Britain's policy towards New Zealand (1840-1872)
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.36327/ewjh.v3i30.12661Keywords:
Britain, New Zealand, Maori WarsAbstract
Abstrac
Great Britain in the eighteenth century witnessed many important events that enabled it to dominate vast areas of the world and establish colonies and trade networks, the independence of its colonies in North America after the American War of Independence, the defeat of France in the Napoleonic Wars (1792-1815), and the place it gained The British Navy shifted the British interest towards the island of New Zealand, especially since the English navigator James, drew detailed maps of New Zealand, and wrote about the brutality of the Maori people, and in the wake of the 1830s the British government decided to impose protection and curb chaos in New Zealand and make it a British colony following the Treaty of Waitanki in (1840), according to which British sovereignty was imposed on the North Island, and on the South Island according to the (right of discovery), and many reasons contributed to the occurrence of the British-Maori wars for the period between (1845-1872), especially since they were separate wars; The first was known as the First Taranaki War (1860-1861), and the Second Taranaki War (1863-1866), as well as other wars, which ended with British victory.
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Copyright (c) 2023 Assist.P.Dr. Rana Abdul-Jabbar Hussain Al-Zuhairi

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