Colonization
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Colonization is when people from one place move to live in and control another country. It is also called settlement.
One special kind of colonization is called settler colonialism. In this, people move to a new place and take control. This often changes the land and the people who already live there.
In many cases, people from faraway countries traveled to new places. They sometimes thought the land was empty, even when others already lived there. This led to big changes for the people who were already home.
Examples of colonization include the European colonization of Australia, New Zealand, and other places in Oceania. These changes shaped how those lands developed and affected many lives.
Etymology
The word colonization comes from old Latin words. Colere means "to cultivate" or "to till the soil," colonia means "a farm," and colonus means "a farmer." Over time, the word came to mean "to live in and govern another country." A person who starts a colony is called a colonizer, and the people living in the colony are called the colonized. Colonization is about creating new communities in different places.
Pre-modern colonization
Classical period
Main article: Colonies in antiquity
In ancient times, sea-loving nations like the city-states of Greece and Phoenicia set up new communities in other parts of the Mediterranean Sea.
Another big period of setting up new places happened during the time of the Roman Empire. The Romans took over large parts of Western Europe, North Africa, and West Asia. In some places, they met people they considered "civilized." But when they moved north into Europe, they often found rural tribes with few cities. After conquering these areas, the Romans would set up new communities. Many cities in Europe today started as Roman colonies, like Cologne, Germany, which the Romans called Colonia Claudia Ara Agrippinensium, and London, the capital of Britain, which the Romans founded as Londinium.
Middle Ages
When the Roman Empire began to fall apart, many people moved around a lot in Eastern Europe and Asia. This started when horse-riding nomads from Asia, known as the Huns, moved into richer lands to the west. This pushed other people further west, and eventually, the Goths crossed into the Roman Empire. This led to ongoing wars that helped cause the Roman Empire's fall. During this time, many new communities were formed all over western Europe. This period helped shape modern nations like the Franks in France and Germany, and the Anglo-Saxons in England.
In West Asia, during the time of the Sassanid Empire, some Persians set up new places in Yemen and Oman. The Arabs also created new communities in Northern Africa, Mesopotamia, and the Levant.
The Vikings from Scandinavia also set up many new places. Known first as raiders from Denmark, southern Norway, and southern Sweden, they later began trading and creating settlements. They first reached Iceland and set up homes there. They then moved on to Greenland, where their settlements lasted until the 1400s. The Vikings even tried to start a place called Vinland, likely at a spot now called L'Anse aux Meadows in Newfoundland and Labrador, on the eastern coast of Canada.
Colonial era
Main article: Colonialism
During the colonial era, many Western European countries sent people to live in and govern lands in the Americas, Africa, Asia, and Oceania. Countries like Spain, Portugal, France, the Tsardom of Russia (which later became the Russian Empire), the Kingdom of England (later Great Britain), the Netherlands, the Kingdom of Italy, the Kingdom of Prussia (now mostly Germany), Belgium, Denmark, and Sweden-Norway were active in this process. Later, the United States and the Empire of Japan also sent settlers to places like Hokkaido and Korea.
Colonizers sometimes changed the cultures of the places they settled. They often brought their own languages to use in government and public life, which could replace the local languages.
20th–21st century on Earth
See also: Neocolonialism and Development aid
Soviet Union
In the 1920s, the Soviet government tried to earn the trust of non-Russian people by supporting their cultures and creating places that felt like nations. But by the early 1930s, the government changed its mind, reducing the number of recognized groups and combining smaller ones into larger ones. For example, Abkhazia was combined into Georgia, and many Georgians were sent there. The local language and schools were changed to match the main culture.
Baltic states
After World War II, many ethnic Russians moved into the Baltic states of Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia. Local languages, customs, and traditions were not allowed. During this time, many people from these countries were forced to leave, and their homes were taken and given to the new settlers.
Jewish oblast
In 1934, the Soviet government made a special area in the Far East for Jewish people to live. The goal was to make the Soviet presence stronger in that region. The government encouraged Jewish families to move there, making it easier to own land. Over time, the number of Jewish people in this area grew, but later it declined, and today most people there are ethnic Russians.
Israel
Main article: Zionism as settler colonialism
Some people say that the creation of Israel was a form of colonization, especially in areas like the West Bank. Others disagree, saying Israel's development was different from traditional colonization.
Indonesia
See also: Transmigration program, Indonesian invasion of East Timor, Insurgency in Aceh, and Papua conflict
Indonesia had a program to move people from crowded islands like Java to less crowded areas of the country, including Papua, Kalimantan, Sumatra, and Sulawesi.
Papua New Guinea
See also: Bougainville Civil War
In 1884, Britain took control of the southern part of New Guinea, while Germany took control of the northern part, splitting the region into two colonies.
Philippines
See also: Moro conflict
By 1969, tensions grew between the Philippine government and Muslim groups in Mindanao because of resettlement policies that treated some communities unfairly.
Subject peoples
Many colonists took control of lands where native people lived, sometimes treating them unfairly. In Canada, schools were set up to take Indigenous children away from their families, stopping them from learning their languages and cultures. During a difficult time in history, plans were made to move people into Eastern Europe and control the local populations.
Endo-colonization
Sometimes, countries focus on dealing with security threats inside their own borders by using technology and policies that limit freedoms and increase control over their own people. This can cause problems and disagreements within society.
Space colonization
People sometimes talk about sending humans to live on places far away from Earth, like planets and moons. This is called space colonization. Some of these places people have thought about include the asteroid belt, Mars, the Moon, Titan, and other objects beyond Neptune. These ideas are about settling in space, much like how people moved to new lands in the past.
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