come as a thief in the night .” Eamon de Valera. How did Self Rule come to other British Colonies? Notes - 4-7. British Colonies.

morna
Download Presentation

Agenda 3-12

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Agenda 3-12 • BW – Define • CW – Other British Colonies • HW – Study for Test Friday • QOTD – “If war comes upon us, it will come as a thief in the night.” Eamonde Valera

  2. How did Self Rule come to other British Colonies?Notes - 4-7

  3. British Colonies • Canada, New Zealand, & Australia all were made dominions (given home rule) because culturally they were very similar to the British • Ireland, South Africa, & India also had movements for home rule but the British refused to give them independence, ETHNOCENTRISM/RACISM

  4. Canada • In 1867, Dominion of Canada formed • Dominion—self-governing but part of British Empire

  5. Australia and New Zealand • Captain James Cook claims New Zealand (1769), part of Australia (1770) • 1788, Britain colonizes Australia, makes it Penal colony • Upon release, prisoners could buy land and settle

  6. Free Settlers Arrive • Free people introduce sheep; wool becomes major export • Government offers cheap land to encourage immigration

  7. Self-Government • 1900s Australia and New Zealand get limited self-rule • In 1893, New Zealand the first nation to grant women suffrage

  8. Ireland • English domination of Ireland begins in the 1100s • British imposed their culture & tried to destroy the Irish culture, banned schools & the Celtic language

  9. The Great Famine • Irish peasants depend heavily on potatoes for nourishment • 1845-1848 potato famine destroys entire crop; one million out of eight million people die • Millions flee Ireland to U.S., Canada, Australia, Britain

  10. Demand for Home Rule • Many Irish want home rule • Home rule granted in 1914, then revoked, by WWI

  11. Rebellion and Division • Frustrated Irish nationalists stage failed Easter uprising in 1916 • Irish Republican Army—unofficial military force seeking independence • In 1921, Ireland splits; Northern Ireland remains part of Britain

  12. Leaders • EamonDeValera – Irish Independence leader, Anti-treaty, Later President of Ireland • Michael Collins - Irish Independence leader, General, Helped bring treaty with England, Assassinated in his hometown.

  13. Independence to Today • Ireland Remains Divided • Catholic vs. Protestant, Northern Ireland had a large Protestant population • South becomes Irish Free State, then Republic of Ireland in 1949. • Tensions in north are still high.

  14. Extra Credit – Watch the Full movie Michael Collins (on Youtube) and come up with a summary of the movie and at least 25 movie questions to follow it.

More Related