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colonial and proclamation
The proclamation, which established an appointed colonial government, was the de facto constitution of Quebec until 1774, when the British parliament passed the Quebec Act, which expanded the province's boundaries to the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers, which was one of the grievances listed in the United States Declaration of Independence.
Under pressure from royal non-cooperation this proclamation was revised in 1952 to grant the Swazi paramount chief a degree of autonomy unprecedented in British colonial indirect rule in Africa.
With Wilson's 1918 proclamation of the Fourteen Points, whose fifth point proclaimed: " A free, open-minded, and absolutely impartial adjustment of all colonial claims, based upon a strict observance of the principle that in determining all such questions of sovereignty the interests of the populations concerned must have equal weight with the equitable claims of the government whose title is to be determined ", some Algerian intellectuals — dubbed oulémas began to nurture the desire for independence or, at least, autonomy and self-rule.
Besides regulating colonial expansion, the proclamation dealt with the management of newly ceded French colonies.
Others have argued that colonial resentment of the proclamation contributed to the growing divide between the colonies and the mother country.
" Though declared a colony in 1920, the formal British colonial presence in Kenya began with a proclamation on 1 July 1895, in which Kenya was claimed as a British protectorate.
The current state flag of Tasmania was officially adopted following a proclamation by Tasmanian colonial Governor Sir Frederick Weld on 25 September 1876, and was first published in the Tasmanian Gazette the same day.
The first local flag of Tasmania was adopted by proclamation of Tasmanian colonial Governor Sir Frederick Weld on 9 November 1875.
The colonial government issued a proclamation setting the rate at six white or three black to one penny.
The proclamation renamed Canada " The Province of Quebec ", redefined its borders, and established a British appointed colonial government.
The proclamation renamed Canada " The Province of Quebec ", redefined its borders and established a British-appointed colonial government.
The proclamation was largely ignored on the ground, however, and various frontier settlement enterprises, owing allegiance to conflicting colonial governments, continued.

colonial and 1773
Jefferson was a lawyer in colonial Virginia from 1768 to 1773 with his friend and mentor, George Wythe.
While the other seven counties were fashioned from existing colonial parishes, Wilkes was unique in that it was formed from land ceded in 1773 by the Creek and Cherokee Nations in their respective Treaties of Augusta.
Letters of his calling for abridgement of colonial rights were published in 1773, further intensifying dislike of him in the colony.
Hooper eventually was elected to the North Carolina General Assembly in 1773, where he became an opponent to colonial attempts to pass laws that would regulate the provincial courts.
Examples of Crisis eras include the Wars of the Roses ( 1459 – 1487 ), the Spanish Armada Crisis ( 1569 – 1594 ), the colonial Glorious Revolution ( 1675 – 1704 ), the American Revolution ( 1773 – 1794 ), the American Civil War ( 1860 – 1865 ), and the twin emergencies of the Great Depression and World War II ( 1929 – 1946 ).
Four of the acts were issued in direct response to the Boston Tea Party of December 1773 ; the British Parliament hoped these punitive measures would, by making an example of Massachusetts, reverse the trend of colonial resistance to parliamentary authority that had begun with the 1765 Stamp Act.
William Molineux ( c. 1717 – October 22, 1774 ) was a hardware merchant in colonial Boston best known for his role in the Boston Tea Party of 1773 and earlier political protests.
After returning to England, he continued to advise the British government on colonial matters, calling for hardline responses to ongoing difficulties in Massachusetts that culminated in the 1773 Boston Tea Party.
Another distinctly American lyric voice of the colonial period was Phillis Wheatley, a slave whose book " Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral ," was published in 1773.
The President's Bodyguard, which was founded in 1773 as the Governor's Troop of Moghuls and renamed the Governor General's Bodyguard during the colonial era, is the country's Household Cavalry regiment, with ceremonial soldiers on horseback and combat soldiers in armoured vehicles or heliborne roles.
John Penn ( 14 July 1729 – 9 February 1795 ) was the last governor of colonial Pennsylvania, serving in that office from 1763 to 1771 and from 1773 to 1776.
It is the only existing work of colonial academic architecture that was principally designed from a plate in Andrea Palladio ’ s Quattro Libri. The house was designed by the architect William Buckland in 1773 – 74 for wealthy farmer Matthias Hammond of Anne Arundel County, Maryland.
They coordinated responses to Britain and shared their plans ; by 1773 they had emerged as shadow governments, superseding the colonial legislature and royal officials.
Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, is named for Sir Thomas Brisbane ( 1773 – 1860 ), British soldier and colonial administrator born in Ayrshire, Scotland.

colonial and listed
France The total includes 1, 186, 000 killed or missing in action and died of wounds The figure for total military dead of 1, 397, 800 is from a study published by the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in 1931 The total includes 71, 100 French Colonial Forces, 4, 600 foreign nationals, and 28, 600 war-related military deaths occurring from 11 / 11 / 18 to 6 / 1 / 1919 The UK War Office in 1922 estimated French losses as 1, 385, 300 dead and missing, including 58, 000 colonial soldiers The U. S. War Department in 1924 estimated 1, 357, 800 killed and died The names of the soldiers who died for France during World War I are listed on-line by the French government.
Late 20th-century researchers have traced 80 percent of the free people of color in North Carolina listed in those two decades of censuses to African Americans free in Virginia in colonial times.
Mansfield Center Cemetery, which contains many 18th-century gravestones, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as a fine example of the rich artistic tradition of funerary stone carving in colonial New England.
The village of Cahokia is the home of significant colonial and Federal-period buildings listed on the National Register of Historic Places: the Cahokia Courthouse ( c 1740 ), in the French Colonial style, Church of the Holy Family ( Cahokia ) ( c. 1697 ), and the Jarrot Mansion ( c 1810 ).
Charlestown also maintains several historic cemeteries and “ commons .” Many key colonial structures, listed in “ Latrobe ’ s View of Charlestown ” from 1813, have been demolished and lost over the last few centuries including the Market House, the Alison-Key House, Morrow House, Tully House, and the Bladen House.
The Chalfont Historic District is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and contains many American colonial and Victorian-style houses.
With the exception of two sillok compiled during the colonial era, the Annals are the 151st national treasure of Korea and listed in UNESCO's Memory of the World registry.
It listed only the sources referred to in the text and in his footnotes, and was not intended as an exhaustive list of every book or document that he had read regarding colonial Tasmania.
2007 Vigan City was listed by UNESCO as the best preserved example of Spanish colonial towns in Asia.
Across the street is Mulford Farmhouse, a significant English colonial farmstead, listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
" Historian and genealogist Virginia DeMarce and Paul Heinegg have found that 80 percent of the individuals listed as free persons of color in 1790 and 1810 were descended from African Americans free in colonial Virginia.
Germany's attempt to build a battleship fleet to match that of the United Kingdom, the dominant naval power on the 19th-century and an island country that depended on seaborne trade for survival, is often listed as a major reason for the enmity between those two countries that led the UK to enter World War I. German leaders desired a navy in proportion to their military and economic strength that could free their overseas trade and colonial empire from dependence on Britain's good will, but such a fleet would inevitably threaten Britain's own trade and empire.

colonial and names
In such cases, cartographers may have to choose between various phonetic spellings of local names versus older imposed, sometimes resented, colonial names.
The following table shows the names that were formerly used in French and Dutch for major cities, during the colonial period.
Nguema introduced a campaign of ' authenticity ', replacing colonial names with native ones: the capital Santa Isabel became Malabo, the main island of Fernando Po was renamed Masie Nguema Biyogo after himself, and Annobón became Pagalu.
The colonial terms Saint-Domingue and Santo Domingo are sometimes still applied to the whole island, although these names refer, respectively, to the colonies that became Haiti and the Dominican Republic.
Ontario has over 2 million people of Irish descent, who in greater numbers arrived in the 1820s and the decades that followed to work on colonial infrastructure and to settle land tracts in Upper Canada, the result today is a countryside speckled with the place names of Ireland.
The modern nations of Nigeria and Niger take their names from the river, marking contesting national claims by colonial powers of the " Upper ", " Lower " and " Middle " Niger river basin during the Scramble for Africa at the end of the 19th century.
Numerous suburbs surround the city, retaining the names colonial administrators gave them during the 19th century, such as Warren Park, Borrowdale, Mount Pleasant, Marlborough, Tynwald and Avondale.
A former colonial road and previous border between the merged municipalities takes three names as it diagonlly crosses the city's urban grid: Hackensack Plank Road, 32nd Street, and Bergen Turnpike.
The area was known from colonial times as " Storm's Bridge " and later, " Hall's Corners ", names derived from the principal landowners of the times.
Taiwanese units of measurement, which appeared under the colonial influences of the Dutch and the Japanese, for the most part may have similar names but are different from the Chinese units of measurement.
The administration which was set up was colonial in nature, the Chinese Muslims started putting up street signs and names in Chinese, which used to be in only Uighur language.
* Cape Saint James or Cape Saint Jacques, former colonial names for Vung Tau
The names of Yee Wo Street, Jardine's Bazaar and Jardine's Crescent reveal that the land in this area was sold by the British colonial government to Jardines in the early 19th century.
In November 1884, Germany proclaimed its protectorate over the New Britain Archipelago ; the German colonial administration gave New Britain and New Ireland the names of Neupommern ( or Neu-Pommern ; " New Pomerania ") and Neumecklenburg ( or Neu-Mecklenburg ; " New Mecklenburg ") respectively, and the whole island group was renamed the Bismarck Archipelago.
In pre-colonial and early colonial times a major Indian pathway through the Great Valley was known as the Great Indian Warpath, Seneca Trail, and various other names.
Early chantwells like Hannibal, Norman Le Blanc, Mighty Panther and Boadicea made names for themselves by criticizing the colonial government.
He believes that Australian cities should be renamed with their original Aboriginal place names, to sever ties with the colonial era.
The colonial Dutch referred to the Lenape Indian peoples whom they encountered in this mid-Atlantic region, along the lower Hudson and northern New Jersey areas, as the Hackensack, Tappan, Nyack, and Minsi ; these were the Dutch-derived names from the Lenape words for the bands, who took the names associated with geographic places.
Many American towns, especially those settled in colonial times, drew their names from the Bible.
The term may have originated from the general depiction of British colonial sailors who were often drunk ( Mad Sailors ); due to the inability of locals to pronounce English words correctly, it became mat salleh ( Mat and Salleh are both typical Malay names ).
To remember the names, colonial school children often recited the poem: " Patience, Prudence, Hope and Despair.
The similarity in the names " berimbau " and " belembao " is intriguing as no acknowledged link between the Pacific society and Brazil, although it is most likely that knowledge of the African-derived berimbau was transported to Guam via Spanish colonial trade ( Guam having once been under Spanish imperial influence ).

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