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Protectorate
*** Shopping-Tip: Protectorate
:''This article is about states protected and/or dominated by a foreign power. For the rule of
Oliver Cromwell and his son Richard in the British Isles as Lord Protector, see
The Protectorate.''
A '''protectorate''' is, in
international law, a political entity (a sovereign state or a less developed native polity, such as a tribal chiefstainship or feudal
princely state) that formally agrees (voluntarily or under pressure) by treaty to enter into an unequal relationship with another, stronger state, called the ''protector'', which engages to protect it (diplomatically or, if needed, militarily) against third parties, in exchange for which the protectorate usually accepts specified obligations, which may vary greatly, depending on the real nature of their relationship.
Rationale
In the case of so-called '''amical protection''', mainly extended by the great powers to fellow Christian (generally European) states and tiny ones without significant intrinsic importance, the terms may often be very favorable for the protectorate. The political interest of the protector there is often moral (a matter of image, prestige, ideology, internal popularity, dynastic, historical or ethno-cultural ties...), and/or countering a rival or enemy power, e.g. preventing the Ottoman empire from keeping or getting control of a strategical place. Even if this involves the very weak protectorate surrendering its external relations, this may constitute no real sacrifice, since they would not have been able to get similar use out of them without the muscle which only the protector can field for its intererst.
Often the conditions are far less generous in areas of '''colonial 'protection''''. Here the western powers were generally after real control, so eager to obtain terms that reduced the protectorate to a de facto condition rather similar to a colony, but using the pre-existing native state as an ideal agent of
indirect rule; sometimes a protectorate was even establshed by and/or exerced by the other mean form of indirect rule: a
chartered company, which does truly becomes a de facto state 'in' (but geographically overseas) its European home state, allowed to conduct its own foreign policy and generally disposing of its own armed forces.
In fact, 'protectorates' were even declared which were not even duly entered into by pre-existent traditional states, or only by a party in its internal politics of dubious authority, while colonial 'protectors' frequently decided on their own to 'reshuffle' several protectorates into a new, artificial unit, a logic not quite respectful of the theoretical duty of a protector to help maintain the protectorate's status and integrity. A similar indication is the formal use of such phrasings as 'colony and protectorate' for an amalgamaton, convenient only for the coloniser/protector, of geographically proximous terrotories over which it held (de facto) sway by protective or 'raw' colonial logic.
In practice, a protectorate often has direct foreign relations only with the protecting power, so other states must deal with it by approaching the protector. Similarly, the protectorate rarely takes military action on its own, but relies on the protector for its defence. This is distinct from annexation, in that the protector has no ''formal'' power to control the internal affairs of the protectorate.
Protectorates differ from
League of Nations Mandates, and similar
United Nations Trust Territories, which gave in practice similar authority to "responsible" Western powers or Japan in various areas of the non-European world over former colonial possessions (including protectorates) of the losers in World Wars I viz. II, since a protectorate formally enters into the protection itself, while the international mandates are imposed upon them by the 'world community-representing body'.
British & Commonwealth protectorates
'''Protection''' is a long-established term in English law for the duty of a
sovereignty sovereign to keep the subject safe from harm, including harm done by the sovereign; the subject has a corresponding duty of
allegiance and
obedience. Thus, in
1775,
George III of the United Kingdom George III declared the
thirteen colonies "out of his protection" for their disobedience — almost equivalent to a declaration of war.
When the British took over
Cephallenia in 1809, they proclaimed that "We present ourselves to you, Inhabitants of Cephalonia, not as Invaders, with views of conquest, but as Allies who hold forth to you the advantages of British protection." When the British continued to occupy the
Ionian Islands after the
Napoleonic wars, they did not formally annex the islands, but described them as a protectorate. The islands were constituted by the
Treaty of Paris (1815) Treaty of Paris in 1815 as the independent 'United States of the Ionian Islands' under British protection.
Other British protectorates followed. In
1894 Prime Minister
William Gladstone's government officially announced that
Uganda was to become a British Protectorate, where Muslim and Christian strife had attracted international attention. The British administration installed carefully selected local kings under a program of indirect rule through the local oligarchy, creating a network of British-controlled civil service. Most British protectorates were overseen by a Commissioner or a High Commissioner, rather than a Governor.
British law made a distinction between a '''protectorate''' and '''protected state'''. Constitutionally the two were of similar status:
* Britain controlled defence and external relations in both cases
* however in ''protectorates'' Britain established an internal government, while in ''protected states'' a form of local internal self-government was already in existence.
Persons connected with former British protectorates, protected states, mandated or trust territories may still be
British protected persons if they did not acquire the nationality of their country at independence. See
British nationality law
Other cases include (list incomplete):
Middle East
*
Aden Protectorate
*
Bahrain
*
Kuwait
*
*
Trucial States, predecessor of the
UAE
In the Americas
*
Miskito#History Miskito nation (amical, over Central America's Mosquito Indian nation)
Further Asia
*The last British protectorate was
Brunei (a protected state), which became independent in
1984.
Subsaharan Africa
*
British Central Africa
*
British Somaliland
*
Bechuanaland Protectorate
*
Nyasaland protectorate
*
Niger Coast Protectorate
*
Somaliland protectorate
*
Oil Rivers protectorate
*
East Africa protectorate
Oceania
*
Other European 'protectors'
''(These lists may be incomplete)''
German
*the
German Empire (Second Reich) used the word ''Schutzgebiet'', literally 'protectorate', for its true colonies as well.
Cases involving indirect rule include:
In the Pacific:
* ?
German New Guinea
*
Nauru, various officials posted with the Head Chiefs
* norther Solomon islands
In Africa:
* sultanate of
Witu, in Kenya
* Namibia *
*
Rwanda, a Resident with the native ''Mwami'' (king)
*
Urundi, a Resident with the native ''Mwami'' (king; 1908 Sultan)
Besides these colonial uses, within Europe the Nazi Third Reich established:
*
Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia (a nazi puppet regime in Czechia)
*
Slovakia 1939-45, the German representative being officially a diplomat styled Envoy and Minister Plenipotentiary.
French
*
Saar (protectorate) Saar, not colonial or amical, but a former part of Germany that would by referendum return to it, in fact a re-edition of a former League of Nations mandate
''Most French protectorates were of course rather colonial:''
In Asia:
*In present India:
Arkat (Arcot/Carnatic) was 1692 - 1750 a French protectorate until 1763 independence recognized under British protectorate
*In Indochina:
**Cambodia 11 August 1863 French protectorate
**
Annam and
Tonkin 6 June 1884
**Laos 3 October 1893 French protectorate
**
In North African and Indian Ocean Muslim cultures:
*
Comoros 21 April 1886 French protectorate (Anjouan *) till 25 Jul 1912 annexed
*
Mauritania on 12 May 1903 French protectorate
**in Mauritanian traditional states ...
*
Morocco - most of the sultanate was 30 March 1912 - 2 March 1956 French protectorate *
*over Madagascar Traditional States
** 6 August 1896 Kingdom of
Imerina under French protectorate. 28 February 1897 French Madagascar colony.
*Tunisia 12 May 1881 becomes a French protectorate by treaty. ... 20 March 1956
French protectorate terminated.
In Sub-saharan Africa:
*in
Benin traditional states
** ... 1889 Independent of
Danhome, under French protectorate
**23 February 1863 - 2 January 1865 Porto-Novo a French protectorate. 19 May 1868
Cotonou a French Protectorate. 14 April 1882
Porto-Novo French protectorate. ...
*in
Central African Republic traditional states:
**12 December 1897 French protectorate over
Dar al-Kuti (1912 Sultanate suppressed by the French)
** 1894 French protectorate over the Sultanate of
Bangassou *
*Burkina Faso was since 20 February 1895 a French protectorate named
Haute-Volta ('Upper Volta')
*in
Chad:
Baghirmi state 20 September 1897 a French protectorate
*Côte d'Ivoire: 10 January 1889 French protectorate of
Ivory Coast
*
Guinea: 5 August 1849 French protectorate over coastal region; (Riviéres du Sud).
*in
Senegal: 4 February 1850 First of several French protectorate treaties with local rulers
In Oceania:
*in
French Polynesia * 1842
Otaheiti becomes a French protectorate
*on Wallis and Futuna:
**4 November 1842 Wallis declared to be a French protectorate by King of
Uvea and Captain Mallet of ...
**5 April 1887 `Uvea (Wallis) becomes a French protectorate.
{{Former French colonies}}
Italian
Twice in Europe:
*
Monaco 20 November 1815 under amical Protectorate of the Kingdom of Sardinia*
*3 June 1917
Albanian independence from the Ottoman empire under an Italian protectorate declared by Italy (this is opposed by most Albanians).
In the colonial empire:
*Ethiopia: the orthodox empire was 2 May 1889 - 26 October 1896 by the Treaty of Uccialli declared a protectorate by Italy (Abyssinian Italian Protectorate); contested by Ethiopia
*in Libya: on 15 October 1912 Italian protectorate declared
Cirenaica (Cyrenaica).
*in Somalia: 3 August 1889
Benadir Coast Italian Protectorate (in the north east; unoccupied until May 1893), until 16 March 1905 Italian Somalia (Italian Somaliland) colony.
Spanish
*in
Morocco 27 November 1912 - 7 April 1956 the so-called Spanish Zone (most of the sultanate was under French protectorate)
jalifado *
*in Mauritania ?*
Non-European protectors
*
Japan held a protectorate over the monarchy of
Korea before annexing that country
Contemporary usage by the United States
Some agencies of the
United States government, such as the
United States Environmental Protection Agency, still use the term ''protectorate'' to refer to
insular areas of the
United States such as
Puerto Rico and the
U.S. Virgin Islands, as were the
Philippines at the end of Spanish colonial rule. However, the agency responsible for the administration of those areas, the
Office of Insular Affairs (OIA) within the
United States Department of Interior exclusively uses the term ''insular area'' rather than ''protectorate''.
See also
*
Chinese Protectorate
*
suzerainty
*
tributary (political)
*
Protector (titles for Heads of State and other individual persons)
*
British protected person
Sources and references
-
WorldStatesmen- by protecting power
Category:Colonialism
Category:Constitutional state types
Category:Dependent territories
ca:Protectorat
da:Protektorat
de:Protektorat
eo:Protektorato
es:Protectorado
fi:Protektoraatti
fr:Protectorat
id:Protektorat
it:Protettorato
ja:ä¿?è·å›½
nl:Protectoraat
no:Protektorat
pl:Protektorat
pt:Protectorado
ru:Протекторат
sq:Protektoriat
sv:Protektorat
*** Shopping-Tip: Protectorate