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| − | |A particularly contentious subject is the appropriateness of using terms such as ‘[[colony]]’ and ‘[[colonisation]]’. In the [[English]] language the term ‘[[colony]]’, derived from the Latin noun ''colonia'', was originally used to denote an [[oversea]]s [[settlement]] that had been founded on the [[directive]] of a [[state]] or [[empire]] and so remained subject to its [[rule]]. However, the term has become [[historic]]ally associated with [[European]] [[expansion]]s into [[oversea]]s [[territory|territorie]]s during the sixteenth to the twentieth centuries CE (e.g. the [[British]] [[colonisation]] of [[Africa]] and [[India]] during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries) and so has acquired [[imperial]] connotations.<ref>{{:RefWoolmer001}} s. 171.</ref> | + | |A particularly contentious subject is the appropriateness of using terms such as ‘[[colony]]’ and ‘[[colonisation]]’. In the [[English]] language the term ‘[[colony]]’, derived from the Latin noun ''colonia'', was originally used to denote an [[oversea]]s [[settlement]] that had been founded on the [[directive]] of a [[state]] or [[empire]] and so remained subject to its [[rule]]. However, the term has become [[historic]]ally associated with [[European]] [[expansion]]s into [[oversea]]s [[territory|territorie]]s during the sixteenth to the twentieth centuries CE (e.g. the [[British]] [[colonisation]] of [[Africa]] and [[India]] during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries) and so has acquired [[Imperial|imperial]] connotations.<ref>{{:RefWoolmer001}} s. 171.</ref> |
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11.45, 19 Ekim 2021 itibarı ile sayfanın şu anki hâli
| A particularly contentious subject is the appropriateness of using terms such as ‘colony’ and ‘colonisation’. In the English language the term ‘colony’, derived from the Latin noun colonia, was originally used to denote an overseas settlement that had been founded on the directive of a state or empire and so remained subject to its rule. However, the term has become historically associated with European expansions into overseas territories during the sixteenth to the twentieth centuries CE (e.g. the British colonisation of Africa and India during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries) and so has acquired imperial connotations.[1] |
- ↑ Woolmer, Mark (2002). A Short History of the Phoenicians. London, New York: I.B.Tauris & Co. Ltd. s. 171.