March of the Titans Volume III: Part 2: The British Empire and the Creation of the United States of America

E-Book, Hard Cover, Soft Cover

March of the Titans Volume III: Europe and the World, European Expansion into the New World—Part 2: The British Empire and the Creation of the United States of America. This is the dramatic story of the globe-wide British Empire and its world-history-altering aftereffects, along with the all-important racial impact in each region where the British flag flew.

The British Empire was different from those of the other European colonial empires in that it was the only one which was overtly racial in nature, as opposed to the egalitarianism of the other empires. Starting with an overview of the racial laws as practiced by the British in all parts of their empire, this volume studies all British colonies from the time of their creation to either self-government or independence.

Price range: $10.95 through $29.95

Description

March of the Titans Volume III: Europe and the World, European Expansion into the New World—Part 2: The British Empire and the Creation of the United States of America. This is the dramatic story of the globe-wide British Empire and its world-history-altering aftereffects, along with the all-important racial impact in each region where the British flag flew.

The British Empire was different from those of the other European colonial empires in that it was the only one which was overtly racial in nature, as opposed to the egalitarianism of the other empires. Starting with an overview of the racial laws as practiced by the British in all parts of their empire, this volume studies all British colonies from the time of their creation to either self-government or independence. They include:

◆ The British Empire in India: the story of the privately held East India Company, its collapse after the anti-White “Indian Rebellion” of 1857, the takeover of that colony by the British Crown;

◆ The British Empire in Oceania, including the founding of the nations of Australia and New Zealand. A comparison with the other regional colonies provides a vivid example of how civilizational levels are linked to race, and not environment;

◆ The British colonies in Africa, which stretched from Egypt in the north to South Africa in the south, and of how the racial laws of much of what became “Apartheid South Africa” in fact originated with British rule;

◆ The British Protectorates in the Middle East, which came about largely as a result of the collapse of the Ottoman Empire after the First World War. This includes the dramatic story of the Mandate of Palestine, and the course of the Jewish terrorist war waged against British and Arabs alike;

◆ The British Empire in the Caribbean, which resulted in the total Africanization of the Caribbean, including the conversion of previously uninhabited islands such as Barbados into African-majority nations;

◆ The colonies and eventual capture from the French of the region which today makes up the nation of Canada;

◆ The creation, settlement, and expansion of the “Thirteen Colonies” on the eastern seaboard of the New World in North America, with each colony being dealt with separately, explaining how, when, and where their racial composition was achieved; and finally

◆ The creation of what became the United States of America out of those Thirteen Colonies in a violent revolution, the American War of Independence. This development was the most momentous by-product of the British Empire ever—but even here, fully 20 percent of the “American” population in 1776 was of African slave origin . . .

290 pages, 285 dramatic illustrations

Contents

Chapter 1: The Racial Imperative—Race Laws in the British Empire.  Read this chapter free online by clicking here.

Chapter 2: Rule Britannia I—The British Empire in India.  Includes: British East India Company; Wars with the Portuguese, French, and Dutch; Anglo-Mughal, Anglo-Mysore, Anglo- Marathas, and Anglo-Sikh Wars; British found Madras, Calcutta; “Clive of India”; “Black Hole of Calcutta”; Indian Rebellion and massacres of 1856; Whites in India during the “Raj,” British build India’s infrastructure; Gandhi, Bose and Hitler; Partition and Independence.

Chapter 3: Rule Britannia II—The British Empire in Asia. Includes: British Ceylon, British found tea plantations and import Tamils; Kandyan Wars; Burma; Anglo-Burmese Wars; Anglo-Afghan Wars; Straits Settlements; British Malaya and Singapore; Japanese invasion; Malayan Emergency, 1948–1960; British Borneo and the Brooke Raj; Brunei; Hong Kong and New Territories; Opium Wars with China; Invasion of China; Nepal; Anglo-Nepalese War (Gurkha War);  Sikkim, and Bhutan.

Chapter 4: Rule Britannia III—The British Empire in Australasia and the Pacific. Includes: Australia; Sydney and Perth; Chinese laborers; Growth; White Australia policy; self-government; New Zealand: Māori Musket Wars; Treaty of Waitangi; Anglo-Māori Wars; self-government; Fiji; Indian laborers imported; Solomon Islands; World War II battlefield; Gilbert & Ellice, Cook, Niue, New Hebrides, and Pitcairn Islands; British New Guinea.

Chapter 5: Rule Britannia IV—The British Empire in Africa. Includes: Sierra Leone; colonies for freed slaves; base for anti-slavery British West Africa Squadron; “Hut Tax War”; Gambia; Gold Coast (Ghana); Anglo-Ashanti Wars; Nigeria and its name; Royal Niger Company; British Cameroons; Egypt; Suez Canal, Ottoman expulsion; Anglo-Egyptian Sudan; Mahdist uprising; General Gordon and Khartoum; British Somaliland; Dervish uprising; Imperial British East Africa Company; Kenya; Uganda; Nyasaland (Malawi); Uganda Railway; East Africa Protectorate; “White Highlands” of Kenya; Mau Mau uprising; Southern and Northern Rhodesia; Cecil Rhodes; Pioneer Column; Wars with Shona and Matabele; White breakaway republic of Rhodesia; South Africa: British occupation of Cape, 1806; English settlement of Eastern Cape; Wars with Xhosa; Occupation of Natal; Wars with Zulus; Isandlwana; Rorke’s Drift; Anglo-Boer Wars; Unification of colonies; Bechuanaland (Botswana); Basutoland (Lesotho); Swaziland (Eswatini); Walvis Bay, (Namibia).

Chapter 6: Rule Britannia V—The British Empire in the Middle East. Includes: Aden; Aden Emergency; Gulf Protectorates; Kuwait; Oman; World War I; Expulsion of Ottomans; Lawrence of Arabia; Mandatory Palestine; Balfour Declaration; Jewish terrorists; Trans-Jordan partition; Iraq; Iran; Anglo-Persian Oil Company and Iraq Petroleum Company (“BP”).

Chapter 7: Rule Britannia VI—The British Empire in Central and South America. Includes: Mass importation of slaves Africanizes Caribbean; Jamaica; Maroon Wars; Baptist War; Morant Bay Rebellion; Barbados; Bussa Rebellion; Saint Kitts; Nevis;  Antigua; Montserrat; Dominica; Anguilla; Bahamas; “Golden Age of Piracy”; Saint Vincent; Carib Wars; Grenada; Saint Lucia; British Honduras (Belize); British Guiana (Guyana); Falkland Islands; Argentine Invasion, 1982.

Chapter 8: Rule Britannia VII—The British Canadian Colonies.  Includes: Nova Scotia; Father Rale’s War; King George’s War; Father Le Loutre’s War;  Dartmouth Massacre; Expulsion of the Acadians; African Slaves; War of 1812; New Brunswick; Prince Edward Island; Newfoundland; Rupert’s Land and the Northwest Territories; Hudson’s Bay Company; Wars with New France; North West Company and the Fur Trade Wars; Vancouver Island; British Columbia; Gold Rushes; Fraser Canyon War; Quebec; French-English War; Quebec Act; War of 1812; African slavery; Racial composition of population; Self-Government.

Chapter 9: Rule Britannia VIII—The Thirteen Colonies, Part 1: Virginia. Includes: Virginia Company of London; Jamestown; John Smith; Anglo-Powhatan Wars; African slavery; Bacon’s Rebellion; French and Indian War; Lord Dunmore’s War; slavery; Racial composition of population in 1776.

Chapter 10: Rule Britannia IX—The Thirteen Colonies, Part 2: Massachusetts. Pilgrims, the Mayflower; Mayflower Compact, Plymouth, First “Thanksgiving”; Puritans; John Winthrop; Religious Dissent; Harvard College; Pequot War, Salem Witch Trials; King Philip’s War, Dominion of New England; Deerfield Raid; Knowles Riot; African Slavery; Racial composition of population in 1776.

Chapter 11: Rule Britannia X—The Thirteen Colonies, Part 3: New Hampshire. Disease and Indian population; Charter for New England; John Mason; Frontier Wars; Dummer’s War, African Slavery; Racial composition of population in 1776.

Chapter 12: Rule Britannia XI—The Thirteen Colonies, Part 4: Maryland. Includes: Cecil Calvert; Catholic persecution in England; The Plundering Time; Susquehannock Wars; Toleration Act and religious freedom; Nanticoke Conflicts; Coode’s Rebellion; Cresap’s War; African slavery; Mason-Dixon Line; Racial composition of population in 1776.

Chapter 13: Rule Britannia XII—The Thirteen Colonies, Part 5: Connecticut. Includes: Thomas Hooker; Fundamental Orders; Pequot War; New Haven colony; The “Charter Oak”; Collegiate School (Yale); African Slavery; Racial composition of population in 1776.

Chapter 14: Rule Britannia XIII—The Thirteen Colonies, Part 6: Rhode Island. Includes: religious dissenters Roger Williams and Anne Hutchinson; Providence; Portsmouth; Quakers; Indian wars; Great Swamp Fight; Slave Trade Center; Newport  Jewish slave trade; College of Rhode Island (Brown University); Gaspee Affair; African slavery; Racial composition of population in 1776.

Chapter 15: Rule Britannia XIV—The Thirteen Colonies Part 7: Delaware. Includes: Baron De La Warr; Pennsylvania and “Lower Counties,”; Loyalists and Whigs; African slavery; Racial composition of population in 1776.

Chapter 16: Rule Britannia XV—The Thirteen Colonies Part 8: North Carolina. Includes: Roanoke and the “lost colony”; Albemarle Settlement; Lords Proprietors of Carolina; Charles Town; Chowanoc War; Constitutions of Carolina; Cary Rebellion; Tuscarora War; Division into North and South; Regulator Movement; African slavery; Racial composition of population in 1776.

Chapter 17: Rule Britannia XVI—The Thirteen Colonies Part 9: South Carolina. Includes: African Slave Revolt, Bath; Yamasee War; African Slaves Majority Population; Stono Rebellion; Cherokee War; Regulator Movement; Christopher Gadsden (“Gadsen Flag”); Racial composition of population in 1776.

Chapter 18: Rule Britannia XVII—The Thirteen Colonies Part 10: New York. Includes: New Amsterdam; Richard Nicolls; Division with New Jersey; Duke’s Laws; Beaver Wars; Charter of Liberties; Leisler’s Rebellion; Schenectady Massacre; French and Indian War; African slavery; New York slave revolt; Zenger Trial; New York “Conspiracy”; King’s College (Columbia); Albany Congress; Racial composition of population in 1776.

Chapter 19: Rule Britannia XVIII—The Thirteen Colonies Part 11: New Jersey. Includes: George Carteret and John Berkeley; Division from New York; Quakers; Lawrence Line; College of New Jersey (Princeton); Queen’s College (Rutgers); African slavery; Racial composition of population in 1776.

Chapter 20: Rule Britannia XIX—The Thirteen Colonies Part 12: Pennsylvania. Includes: William Penn; Quakers; Philadelphia; Anabaptists; Mennonites; Amish; the “Walking Purchase,”; Fort Duquesne (Fort Pitt) and Pittsburgh; the “smallpox-infected blankets” story; Indian Cruelties; Pontiac’s War; Paxton Boys and the Conestoga Massacre; Benjamin Franklin; College of Philadelphia; African slavery; Racial composition of population in 1776.

Chapter 21: Rule Britannia XX—The Thirteen Colonies Part 13: Georgia. Includes: James Oglethorpe; Slavery and Africans banned; Savannah; War of Jenkins’ Ear; Invasion of Spanish Florida; African slavery legalized; African Slaves; Racial composition of population in 1776.

Chapter 22: Rule Britannia XXI—The American Revolution. Includes: Ethnic composition of White population in 1776; Stamp Act; “Sons of Liberty”; Stamp Act Congress; Townshend Acts; Boston Massacre; Tea Act; Boston Tea Party; Continental Congresses; the War of Independence; Declaration of Independence; American victory; Loss of Thirteen Colonies; Racial composition of population in 1776.

Index

Sample pages:

Additional information

Format

E-Book, Hard Cover, Soft Cover

Ink

Black and white, Full color