Transcript Slide 1

Chapter 19
Part 3
Colonial Wars
Colonial Wars 1689--1815
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The Brits and the French were the two main
contenders in the wars for colonial empires
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Period is sometimes called the Second Hundred
Years’ War
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1701-1783 wars between the two concerned
maritime trade and colonial expansion
France v Brits
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France had the largest army on land and was
working to build up its naval forces
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Brits had the largest navy
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The Netherlands and Spain were in decline
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BUT France sought Spain’s help against the
Brits as an ally
Wars between 1689-1815
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Were considered world wars
They involved fighting in Europe, the high seas,
and in the New World
The War of the Spanish
Succession (1701-1713)
The possibility of the Bourbons inheriting the
Spanish throne and merging the French and
Spanish Empires was a major threat to the
balance of power in Europe AND a threat to
the Brits in North America
In North America
If Spanish and French empires merged, the
British American colonies would be surrounded
by New France in the North and Spanish
territory in Florida and in the West
The Treaty of Utrecht 1713
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France lost Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, and the
Hudson Bay area to Great Britain
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Spain lost the asiento to Britain: the West African
Slave trade to the New World
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Spain also agreed to allow one British ship to trade
with Panama annually …a real opportunity for the
Brits to gain the Spanish colonial market
The War of Jenkins’ Ear
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Began in 1739 and expanded into the War of the
Austrian Succession
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Spain believed that the Brits had abused the
provision in the Treaty of Utrecht regarding the
one ship a year to Panama
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Belief that the Brits were trading with Spanish
colonies more than once a year
The War of Jenkins’ Ear
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Spanish officials boarded a British ship suspected of
smuggling goods into Latin America
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Spanish officials cut off the ear of the captain
(Jenkins) of the British ship
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Jenkins kept his ear in a jar of Brandy and presented it
to Parliament 7 years later
The War of Jenkins’ Ear
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George II declared war on Spain in response
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Led to the War of the Austrian succession the
following year (1740)
The War of the Austrian
Succession in North America
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1740-1748 Remember Frederick the Great attacked
Austrian possession: Silesia
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Also involved battles between England and France in
North America and India
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Spain also fought to keep its colonial empire intact
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Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle: no impact on colonies
The Seven Years’ War
aka The French and Indian War
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1754-1763 Biggest war of the 18th century
Began in the Ohio Valley
George Washington and troops engaged the
French at Ft. Duquesne
In Europe it was the 7 Years’ War and began
after Diplomatic Revolution of 1756 (when
Maria Theresa tried to crush Prussia and regain
Silesia)
William Pitt
(Britain’s Prime Minister)
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Changed Britain’s war strategy in the middle of
the war by focusing more attention on North
America
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Remember…the Brits were allied with Prussia
but did not fight much in Europe…gave Prussia
$ and support instead
The French and Indian War
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The British Royal navy clobbered the French navy
many times during the war
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The French had hoped to invade Britain but was
impossible due to the many naval defeats
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French trade with its West Indian colonies was
choked off and Spain suffered similarly as an ally of
France
The Treaty of Paris 1763
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Ended the 7 Years’ War
France was no longer a major colonial power
France lost Canada to Britain
France lost all possessions east of the Mississippi
to Britain
France lost possessions west of the Mississippi
to Spain
The Treaty of Paris
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France kept some posts in India but lost much
there to the Brits
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Spain lost Florida to the Brits
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So…Britain became the world’s dominant
colonial power
The American Revolution
1775-1783
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France and Spain gave significant financial and
military support to Americans in order to
weaken Britain’s world empire
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The 13 American colonies were Britain’s most
valuable colonial possessions…for both raw
materials and as a market for surplus British
goods
By 1775
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Over 2.5 million people lived in the American
colonies
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The British American colonies had the highest
standard of living in the world at the onset of
the war for independence
Colonial Latin America
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By the 18th Century, Spain’s colonies continued
to be an important part of the Atlantic
Economy
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Silver mining in Mexico and Peru quadrupled
between 1700-1800
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Accounted for ½ of the world’s supply of silver
Philip V (the Bourbon Spanish
King)
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Spain recovered somewhat under the leadership
of Philip V (grandson of Louis XIV)
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Spain had the world’s 3rd largest navy in the
world
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Spain gained more control over its colonial
empire and incorporated administrative and
economic reforms under Charles III
(Enlightened Despot)
Creoles
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Spaniards born in Latin America
About 20% of the American population
Tried to recreate a European-style aristocracy in
Latin America
Some were wealthy class merchants who
prospered from smuggling
Natives went from forced labor to debt peonage
Mestizos
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The children born to Spanish fathers and Native
American mothers
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Represented about 30% of the population
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Amerindians about 70% of population
Most Spanish landowners believed Amerindians
should do the hard labor
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Black slavery in sugar plantations of Cuba and Puerto
Rico
Portuguese Brazil
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Portugal imported massive numbers of slaves to
work in the Brazilian sugar plantations
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By early 19th century, ½ of Brazil’s population
was of African descent
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More intermixed population than in Spanish
colonies (Portuguese, Indian, African)