Notes on the colonial empire of Great Britain |
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Page 22
... settlers landed in 1618 and more in 1723 , under the Royal African Company , since which time a trade has been regularly carried on with England . GOVERNMENT . - Under a Governor who is also Commander- in - Chief of the forces . II ...
... settlers landed in 1618 and more in 1723 , under the Royal African Company , since which time a trade has been regularly carried on with England . GOVERNMENT . - Under a Governor who is also Commander- in - Chief of the forces . II ...
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... settlers , of British and Dutch origin ; Dutch farmers called Boers . The other half consists of Hottentots and Kaffres and the descendants of a union of these races with the Dutch , the Negroes , and the Malays . DIVISIONS . - There ...
... settlers , of British and Dutch origin ; Dutch farmers called Boers . The other half consists of Hottentots and Kaffres and the descendants of a union of these races with the Dutch , the Negroes , and the Malays . DIVISIONS . - There ...
Page 40
... settlers . At length , in 1757 , Government interfered , and Generals Amherst and Wolfe forced the French to surrender . Possession not since disputed . GOVERNMENT . - A Dependency of Canada . This colony , together with Prince Edward ...
... settlers . At length , in 1757 , Government interfered , and Generals Amherst and Wolfe forced the French to surrender . Possession not since disputed . GOVERNMENT . - A Dependency of Canada . This colony , together with Prince Edward ...
Page 42
... settlers here in 1614 , 1623 , and ' 1633 respec- tively . St. John's was burnt in 1696 during one of the contests between the English and French . The latter took this town in 1707 and again in 1708 ; but by the Treaty of Utrecht they ...
... settlers here in 1614 , 1623 , and ' 1633 respec- tively . St. John's was burnt in 1696 during one of the contests between the English and French . The latter took this town in 1707 and again in 1708 ; but by the Treaty of Utrecht they ...
Page 47
... settlers to keep possession of the country . GOVERNMENT . - A Dependency of Jamaica until 1862 ; since an independent colony under a Governor . —0— XIII . - BRITISH GUIANA . SITUATION . - An extensive province on the mainland of S ...
... settlers to keep possession of the country . GOVERNMENT . - A Dependency of Jamaica until 1862 ; since an independent colony under a Governor . —0— XIII . - BRITISH GUIANA . SITUATION . - An extensive province on the mainland of S ...
Expressions et termes fréquents
&C.-Discovered Aden Africa America Antilles AREA IN SQ Atlantic Australia Bahamas Bass Strait Britain British called Canada CANADA EAST Cape Breton Cape Colony capital CARIBBEE ISLANDS ceded chief towns chiefly Climate healthy Conquest Council Crown Colony Crown Dependency DATE OF ACQUISITION diocese Discovered by Columbus district Dutch elevated England English Bishop extremely fertile French GOVERNMENT.-A Crown Colony GOVERNMENT.-A Dependency GOVERNMENT.-Under a Governor Gulf of St hills HISTORY House of Assembly Hudson's Bay indented inhabitants islets Lake land largest Lawrence Lesser Antilles Long MANNER AND DATE Mauritius mountains mouth NAME native negroes Nova Scotia PHYSICAL FEATURES.-Coast PHYSICAL FEATURES.-Surface POPULATION Port Jackson portion Portuguese PRINCIPAL PRODUCTS principal towns province river St rocky seat of Government Settlement Settlemt settlers ships side Sierra-Leone Sir Thomas Warner SITUATION South Island South Wales Spain square miles station Strait surface trade Tristan d'Acunha valleys volcano well-watered West Indian Zealand
Fréquemment cités
Page 85 - DEMOCRACY, a form of government, in which the supreme power is lodged in the hands of the people collectively, or in which the people exercise the powers of legislation.
Page 85 - Government by the people; a form of government in which the supreme power is vested in the people and exercised by them or by their elected agents under a free electoral system.
Page 50 - IGO, an immense island-system, extending in a corve from the Florida shore, on the northern peninsula, to the Gulf of Venezeula, on the southern. This name was applied to them by Columbus, under the idea that they formed part of the Indian continent, to which it was the object of his first voyage to find a western passage ; and it has still been retained, though the mistake of the navigator has been discovered. The following is a list of the principal of these islands, which will be found treated...
Page 58 - N. for 40 miles to cape Orange. The whole shore continues low and is bounded by mangroves of moderate height, which cannot be seen at a greater distance than 10 or 12 miles, and being exposed to the varied and violent action of the waters of the Amazons and other smaller streams the outline often changes. Soft mud flats, formed by the debris thrown out of these rivers, extend off in some places to a considerable distance, upon which the mangroves advance with great rapidity...
Page 1 - O'er the glad waters of the dark blue sea, Our thoughts as boundless, and our souls as free. Far as the breeze can bear the billow's foam, Survey our empire and behold our home.
Page 86 - Who are the Jews ? A. They are those who believe in the Old Testament, but reject the New, and expect a Saviour yet to come.
Page 18 - Singapore, on an island of the same name, described as " The Paradise of India, the home of plenty, and the abode of health.
Page 69 - Telegraph lines traverse all the settled districts, and a submarine cable connects the island with Melbourne. GOVERNMENT : The Parliament of Tasmania consists of a Legislative Council and a House of Assembly. The Governor is aided by an Executive Council. Both the Legislative Council and the House of Assembly are elected by duly qualified voters. The executive power is vested in the Governor, aided by a Cabinet of four responsible ministers — the Chief Secretary, the Treasurer, the Attorney-General,...
Page 33 - The whole is a solid mass of rock in the form of a truncated cone, rising abruptly from the sea, and ascending, at an angle of 45 degrees, to the height of 3000 feet. This mass is surmounted by a dome, upwards of 5000 feet high, on the summit of which is the crater of an old extinguished volcano. The face of this mountain, as far up as the base of the dome, is mostly covered with brushwood, intermixed with fern and long grass, that veil its native ruggedness. Along the NW side of the island there...
Page 34 - Dutch in 1G43, and by the French in 1767. At present it is the domain of an interesting community of English people, whose manners, simplicity, and excellence of character remind us strongly of the somewhat similarly placed family upon Pitcairn Island in the Pacific, the retreat of the mutineers of the Bounty.