| British Empire
with permission from Dr. George P. Landow
The growth of the British Empire was due in large part to the ongoing
competition for resources and markets which existed over a period of
centuries between England and her Continental rivals, Spain, France, and
Holland. During the reign of Elizabeth I, England set up trading companies
in Turkey, Russia, and the East Indies, explored the coast of North
America, and established colonies there. In the early seventeenth century
those colonies were expanded and the systematic colonization of Ulster in
Ireland got underway.
The first British Empire was a mercantile one. Under both the Stuarts
and Cromwell, the mercantilist outlines of further colonization and
Empire-building became more and more apparent. Until the early nineteenth
century, the primary purpose of Imperialist policies was to facilitate the
acquisition of as much foreign territory as possible, both as a source of
raw materials and in order to provide real or potential markets for
British manufactures. The mercantilists advocated in theory, and sought in
practice, trade monopolies which would insure that Britain's exports would
exceed its imports. A profitable balance of trade, it was believed, would
provide the wealth necessary to maintain and expand the empire.
After ultimately successful wars with the Dutch, the French, and the
Spanish in the seventeenth century, Britain managed to acquire most of the
eastern coast of North America, the St. Lawrence basin in Canada,
territories in the Carribean, stations in Africa for the acquisition of
slaves, and important interests in India. The loss in the late eighteenth
century of the American colonies was not offset by the discovery of
Australia, which served, after 1788, as a penal colony (convicts like
Magwitch, in Dickens's Great Expectations, were transported there).
However, the loss influenced the so-called "swing to the East" (the
acquisition of trading and strategic bases along the trade routes between
India and the Far East). In 1773 the British government was obliged to
take over for the financially troubled East India Company, which had been
in India since 1600, and by the end of the century Britain's control over
India extended into neighboring Afghanistan and Burma.
With the end, in 1815, of the Napoleonic
Wars, the last of the great imperial wars which had dominated the
eighteenth century, Britain found itself in an extraordinarily powerful
position, though a complicated one. It acquired Dutch South Africa, for
example, but found its interests threatened in India by the southern and
eastern expansion of the Russians.
(The protection of India from the Russians, both by land and by sea, would
be a major concern of Victorian foreign policy). At this time, however,
the empires of Britain's traditional rivals had been lost or severely
diminished in size, and its imperial position was unchallenged. In
addition, it had become the leading industrial nation of Europe, and more
and more of the world came under the domination of British commercial,
financial, and naval power.
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