Colonialism in the colonial era, mostly refers to Western European countries' colonisation of lands in the Americas, Africa, Asia, and Oceania. The main European countries active in this form of colonisation included
Spain,
Portugal,
France, the
Tsardom of Russia (later
Russian Empire and
Soviet Union), the
Kingdom of England (later
Kingdom of Great Britain), the
Kingdom of the Netherlands,
Belgium and the
Kingdom of Prussia (now mostly Germany), and, beginning in the 18th century, the
United States. Most of these countries had a period of almost complete dominance of world trade at some stage in the period from roughly 1500 to 1900. Beginning in the late 19th century, the
Empire of Japan also engaged in settler colonisation, most notably in
Hokkaido and
Korea. While some European colonisation focused on shorter-term exploitation of economic opportunities (
Newfoundland, for example, or
Siberia) or addressed specific goals such as settlers seeking religious freedom (
Massachusetts), at other times long-term social and economic planning was involved for both parties, but more on the colonising countries themselves, based on elaborate theory-building (note
James Oglethorpe's
Province of Georgia in the 1730s and
Edward Gibbon Wakefield's
New Zealand Company in the 1840s). In some cases European colonisation appeared to be primarily for long-term economic gain, as in the Congo where Joseph Conrad's
Heart of Darkness described life under the rule of King
Leopold II of Belgium in the 19th century and
Siddharth Kara has described colonial rule and European and Chinese influence in the 20th and 21st centuries. Many African independence movements took place in the 20th century, when a wave of struggles for independence in European-ruled African territories were witnessed.
World War II (1939-1945) served as the catalyst for many of these movements, as it devastated both the
colonial empires and their African territories. The colonial powers were distracted by the war against
Nazi Germany, and thus had less time and resources devoted to their colonies, weakening their influence. After WW2, Harry Truman and Winston Churchill introduced the Atlantic Charter, which declared that the United States and Britain would "respect the right of all peoples to choose the form of government under which they will live". The United Nations was also formed, and colonial powers were required to make annual reports on their territories, and it gave Africans a voice to list their grievances. The end of WW2 also saw the decline of Britain and France, and the rise of the United States and the USSR, which did not support colonial Europe's overseas territories. The troops did not encounter significant resistance, and within 3 weeks, the occupation was officially declared on 5 July 1830. An estimated 6,000–45,000 Algerians were killed by the French army. Women took part as "combatants, spies, fundraisers, and couriers, as well as nurses, launderers, and cooks". Peace in the country did not last long. Shortly after gaining independence, the
Algerian Civil War began. The civil war erupted from anger regarding one party rule and ever increasing unemployment rates in Algeria. In October 1988, young Algerian men took to the streets and participated in week-long riots. In addition, the Algerian war for independence inspired liberationists in
South Africa. However, the liberationists were unsuccessful in implementing Algerian strategy into their independence movement.
African nationalism in Portuguese Africa Portugal built a five-century
global empire, starting overseas expansion in the 15th century. Innovations such as the
caravel, better navigation tools, and the school at
Sagres under
Prince Henry the Navigator gave the small Atlantic nation an early lead. Explorers reached islands like
Madeira and the
Azores, pushed down the African coasts, and arrived in Asia, including Japan, by the 16th century. Portugal established forts and colonies across Africa, including
Cape Verde,
São Tomé and Príncipe, and territory around the Congo River such as
Cabinda,
Luanda, and
Benguela. On the southeast coast, they controlled ports like
Mozambique,
Quelimane, and
Lourenço Marques until Arab rivals from Oman took northern territories. Weaknesses soon emerged. Portugal's small population and limited popular support meant few settlers, and convict exiles were sent to places like Angola. African economies under Portuguese control became dependent on the Atlantic slave trade, especially to
Brazil. Although slavery was outlawed in stages, ending in 1858, powerful interests delayed change. Political instability at home during and after the
Napoleonic Wars hindered colonial governance. Meanwhile, the
Industrial Revolution increased European demand for African resources. Britain, tied to Portugal through long diplomatic and economic relations, pushed for free-trade access and often dominated commerce in Portuguese territories. Growing European competition in the 19th century led to disputes over regions such as the Shire Highlands (modern
Malawi) and over control around the Congo River. British challenges to vague Portuguese claims set precedents requiring effective occupation, a principle formalised at the
Congress of Berlin in 1884–85. After World War II, Portugal renamed its colonies "Overseas Provinces" and resisted decolonisation. Modernisation followed, particularly in
Angola and
Mozambique. In the 1960s, nationalist movements, supported by the
Eastern Bloc and others, launched liberation struggles. The resulting conflicts in
Angola,
Guinea, and
Mozambique became known as the
Portuguese Colonial War.
Portuguese Angola In
Portuguese Angola, the rebellion of the ZSN was taken up by the União das Populações de Angola (UPA), which changed its name to the
National Liberation Front of Angola (FNLA) in 1962. On 4 February 1961, the People's Movement for the Liberation of Angola (
MPLA) took credit for the attack on the prison of Luanda, where seven policemen were killed. On 15 March 1961, the UPA, in a tribal attack, started the massacre of white populations and black workers born in other regions of Angola. This region would be retaken by large military operations that, however, would not stop the spread of the
guerrilla actions to other regions of Angola, such as
Cabinda, the east, the southeast and the central plateaus.
Portuguese Guinea (PAIGC) checkpoint in 1974 In Portuguese Guinea, the
Marxist African Party for the Independence of Guinea and Cape Verde (PAIGC) started fighting in January 1963. Its
guerrilla fighters attacked the Portuguese headquarters in
Tite, located to the south of
Bissau, the capital, near the Corubal River. Similar actions quickly spread across the entire colony, requiring a strong response from the Portuguese forces. The war in Guinea placed face to face
Amílcar Cabral, the leader of PAIGC, and
António de Spínola, the Portuguese general responsible for the local military operations. In 1965 the war spread to the eastern part of the country and in that same year the PAIGC carried out attacks in the north of the country where at the time only the minor guerrilla movement, the
Struggle Front for the National Independence of Guinea (FLING), was fighting. By that time, the PAIGC started receiving military support from the
Socialist Bloc, mainly from
Cuba, a support that would last until the end of the war. In Guinea the Portuguese troops mainly took a defensive position, limiting themselves to keeping the territories they already held. This kind of action was particularly devastating to the Portuguese troops who were constantly attacked by the forces of the PAIGC. They were also demoralised by the steady growth of the influence of the liberation supporters among the population that was being recruited in large numbers by the PAIGC. With some strategic changes by António Spínola in the late 1960s, the Portuguese forces gained momentum and, taking the offensive, became a much more effective force. Between 1968 and 1972, the Portuguese forces took control of the situation and sometimes carried attacks against the PAIGC positions. At this time the Portuguese forces were also adopting subversive means to counter the insurgents, attacking the political structure of the nationalist movement. This strategy culminated in the assassination of Amílcar Cabral in January 1973. Nonetheless, the PAIGC continued to fight back and pushed the Portuguese forces to the limit. This became even more visible after PAIGC received
anti-aircraft weapons provided by the Soviets, especially the
9K32 Strela-2 rocket launchers, thus undermining the Portuguese air superiority.
Portuguese Mozambique Portuguese Mozambique was the last territory to start the war of liberation. Its nationalist movement was led by the
Marxist–Leninist Liberation Front of Mozambique (FRELIMO), which carried out the first attack against Portuguese targets on 24 September 1964, in Chai, province of
Cabo Delgado. The fighting later spread to
Niassa,
Tete at the centre of the country. A report from Battalion No. 558 of the Portuguese army makes references to violent actions, also in Cabo Delgado, on 21 August 1964. On 16 November of the same year, the Portuguese troops suffered their first losses fighting in the north of the country, in the region of Xilama. By this time, the size of the guerrilla movement had substantially increased; this, along with the low numbers of Portuguese troops and colonists, allowed a steady increase in FRELIMO's strength. It quickly started moving south in the direction of Meponda and Mandimba, linking to Tete with the aid of
Malawi. Until 1967 the FRELIMO showed less interest in Tete region, putting its efforts on the two northernmost districts of the country where the use of
landmines became very common. In the region of Niassa, FRELIMO's intention was to create a free corridor to Zambézia. Until April 1970, the military activity of FRELIMO increased steadily, mainly due to the strategic work of Samora Machel in the region of Cabo Delgado. In the early 1970s, after Portugal's
Operation Gordian Knot, the nationalist guerrilla was severely damaged.
Role of the Organisation of African Unity The
Organisation of African Unity (OAU) was founded May 1963. Its basic principles were co-operation between African nations and solidarity between African peoples. Another important objective of the OAU was an end to all forms of colonialism in Africa. This became the major objective of the organisation in its first years and soon OAU pressure led to the situation in the Portuguese colonies being brought up at the
United Nations Security Council. The OAU established a committee based in
Dar es Salaam, with representatives from
Ethiopia,
Algeria,
Uganda,
Egypt,
Tanzania,
Zaire,
Guinea,
Senegal and
Nigeria, to support African liberation movements. The support provided by the committee included military training and weapon supplies. The OAU also took action in order to promote the international acknowledgement of the legitimacy of the Revolutionary Government of Angola in Exile (GRAE), composed of the
National Liberation Front of Angola (FNLA). This support was transferred to the People's Movement for the Liberation of Angola (
MPLA) and to its leader,
Agostinho Neto in 1967. In November 1972, both movements were recognised by the OAU in order to promote their merger. After 1964, the OAU recognised PAIGC as the legitimate representatives of Guinea-Bissau and Cape Verde and in 1965 recognised
FRELIMO for Mozambique.
Eritrea Eritrea sits on a strategic location along the
Red Sea between the
Suez Canal and the
Bab-el-Mandeb. Eritrea was an
Italian colony from 1890 to 1941. On 1 April 1941, the British captured
Asmara defeating the Italians and Eritrea fell under the
British Military Administration. This military rule lasted from 1941 until 1952. On 2 December 1950, the
United Nations General Assembly, by UN Resolution 390 A(V)
federated Eritrea with Ethiopia. The architect of this federal act was the United States. The federation went into effect 11 September 1952. However, the federation was a non-starter for feudal Ethiopia, and it started to systematically undermine it. On 24 December 1958—the Eritrean flag was replaced by the Ethiopian flag; On 17 May 1960—The title "Government of Eritrea" of the Federation was changed to "Administration of Eritrea". Earlier
Amharic was declared official language in Eritrea replacing
Tigrinya and
Arabic. Finally on 14 November 1962 -– Ethiopia officially annexed Eritrea as its 14th province. The people of Eritrea, after finding out peaceful resistance against Ethiopia's rule was falling on deaf ears formed the Eritrean Liberation Movement in 1958. The founders of these independence movement were: Mohammad Said Nawud, Saleh Ahmed Iyay, Yasin al-Gade, Mohammad al-Hassen and Said Sabr. ELM members were organised in secret cells of seven. The movement was known as Mahber Shewate in Tigrinya and as Harakat Atahrir al Eritrea in Arabic. On 10 July 1960, a second independence movement, the
Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF) was founded in Cairo. Among its founders were: Idris Mohammed Adem, President, Osman Salih Sabbe, Secretary General, and Idris Glawdewos as head of military affairs. These were among those who made up the highest political body known as the Supreme Council. On 1 September 1961, Hamid Idris Awate and his ELF unit attacked an Ethiopian police unit in western Eritrea (near Mt. Adal). This heralded the 30-year Eritrean war for independence. Between March and November 1970, three core groups that later made up the
Eritrean People's Liberation Front (EPLF) split from the ELF and established themselves as separate units. In September 1974, Emperor Haile Selassie was overthrown by a military coup in Ethiopia. The military committee that took power in Ethiopia is better known by its Amharic name the
Derg. After the military coup the Derg broke ties with the U.S. and aligned with the
Soviet Union, and the Soviet Union and its eastern bloc allies replaced the United States as patrons of Ethiopia's aggression against Eritrea. Between January and July 1977, the ELF and EPLF armies had liberated 95% of Eritrea, capturing all but 4 towns. However, in 1978–79, Ethiopia mounted a series of five massive Soviet-backed offensives and reoccupied almost all of Eritrea's major towns and cities, except for Nakfa. The EPLF withdrew to a mountain base in northern Eritrea, around the town of
Nakfa. In 1980 the EPLF had offered a proposal for referendum to end the war, however, Ethiopia, thinking it had a military upper hand, rejected the offer and war continued. In February–June 1982, The EPLF managed to repulse Ethiopia's much heralded four-month "Red Star" campaign, also known as the 6th offensive by Eritreans, inflicting more than 31,000 Ethiopian casualties. In 1984, the EPLF launched a counter-offensive and cleared the Ethiopian from the Northeastern Sahil front. In March 1988, the EPLF demolished the Ethiopian front at Afabet in a major offensive the British Historian
Basil Davidson compared to the French defeat at
Điện Biên Phủ. In February 1990, the EPLF liberated the strategic port of
Massawa, and in the process destroyed a portion of the
Ethiopian Navy. A year later, the war came to conclusion on 24 May 1991, when the Ethiopian army in Eritrea surrendered. Thus Eritrea's 30-year war crowned with victory. On 24 May 1993, after a UN-supervised referendum on 23–25 April 1993, in which the Eritrean people overwhelmingly, 99.8%, voted for independence, Eritrea officially declared its independence and gained international recognition.
Namibia soldiers pose with a captured
flag of Germany after their successful invasion of
South West Africa in 1915. in 1978 At the onset of
World War I, the
Union of South Africa participated in the invasion and occupation of several Allied territories taken from the
German Empire, most notably
German South West Africa and
German East Africa in present-day
Namibia and
Tanzania respectively. Germany's defeat forced the new
Weimar Republic to cede its overseas possessions to the
League of Nations as mandates. A mandate over South-West Africa was conferred upon the
United Kingdom, "for and on behalf of the government of the Union of South Africa", which was to handle administrative affairs under the supervision of the league. South-West Africa was classified as a "C" mandate, or a territory whose population sparseness, small size, remoteness, and geographic continuity to the mandatory power allowed it to be governed as an integral part of the mandatory itself. Nevertheless, the League of Nations obliged South Africa to promote social progress among indigenous inhabitants, refrain from establishing military bases there, and grant residence to missionaries of any nationality without restriction. Article 7 of the South-West Africa mandate stated that the consent of the league was required for any changes in the terms of the mandate. With regards to the local German population, the occupation was on especially lenient terms; South Africa only repatriated civil and military officials, along with a small handful of political undesirables. Other German civilians were allowed to remain. In 1924 all white South-West Africans were automatically naturalised as South African nationals and British subjects thereof; the exception being about 260 who lodged specific objections. In 1926 a Legislative Assembly was created to represent German, Afrikaans, and English-speaking white residents. Control over basic administrative matters, including taxation, was surrendered to the new assembly, while matters pertaining to defence and native affairs remained in the hands of an administrator-general. Following
World War II, South West Africa's international status after the dissolution of the League of Nations was questioned. The
United Nations General Assembly refused South Africa permission to incorporate the mandate as a fifth province, largely due to its controversial policy of racial
apartheid. At the General Assembly's request the issue was examined at the
International Court of Justice. The court ruled in 1950 that South Africa was not required to transfer the mandate to UN trusteeship, but remained obligated to adhere to its original terms, including the submission of annual reports on conditions in the territory. Led by newly elected
Afrikaner nationalist D. F. Malan, the South African government rejected this opinion and refused to recognise the competence of the UN to interfere with South-West African affairs. In 1960 Ethiopia and
Liberia, the only two other former League of Nations member states in Africa, petitioned the Hague to rule in a binding decision that the league mandate was still in force and to hold South Africa responsible for failure to provide the highest material and moral welfare of black South West Africans. It was pointed out that nonwhite residents were subject to all the restrictive
apartheid legislation affecting nonwhites in South Africa, including confinement to reserves, colour bars in employment,
pass laws, and "influx control" over urban migrants. A South African attempt to scupper proceedings by arguing that the court had no jurisdiction to hear the case was rejected; conversely, however, the court itself ruled that Ethiopia and Liberia did not possess the necessary legal interest entitling them to bring the case. In October 1966 the General Assembly declared that South Africa had failed to fulfil its obligations as the mandatory power and had in fact disavowed them. The mandate was unilaterally terminated on the grounds that the UN would now assume direct responsibility for South-West Africa. In 1967 and 1969 the UN called for South Africa's disengagement and requested the Security Council to take measures to oust the
South African Defence Force from the territory that the General Assembly, at the request of black leaders in exile, had officially renamed
Namibia. One of the greatest aggravating obstacles to eventual independence occurred when the UN also agreed to recognise the
South West African People's Organization (SWAPO), then an almost exclusively
Ovambo body, as the sole authentic representative of the Namibian population. South Africa was offended by the General Assembly's simultaneous dismissal of its various internal Namibian parties as puppets of the occupying power. Furthermore, SWAPO espoused a militant platform which called for independence through UN activity, including military intervention. By 1965 SWAPO's morale had been elevated by the formation of a guerrilla wing, the
People's Liberation Army of Namibia (PLAN), which forced the deployment of
South African Police troops along the long and remote northern frontier. The first armed clashes between PLAN cadres and local security forces took place in August 1966. ==Legacy==