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Overseas colony

Colony refers to the area ruled by the suzerain, which has no independent rights in politics, economy, military affairs and diplomacy, and is completely controlled by the suzerain. Colonies in a broad sense also include semi-colonial countries and protected countries, which have administrative organs, armies and other state machines, but are controlled by other countries in economic, military and diplomatic aspects, as well as mandated areas and trust areas, as well as "overseas territories", "territories" and "overseas provinces" established by colonial countries in these areas. After World War II, most colonies in the world gained independence, and the old world colonial system no longer existed.

As far as the nature of colonies is concerned, they can be roughly divided into three main types: colonial colonies, resource-predatory colonies and commercial colonies, which appeared in turn with the development of capitalism.

Colonial history

origin

Most of the ancient colonies were colonial colonies, that is, the continuation of the suzerain country overseas, such as Carthage established by the Phoenicians. In ancient Greece, Greek cities established many colonies along the Mediterranean Sea and the Black Sea, once as far away as the coasts of North Africa and Spain. The Greek colonial movement began with the need of trade with overseas regions. At the same time, some Greek citizens were dissatisfied with the political status quo of their city-states, or emigrated overseas because of the small land and large population. After the establishment of Greek overseas colonies, most of them maintained political independence, but maintained certain ties with their home countries, sent representatives to participate in the ancient Olympic Games in various parts of Greece, and took pride in being the outpost of Greek civilization. Some Greek colonies have survived to this day, such as Syracuse (now known as Syracuse in Sicily), taranto and Byzantium (now known as Istanbul).

The modern word "colony" comes from "Colonia" in ancient Rome, which originally refers to the village community composed of Roman citizens and their families guarding the coast of Apennine Peninsula. With the expansion of Roman territory, this system gradually expanded to newly conquered areas and evolved into a colonial system. Colonists still enjoy all the rights of Roman citizens, but the population of conquered areas cannot enjoy Roman citizenship (in the late Roman Republic and Roman Empire, with the romanization of conquered areas, citizenship was granted to colonial people).

Early colony

After the demise of the Western Roman Empire, its overseas provinces and colonies were divided up by the Eastern Roman Empire, the Frankish Empire, the Visigoth Kingdom and other countries. Due to political and military restrictions, and because of the sparse population after the demise of western Rome, these countries have almost no power to conquer overseas colonies.

The Crusade marked the beginning of Europe's interest in areas outside itself. The Crusader countries established on the eastern Mediterranean were not colonies, but after the fourth Crusader occupied the Byzantine Empire, Venice and Genoa occupied many territories originally belonging to Byzantium and established their own commercial colonies in the eastern Mediterranean. Most of these colonies were later occupied by the Ottoman Empire.

15th century to17th century: colonial empires of Spain and Portugal.

It is generally believed that the earliest colony occupied by western countries in modern times was Ceuta occupied by Portugal in 14 15. This port originally belonged to Morocco. In order to put out local pirates and control the import of gold and ivory from West Africa through Ceuta, Portugal occupied the port of Ceuta after careful deployment, and then went south along the African coast to occupy Madeira, Cape Verde and other islands, so as to establish direct contact with the gold-producing West African Hei Di.

With the development of the Renaissance in Europe, there is a desire for commercial capital and wealth in Europe. At that time, Europe's main trade targets were the East, especially silk, precious stones, spices and other luxury goods from China, India and Nanyang Islands. As the trade with the East was monopolized by Venice and Genoa at that time, western European countries decided to explore their own routes to the East. Portugal and Spain were the first to explore the Eastern Front. 1498 dagama arrived in India through the cape of good hope. In order to ensure that the trade with India is not interfered by Mughal Empire, Oman and Indian Ocean countries, Portugal established its first colony in Goa in 15 10, built a fortress, equipped with troops, and protected the safety of Portuguese businessmen. At the same time, it occupied some islands and coastal strongholds along the coast of Africa as a midway supply station for India.

Because the route eastward through the Cape of Good Hope was monopolized by Portugal, Spain had to find a new route eastward. 1492 After Columbus discovered America, Spain conquered and colonized America, wiped out the empire established by Indians in a very short time, and established a vast colony. 1494, after papal arbitration, Portugal also acquired a huge colony in the American continent east of 50 degrees west longitude.

Because the Spanish conquered areas are rich in gold and silver, a large number of precious metals flowed into Europe through Spain, which stimulated the price changes and industrial and commercial development in other parts of Europe. At the same time, due to the introduction of new consumer goods such as coffee, cocoa, tea, tobacco, sugar and potatoes into Europe, the eating habits of Europeans have also changed greatly, which has led to an increase in demand for these consumer goods and prompted Spain and Portugal to develop cash crops in the newly conquered America.

From the end of 16 to the beginning of 17, Britain and France seized the Caribbean islands from the Spanish, and the Netherlands seized the Natal area on the northeast coast of Brazil from Portugal. The slave plantation system initiated by the Portuguese in Madeira and Cape Verde Islands in Africa was introduced into these areas controlled by Britain, France and Holland, and the demand for labor increased sharply. However, due to the brutal slaughter of Indians by colonists (especially the Spanish), the number of Indians dropped sharply from 50 million at the end of 15 to 4 million in 17, and European colonists had to find new sources of labor from Africa.

From 1442, the Portuguese used Berbers as slaves (in Portugal), and the Spanish began to transport African blacks into America from 1502. The demand for slave trade prompted these two countries and Britain, the Netherlands, France, Denmark and other emerging capitalist countries to set up many trading posts on the West African coast to sell slaves, ivory, gold and peppers (then known as "the seeds of heaven", and another name for Ivory Coast (now C? te d 'Ivoire) is the seed coast). However, because the coast of West Africa is inaccessible, and the local landform and climate are not suitable for Europeans to live in, Europe's colonization of Africa in the following centuries was limited to a few coastal strongholds. From the naming of these colonies by European countries-Gold Coast, Ivory Coast and Slave Coast-we can see that the colonies in West Africa are basically resource-predatory colonies.

17th century to18th century: Britain, France and the Netherlands.

With the discovery of the New World, the Atlantic replaced the Mediterranean and became the only way for commercial transportation, which led to the decline of traditional commercial cities in Italy and Hanseatic League in northern Germany, as well as the economic rise of Britain, France and the Netherlands oriented by the Atlantic. /kloc-After independence at the end of 0/6, the Netherlands has rapidly developed into the largest maritime and commercial country in the world. 1602, the Dutch East India Company was established and gradually monopolized the trade with China, India, Japan, Ceylon and the spice islands. At first, Britain tried to open the eastern trade route through Russia, so it set up the Moscow company at 1533. Soon after, it found that Russia had no direct commercial ties with the East, so it turned to the northwest route and tried to go to the East via northern North America. 1588 After Britain defeated the Spanish Armada, it began to colonize North America and established the Hudson's Bay Company and the New England Colony. /kloc-in 0/600, British businessmen established the British East India Company, and then began to expand in India. France, on the other hand, established a new French colony in North America and occupied several islands with strategic significance and rich sugar in the Caribbean.

As Britain planted tobacco and cotton commercially in the North American colonies, France needed to send manpower to sugar cane plantations in Caribbean islands, so the demand for slaves in the two countries was also expanding. 1526, Britain started the slave trade. Soon after, the Netherlands and Denmark, as active trade transit countries, also joined the slave trade activities, trying to share the benefits. Sweden, Brandenburg, Hamburg, Kurland and other countries also engaged in the slave trade during this period, thus occupying some strongholds on the African coast. Because the local economy in West Africa is mainly gathering and hunting, and the grain output is limited, in order to support the grain of slaves on long-distance trips, agricultural areas have been opened around these strongholds, and food crops such as sweet potatoes and yams have been introduced from Europe and America.

From the beginning of17th century to the middle of18th century, Britain and France fought four wars for their respective interests in the European continent. With its powerful naval power, Britain seized large areas of French territory in India, Canada and the east of the Mississippi River overseas, becoming a world-class colonial power, and replaced the Netherlands as a shipping power in several wars with the Netherlands, establishing a huge merchant fleet and navy. With the signing of the Paris Treaty with France and Spain in 1763, Britain replaced Spain and became the world's largest colonial power.

During this period, the colonial management of European countries in America was basically the same, that is, they were treated differently from the mainland and sent governors or deputy kings representing the king to the colonies. The economic development of the colony was restrained and supervised, and it was forced to grow a single cash crop needed by the suzerain. The mining industry is highly developed and the development of other industries is stagnant. Even basic consumer goods such as farm tools and clothes cannot be produced. The suzerain country exported colonial products for free or at a low price, which even led to the deflation of the colony and forced it to borrow other countries' currencies (such as Austrian maria theresia silver coins and Spanish eight-character silver dollars commonly used in British colonies). The links between the colonies were also blocked. In 13 states in North America, mail sent from one colony to another must be sent back to London first.

The era of industrial revolution: the shrinking of colonies

After the arrival of the industrial revolution era, the traditional colonial trade of sugar, tobacco and slaves is no longer of great significance. The demand for industrial raw materials such as cotton, wool, fuel, iron, copper, tin and coal in industrial countries has replaced the demand for consumer goods. At the same time, these countries urgently need to open up markets outside their own countries to digest their manufactured goods. Because the European market is saturated, we can only seek development space from America and Asia (before African colonization).

1776 After the independence of the thirteen states in North America, the British colonial cause suffered a great blow, so the focus of colonial management shifted from North America to India, which has more abundant resources and a bigger market. In addition, Britain also occupied Australia, New Zealand, Myanmar, Cape Colony, Hong Kong and other places.

Due to the influence of the concept of natural human rights advocated by the French Revolution and religious, humanitarian and economic reasons, Britain declared the slave trade illegal in 1807, and then the Netherlands, France, Sweden, Denmark and other countries also announced the prohibition of the slave trade. This measure made the strongholds of countries in the coastal areas of Africa shrink rapidly, and both Denmark and the Netherlands sold their commercial stations in the coastal areas of West Africa in the middle of the19th century. At the same time, due to the influence of the Napoleonic Wars, Spanish and Portuguese colonies in America declared their independence one after another, the demand for slaves dropped sharply, and the colonial power of these two countries in Africa also declined rapidly.

In North Africa, the French took advantage of Turkey's decline, and by eliminating the pirates in North Africa, they infiltrated into Turkey's subordinate countries, such as Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia. Algeria, where pirates are most active, has been hit hardest. 18 15, the U.S navy defeated the Algerian navy, 18 19, the British-Dutch joint fleet shelled Algiers. There are also many conflicts between France and Algeria.

During the period from 1825 to 1875, except for Britain and France, the activities of European countries to conquer new colonies basically stopped, and instead, they moved to overseas colonies. As far as the British situation is concerned, a sentence by British Prime Minister disraeli in 1852 can be said to be the best summary of Britain's attitude towards colonies in this period: "Colonies are millstones around our necks". Take Gambia and Gold Coast as two small British colonies, for example, the business tax revenue is far behind the administrative expenses. On several occasions, the British Parliament suggested reducing the size of the colonies or giving them up completely. It was only because the Royal Navy West Africa Sub-fleet needed to set up a naval base in the Gulf of Guinea to ban the slave trade that Britain finally retained these two areas.

However, in order to resettle the freed slaves in the Caribbean islands, Britain established the Sierra Leone colony in the form of authorized companies during the colonial contraction, the American Colonial Association opened the Liberian colony at the same time, and France opened the Libreville (now Gabon) colony, all of which were used to resettle the freed slaves.

/kloc-from the end of 0/9 to the beginning of the 20th century: the climax of colonial occupation.

1870 After the Franco-Prussian War ended and Germany achieved political reunification, German geographer Friedrich Latzel (Kloc-0/844-1904) began to study the expanding market of German industrial products at that time and began to defend Bismarck's imperialist policy with geography. He believes that with the development of the world, space will become more and more important for a country, big countries will gradually expand, and small parliaments will become insignificant. World history needs more and more space. This fact can be clearly seen from the evolution of important commercial countries: Venice is a city; Holland is a delta country; Britain is an island country; America is a continent. Great powers must conform to this absolute and inevitable trend and strive to expand their space through colonization, merger and conquest. Sir halford mackinder, a British imperialist theorist, also put forward a similar theory, pointing out that a country must achieve self-sufficiency in order to survive. Controlling the origin of raw materials and making it an export market for products has become a strategic demand of national interests. In the first 75 years of the19th century, western countries occupied an average of 2 1000 square kilometers of colonies every year, and in the last 25 years, they occupied an average of 620,000 square kilometers of colonies every year.

From the end of15th century to the middle of19th century, colonial countries only occupied 3180,000 square kilometers of land in Africa, and in the last quarter of19th century, Europe became more interested in Africa, occupying 25.69 million square kilometers of land in Africa. Due to the rapid industrialization and population increase in Europe, the demand for vegetable oil, plant fiber, rubber and some mineral resources has increased, and these products can be exchanged for cheap industrial products in Africa. The demand for new raw materials has led to fierce competition for African raw material producing areas.

The colonization of African continent by colonial countries began in the late19th century, with the gradual method initiated by France in Senegal as the starting point, that is, taking farms growing peanuts or oil palm as the forward base, using drugs to treat tropical diseases, using local aborigines to form hired troops and advancing to the hinterland along major rivers. This method is far more effective than the British coastal infiltration method, so it is imitated by other colonial countries. In the1870s, a large number of minerals, such as diamonds and gold, were discovered in South Africa, which stimulated other colonial countries to develop similar minerals in other parts of Africa. The land for competition is no longer limited to areas suitable for planting crops, but wasteland, swamp, desert and no man's land have all become the objects for competition. 1884-1885 The Berlin Conference established the principle that "only actual occupation can prove the sovereignty of a colony". Britain, France, Portugal and other countries that have occupied the coastal areas of Africa quickly signed agreements and treaties with local chiefs to expand their influence inland. Germany, Belgium and Italy, emerging industrial powers, have also joined the fight for Africa.

From 1885 to 1900, European countries completed the division of Africa. Apart from Ethiopia and Liberia, two politically independent countries, traditional African kingdoms such as Ashanti, Dahomey, sokoto and Buganda, as well as countries such as Transvaal and Orange Free State founded by African Americans, have all become colonies or protectorates of western countries. Egypt is nominally an independent country, but it is completely controlled by Britain.

In Asia, from 65438+ 1960, Russia accelerated its colonization and conquest of Transcaucasia, Central Asia, Siberia and the Far East, successively occupying Daruzi, Middle Luzi, Little Luzi, Shiva Khan, Bukhara Khan and Hao Han Khan, and infiltrating into Xinjiang, Outer Mongolia and Manchuria in China. By 1876, Russia had occupied170,000 square kilometers of land. France conquered Annan, Laos and Cambodia, Britain occupied Malay Peninsula and North Borneo, and controlled the Persian Gulf and the southern Arabian Peninsula. In Oceania, emerging Germany bought colonies such as Caroline Islands and Mariana Islands from Spain. In addition to directly conquering colonies, colonial countries also turned some economically backward countries into semi-colonies, such as China, Korea, Siam, Persia, Afghanistan and Ottoman Empire. And seized the customs, transportation, trade, road construction, mining, factory building, bank opening, military training and other rights and interests of these countries.

The Re-division of Colonies and Two World Wars

By the beginning of the 20th century, colonial countries and colonies had occupied 85% of the world land area. The colonial distribution of countries is uneven. In addition to Britain and France, which are still powerful, Spain and Portugal, which have already declined, still control large colonies, while emerging countries such as the United States, Germany, Japan and Italy only occupy some "leftover land" with small area and poor resources. With the intensification of the means of fighting for colonies, major colonial countries were involved in a series of diplomatic and military conflicts from the end of 19 to the beginning of the 20th century, such as the first moroccan crises between Britain, France and Germany, the second Fashoda crisis between moroccan crises and Britain, the two Boer wars, the Spanish-American war, the Russo-Japanese war and the Italian-Turkish war.

From 1900 to 19 14, on the eve of the outbreak of World War I, colonial countries formed extremely complicated conflicts of interest in order to compete for new colonies or protect existing colonies: Germany challenged Britain's world hegemony; Japan challenges Russia's hegemony in Asia; Russia challenges Britain's hegemony in Asia; Britain used France to contain Germany; Britain used Japan to contain Russia; France used Russia to contain Germany; Germany was surrounded by Austria-Hungary and the Ottoman Empire in Russia ... In order to consolidate the existing colonies, two groups, the British-French Allied Forces and the German-Austrian-Italian Allied Forces, were formed successively.

World War I ended with the defeat of the Allies (Italy defected). As a punishment, Germany was deprived of all its overseas colonies, the Austro-Hungarian Empire collapsed, its territory was divided up by neighboring countries or formed into a new country, and the Ottoman Empire lost all its Arab territories.

With the modernization of economy, the adjustment of market, the development of urbanization, the progress of social culture and the upsurge of national liberation and anti-colonialism movement, the old colonial system has been greatly weakened by1920s, and colonial countries have realized that they cannot acquire new colonies by war. The colonies deprived by the defeated countries became the mandated areas of the League of Nations, and were managed by the victorious countries. Although it is still a colony in essence, the mandate clause of the League of Nations stipulates that the trusteeship must promote the welfare of the residents in the mandate area and establish an independent country in due course.

In the 1930' s, a new trend of thought of colonialism emerged-the fascist colonial view originated from geopolitical theory and the concept of "living space". After the Russo-Japanese War, Japan also began to put forward the slogan that Asian countries should resist the aggression of the white world under Japan's "leadership", and in the 1930 s, it evolved into the theory of "Greater East Asia * * * glory circle". Italy, Spain and other fascist countries also put forward the slogans of "fascist imperialism" and "Spain's Spain". In his book Mein Kampf, Hitler did not advocate that Germany should expand overseas, thinking that overseas expansion was not as good as European expansion, but he later approved the colonial requirements in the Nazi Party's "25-Point Program" and encouraged the activities of the German colonial movement after 1933.

193 1 year, the Japanese launched the September 18 incident, occupied the northeast of China, and declared that the world division began again, followed by 1935 when Italy invaded Ethiopia. The cause of the Second World War is very complicated and cannot be simply attributed to the development of traditional forms of colonialism, but the theory of "living space" as a variant of colonialism and the struggle for "living space" are obviously one of the main reasons for its outbreak.

The independence movement of the colonies after World War II.

Due to the influence of World War II, Britain, France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Italy and other remaining major colonial countries were weakened in the war. During the war, the national industries of India, East Africa, Nigeria, Belgian Congo and other unoccupied allied colonies developed to a certain extent, and the division of labor system within the colonial empire was broken. At the same time, because Japan and Germany weakened their allies by fostering colonial nationalist movements, the national liberation movement of the allied colonies also developed under the egg wing of the Axis countries in the war. .

After World War II, colonial liberation movements broke out in Dutch East India, British Burma, French India and zhina, which were occupied by Japanese troops. Nationalists in these areas cooperated with Japanese occupation forces in the war to establish nominally "independent" puppet countries. On the eve of surrender, Japan handed over power and weapons to local nationalists, causing chaos to its allies. 1945 August 17, Indonesia was the first to declare independence, and Vietnam declared independence on September 2. The wave of colonial independence movement immediately spread to Myanmar, India, Malaya, the Philippines and other Asian countries and regions. 1953 After Cambodia became independent, the colonies of France, the Netherlands and the United States in Asia became independent countries.

After the 1960s and 1950s, especially after the 1955 Bandung Conference, with the encouragement of independent colonial and semi-colonial countries, this movement developed to Africa. 1956 After the Second Middle East War, Britain announced the policy of "retreating from the east of Suez". From 1957 to 1963, Britain successively withdrew from Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), Malaya, North Borneo, Straits Colonies (Singapore, Malacca, Penang), South Yemen, Bahrain, Kuwait and Penang.

The wave of post-war African countries' independence began with the independence of Britain, Egypt and Sudan in 1956 and Ghana in 1957. /kloc-since 0/960, the African colonial independence movement has reached its climax. In the one-year period from 1960, 17 countries in Africa declared independence, of which 13 countries were former French colonies, 3 countries were former British colonies (including Italian Somali), and 1 countries were former belgian colonial. By the end of 1960, most colonies belonging to Britain and France had declared independence, and only Portugal still kept a large number of colonies in Africa. After years of war, these colonies also became independent in the middle and late 1970s. ..

The historical role of colonies

Because American colonies became independent earlier, the historical role of colonies was mainly reflected in Africa and Asia.

1853, economist Karl Marx put forward in the article "The Future Results of British Rule in India" that colonialism and colonialism have a "dual mission", that is, a destructive mission and a constructive mission, both of which have positive and negative aspects. The "destructive mission" of the colony is mainly manifested in the destruction of the traditional social and economic structure of the colony. However, due to the different political and economic conditions of the suzerain country, the historical situation, colonial objects, natural ecological conditions and social groups of each colony are different, so the impact on the colony is very different in quality. The disintegration and destruction of the traditional economic structure of American western colonies or British Indian colonies is enormous, but in tropical Africa, except for the cash crop planting area (8% in French West Africa and 5% in sub-Saharan Africa), most colonial areas have maintained their original agricultural and social structures. In addition, by exporting capital and technology to the colonies, the suzerain provided them with modern infrastructure such as ports and roads. The commodity economy in the colonies also developed, the pace of urbanization accelerated, and railways, highways, telecommunications, telephones, hospitals and schools appeared, bringing the originally backward colonial areas into the field of market economy.

Debate on the definition of colony

It has always been a controversial issue whether the newly conquered areas connected with the original territory of our country but different in race and culture can be counted as colonies. In history, the Russian colonization of Central Asia, Siberia and North America, the westward movement of the United States, the colonization of Eastern Europe by the Teutonic Knights, and the conquest of the surrounding areas of the Central Plains (such as Lingnan, Baiyue, Central Asia, Mongolia and Tibet) by some ancient dynasties in China all have the nature of conquering colonies. Some historians also count these conquests of new territories as colonial movements. However, some historians believe that after being conquered, these areas have evolved into new provinces (or states) with equal status with other administrative divisions of the suzerain, and adopted the language, culture and ideology of the suzerain, so they should not be counted as colonies.

A compromise view holds that conquest itself is regarded as a colonial act, but when the conquered area joins the suzerain as an entity with the same status as other political entities of the suzerain (such as provinces and States), and its residents enjoy completely equal political rights with the citizens of the suzerain, the period of the region as a colony ends. Take American history as an example, that is, from the territory of the new west to the territory joining the United States as a state, this period can be regarded as the colonial period of this region (such as Alaska from 1867 to 1959). Historically, the vassal relationship between China's neighboring countries and China is also different from that between colonies and suzerain countries, because these countries have internal political autonomy and are completely independent economically and militarily. In fact, this relationship is somewhat similar to the relationship between the German States and the emperor in the early days of the Holy Roman Empire, and the relationship between European countries' submission to the Vatican before the Reformation.

The second controversial issue is the difference between overseas territories and colonies. Some desolate and uninhabited small colonies (mostly islands) whose residents are immigrants from the suzerain country, enjoy complete and full political rights, have the same culture as the suzerain country, have a sense of identity with the suzerain country, or are too desolate to have permanent residents, and cannot be regarded as colonies. Specifically, for example, the Falkland Islands, St. Helena, Tristan da Cunha in Britain and Bouvet in Norway. Although some overseas provinces in France are different from France in race, they also have a strong sense of identity with French culture and are unwilling to be independent.

On the contrary, if a colony is listed as an "overseas territory" or an "overseas province", but its residents cannot enjoy completely equal political rights with the citizens of the suzerain country due to reasons such as color, race and belief, the region is still regarded as a colony. The most famous example in this regard is that after Portugal declared Angola, Mozambique and other African colonies as "overseas provinces" in the 1950' s, most countries in the world did not recognize these areas as non-colonial areas because the local blacks could not enjoy full civil rights. The same example is that after iain smith announced the independence of Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) in 1965+065438+ 10/,because the political status of blacks in China was still the same as before independence, except for a few countries such as South Africa and Portugal, all countries in the world, including Britain, did not recognize Rhodesia as an independent country. Britain also put forward a principle called "NIBMAR", that is, "not independent before the rule of major Africa".

As a reference standard, in the list of "Non-Self-Governing Territories" listed by the United Nations Special Committee on Decolonization, only French New Caledonia, where there is an indigenous movement for independence, is included, while overseas French provinces such as Guadeloupe, Martinique and French Guiana are excluded. Puerto Rico and Greenland are not included in the list because they have achieved a high degree of internal autonomy.

No country can claim Antarctica as its own or declare it as its own colony.

Existing colonies and overseas territories

Overseas territory

Britain, England

Internally self-governing overseas territories: Anguilla, Bermuda and Cayman Islands.

Non-sovereign Overseas Territories: British Indian Ocean Territory, British Virgin Islands, Gibraltar, Montserrat, Pitcairn Island, Saint Helena, Turks and Caicos Islands.

British Crown Colonies: Falkland Islands, South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands.

Overseas territory: British base in Cyprus.

France

Overseas provinces: Martinique, Guadeloupe, French Guiana, reunion island.

Overseas Territories: Saint Pierre and Miquelon Islands, Wallis and Futuna Islands.

Overseas administrative entity: Mayotte Island.

Overseas payment: French Polynesia.

Local entity with special status (special collective): New Caledonia.

Overseas territories: southern France and Antarctic territories.

the Netherlands

Internal self-governing territories: Aruba, Netherlands Antilles

Denmark

Autonomous Region: Faroe Islands

Inner Autonomous Region: Greenland

Norway

Antarctic territory: Bouvet Island

Spain

Overseas Department: Canary Islands

Overseas Territories: Ceuta, Melilla

Portugal

Overseas provinces: Madeira Islands, Azores Islands

United States of America

Free Association: Puerto Rico

Unorganized territory: Guam

Colonization: American Samoa, United States Virgin Islands

Australia

Overseas Territories: Christmas Island, norfolk island, macquarie island, Hurd Island, Corcos Islands.

New Zealand

Fully Internal Self-Governing Territory: Cook Islands

Internal Self-Governing Territories: Niue, Tokelau