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Decolonization of the Americas

The decolonization of the Americas occurred over several centuries as most of the countries in the Americas gained their independence from European rule. The American Revolution was the first in the Americas, and the British defeat in the American Revolutionary War (1775–1783) was a victory against a great power, aided by France and Spain, Britain's enemies. The French Revolution in Europe followed, and collectively these events had profound effects on the Spanish, Portuguese, and French colonies in the Americas. A revolutionary wave followed, resulting in the creation of several independent countries in Latin America. The Haitian Revolution lasted from 1791 to 1804 and resulted in the independence of the French slave colony. The Peninsular War with France, which resulted from the Napoleonic occupation of Spain, caused Spanish Creoles in Spanish America to question their allegiance to Spain, stoking independence movements that culminated in various Spanish American wars of independence (1808–33), which were primarily fought between opposing groups of colonists and only secondarily against Spanish forces. At the same time, the Portuguese monarchy fled to Brazil during the French invasion of Portugal. After the royal court returned to Lisbon, the prince regent, Pedro, remained in Brazil and in 1822 successfully declared himself emperor of a newly independent Brazilian Empire.[1]

Spain would lose all three of its remaining Caribbean colonies by the end of the 1800s. Santo Domingo declared independence in 1821 as the Republic of Spanish Haiti. After unification and then split from the former French colony of Haiti, the President of the Dominican Republic signed an agreement that reverted the country to a Spanish colony in 1861. This triggered the Dominican Restoration War, which resulted in the Dominican Republic's second independence from Spain in 1865. Cuba fought for independence from Spain in the Ten Years' War (1868–78) and Little War (1879-80) and finally the Cuban War of Independence (1895–98). American intervention in 1898 became the Spanish–American War and resulted in the United States gaining Puerto Rico, Guam (which are still U.S. territories), and the Philippine Islands in the Pacific Ocean. Under military occupation, Cuba became a U.S. protectorate until its independence in 1902.

Peaceful independence by the voluntary withdrawal of colonial powers then became the norm in the second half of the 20th century. However, there are still British and Dutch colonies in North America (mostly Caribbean islands). France has fully integrated most of its former colonies in the Americas (French Guiana, Guadeloupe, and Martinique) as fully constituent Departments of France.

Conditions before revolution edit

Undermining of metropolitan authority edit

 
Political map of the Americas in 1794

During the 18th century, Spain recovered much of the strength it had lost in the 17th century but the country's resources were under strain because of the incessant warfare in Europe from 1793. This led to increased local participation in the financing of defense and increased participation in militias by the locally born. Such development was at odds with the ideals of the centralized absolute monarchy. The Spanish also made formal concessions to strengthen defense; In Chiloé, Spanish authorities promised freedom from the Encomienda for indigenous locals who settled near the new stronghold of Ancud (founded in 1768) and contributed to its defense. The increased local organization of the defenses would ultimately undermine the metropolitan authority and bolster the independence movement.[2]

Napoleonic Wars edit

The Napoleonic Wars were a series of wars fought between France (led by Napoleon Bonaparte) and alliances involving Britain, Prussia, Spain, Portugal, Russia, and Austria at different times, from 1799 to 1815.

In the case of Spain and its colonies, in May 1808, Napoleon captured Carlos IV and King Fernando VII and installed his brother, Joseph Bonaparte, as Spanish monarch. This event disrupted the political stability of Spain and broke the link with some of the colonies which were loyal to the Bourbon Dynasty. The local elites, the creoles, took matters into their own hands organizing themselves into juntas to take "in absence of the king, Fernando VII, their sovereignty devolved temporarily back to the community". The juntas swore loyalty to the captive Fernando VII and each ruled different and diverse parts of the colony. Most of Fernando's subjects were loyal to him in 1808, but after he was restored to the Spanish crown in 1814, his policy of restoring absolute power alienated both the juntas and his subjects. He abrogated the Cádiz Constitution of 1812 and punished those who had supported it. The violence used by royalist forces and the prospect of being ruled by Fernando shifted the majority of the colonist population in favor of separation from Spain.[3] The local elites reacted to absolutism in much the same way that the British colonial elites, Tory and Whig alike, had reacted to London's interference before 1775.

Spanish military presence in its colonies edit

 
Graphs showing the make-up of the royalist army at the time of the revolution.

The colonial army of the Spanish Empire in the Americas was made up of local American and European supporters of King Ferdinand. The Royalists were made up of a cross-section of society loyal to the crown with Americans composing the majority of the royalist forces on all fronts. There were two types of military units: from the regular Spanish army which were sent out or formed with local Europeans and called Expidicionarios and units called veterans or militias created in the Americas. The militias included some veteran units and were called the disciplined militia. Only 11% of the personnel in the militias were European or American whites. After Rafael del Riego's revolution in 1820, no more Spanish soldiers were sent to the wars in the Americas. In 1820 there were only 10,000 soldiers in Royal Army in Colombia and Venezuela, and Spaniards formed only 10% of all the royalist armies, and only half of the soldiers of the expeditionary units were European. By the Battle of Ayacucho in 1824, less than 1% of the soldiers were European.[citation needed]

Other factors edit

The Enlightenment spurred the desire for social and economic reform to spread throughout the Americas and the Iberian Peninsula. Ideas about free trade and physiocratic economics were raised by the Enlightenment.

Independence movements in South America can be traced back to slave revolts in plantations in the northernmost part of the continent and the Caribbean. In 1791, a massive slave revolt sparked a general insurrection against the plantation system and French colonial power.[4] These events were followed by a violent uprising led by José Leonardo Chirino and José Caridad González that sprung up in 1795 Venezuela, allegedly inspired by the revolution in Haiti.

Toussaint L'Ouverture was born a slave in Saint-Domingue where he developed labor skills that would give him higher privileges than other slaves. He intellectually and physically advanced resulting in promotion, land of his own, and owning slaves. In 1791, slaves in Haiti formed a revolution to seek independence from their French owners. L'Ouverture joined the rebellion as a top military official to abolish slavery without complete independence. However, through a series of letters written by Toussaint, it became clear that he grew open to equal human rights for all that live in Haiti. Similar to how the United States Constitution was ratified, the enlightenment ideas of equality and representation of the people created an impact of change against the status quo that sparked the revolution. The letter details the great concerns he felt due to a conservative shift in France's legislature after the revolution in 1797. The greatest fear was that these conservative values could give ideas to the French Government to bring back slavery. The enlightenment has proven to forever change the way a captive society thinks after L'Ouverture refuses to let the French send him and his people back into slavery. "[W]hen finally the rule of law took the place of anarchy under which the unfortunate colony had too long suffered, what fatality can have led the greatest enemy of its prosperity and our happiness still to dare to threaten us with the return of slavery?" Ultimately, slavery was abolished from French colonies in 1794 and Haiti declared Independence from France in 1804.[5]

United States edit

The United States of America declared independence from Great Britain on July 4, 1776, thus becoming the first independent, foreign-recognized nation in the Americas and the first European colonial entity to break from its mother country. Britain formally acknowledged American independence in 1783 after its defeat in the American Revolutionary War. The U.S. victory encouraged independence movements in other parts of the Americas.

Although initially occupying only the land east of the Mississippi between Canada and Florida, the United States would later eventually acquire various other North American territories from the British, French, Spanish, and Russians in succeeding years under the mantle of Manifest Destiny. While ending European control over the region, these events resulted in the expansion of settler colonialism against Native nations, especially following the discovery of gold in regions such as the Dakotas and California, as well as opportunities for American settlers to claim farmland in the Great Plains. Land speculators and individual settlers both played a significant role in the expansion of America into what was then termed Indian Territory. American encroachment on indigenous nations prompted the creation of several federations opposed to Manifest Destiny such as the Northwestern confederacy and Tecumseh's Confederacy.

Haiti and the French Antilles edit

The American and French Revolutions had profound effects on the Spanish, Portuguese and French colonies in the Americas. Haiti, a French slave colony, was the first to follow the United States to independence, during the Haitian Revolution, which lasted from 1791 to 1804. Thwarted in his attempt to rebuild a French empire in North America, Napoleon Bonaparte sold Louisiana to the United States and from then on focused on the European theater, marking the end of France's ambitions of building a colonial empire in the Western Hemisphere.

Spanish America edit

 
Places in the Americas by date of independence.[contradictory] Note that the United States did not complete its continental territorial expansion until 1867; Canada did not complete sovereignty as an independent country until 1982.
 
Intendecies (provinces) of the South American viceroyalties.

Except for Cuba and Puerto Rico, the Spanish colonies in the Americas won their independence during the first quarter of the 19th century.

During the Peninsular War, Napoleon installed his brother, Joseph Bonaparte, on the Spanish throne and captured the King Fernando VII. The crisis of political legitimacy sparked a reaction in Spain's overseas empire. Several assemblies were established after 1810 by the Criollos (Latin Americans who are of full or near full Spanish descent) to recover sovereignty and self-government based on the Castilian law and to rule American lands in the name of Ferdinand VII of Spain.

This experience of self-government, along with the influence of Liberalism and the ideas of the French and American Revolutions, brought about a struggle for independence, led by the Libertadores. The territories freed themselves, often with help from foreign mercenaries and privateers. The United States and Europe were neutral, yet aimed to achieve political influence and trade without the Spanish monopoly.

In South America, Simón Bolívar and José de San Martín led the final phase of the independence struggle. Although Bolívar attempted to keep the Spanish-speaking parts of the continent politically unified, they rapidly became independent of one another as well, and several further wars were fought, such as the Paraguayan War and the War of the Pacific.

A related process took place in what is now Mexico, Central America, and parts of North America between 1810 and 1821 with the Mexican War of Independence. Independence was achieved in 1821 by a coalition uniting under Agustín de Iturbide and the Army of the Three Guarantees. Unity was maintained for a short period under the First Mexican Empire, but within a decade the region fought against the United States over the borderlands (losing the bordering lands of California and Texas). Most of the heat was during the official Mexican-American War from 1846 to 1848.[6]

In 1898, in the Greater Antilles, the United States won the Spanish–American War and occupied Cuba and Puerto Rico, ending Spanish territorial control in the Americas.

Argentina edit

After the defeat of Spain in the Peninsular War and the abdication of King Ferdinand VII, the Spanish colonial government of the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata, present-day Argentina, majority of Bolivia, parts of Chile, Paraguay and Uruguay, became greatly weakened. Without a recognized king on the Spanish throne to render the office of the Viceroy legitimate, the right of Viceroy Baltasar Hidalgo de Cisneros to govern came under fire. The local elites, tired of the Spanish trade restrictions and taxes, seized the opportunity and during the May Revolution of 1810, removed Cisneros and created the first local government, the Primera Junta.

 
José de San Martín

Following half a decade of battles and skirmishes with provincial royalist forces within the former Vice-royalty along with military expeditions across the Andes to Chile, Peru and Bolivia led by General José de San Martín to finally end Spanish rule in America, a formal declaration was signed on 9 July 1816, by an assembly in San Miguel de Tucumán, declaring full independence with provisions for a national constitution. The Argentine Constitution was signed in 1853, declaring the creation of the Argentine Republic.

Bolivia edit

Following upheaval caused by the May Revolution, along with the independence movements in Chile and Venezuela, a local struggle for independence kicked off with two failed revolutions. Over sixteen years of struggle followed before the first steps toward the establishment of a republic were taken.

Formally, it is considered that the fight for independence culminated in the Battle of Ayacucho, on 9 December 1824.[citation needed]

 
Retreat of European colonialism and change of political borders in South America, 1700–present

Colombia edit

 
The Battle of Boyacá sealed Colombia's independence

Chile edit

The Chilean Independence campaign was led by Liberator General Jose de San Martin with the support of Chilean exiles such as Bernardo O'Higgins. The local independence movement was composed of Chilean-born criollos, who sought political and economic independence from Spain. The independence movement was far from gaining unanimous support among Chileans, who became divided between independentists and royalists. What started as an elitist political movement against their colonial master, finally ended as a full-fledged civil war. Traditionally, the process is divided into three stages: Patria Vieja, Reconquista, and Patria Nueva.

Ecuador edit

The first uprising against Spanish rule took place in 1809, and criollos in Ecuador set up a junta on 22 September 1810, to rule in the name of the Bourbon monarch; but as elsewhere, it allowed assertion of their power.[7] Only in 1822 did Ecuador fully gain independence and became part of Gran Colombia, from which it withdrew in 1830.[8] At the Battle of Pichincha, near present-day Quito, Ecuador on 24 May 1822, General Antonio José de Sucre's forces defeated a Spanish force defending Quito. The Spanish defeat guaranteed the liberation of Ecuador.

Guatemala edit

In 1821, the entire Kingdom of Guatemala was peacefully subject to Spanish rule. With the innovations produced by the constitutional system, the freedom of the press and the exaltation of the parties, which were born in the popular elections, opinion in favor of independence spread.

Those in favor of independence held meetings in Guatemala, but they did not have the resources to rise up against the government; They expected everything from the progress made in Mexico by the Plan of Iguala or Plan of Independence. Likewise, not all the independentists were in agreement with the system of government proclaimed by Iturbide, much less by the dynasty called to the Mexican throne, but then it was only about independence, each one reserving their opinion regarding the forms of government.

On September 13, the minutes of Ciudad Real de Chiapas and other towns of that State adhering to the Plan of Iguala were received in Guatemala; the advances that the army was making gave all their strength to the pronouncements of Chiapas, which by itself never had any political importance in that kingdom.

The trustee of the Guatemala City Council, Mr. Mariano Aycinena, requested an extraordinary session to present a petition in order to proclaim independence. pp. 85–90.</ref>[9]

Mexico edit

Independence in Mexico was a protracted struggle from 1808 until the fall of the royal government in 1821 and the establishment of independent Mexico. In the Viceroyalty of New Spain, as elsewhere in Spanish America in 1808, people reacted to the unexpected French invasion of the Iberian peninsula and the ouster of the Bourbon king, replaced by Joseph Bonaparte. Local American-born Spaniards saw the opportunity to seize control from Viceroy José de Iturrigaray who may well have been sympathetic to creoles' aspirations. Iturrigaray was ousted by pro-royalists. A few from among the creole elites sought independence, including Juan Aldama, Ignacio Allende, and the secular parish priest Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla. Hidalgo made a proclamation in his home parish of Dolores, which was not recorded in writing at the time, but denounced the bad government and gachupines (pejorative for peninsular-born Spaniards), and declared independence. The unorganized hordes following Hidalgo wrought destruction on the property and the lives of whites in the region of the Bajío. Hidalgo was caught, defrocked, and executed in 1811, along with Allende. Their heads remained on display until 1821. His former student José María Morelos continued the rebellion and was himself caught and killed in 1815. The struggle of Mexican insurgents continued under the leadership of Vicente Guerrero and Guadalupe Victoria. From 1815 to 1820 there was a stalemate in New Spain, with royalist forces unable to defeat the insurgents and the insurgents unable to expand beyond their narrow territory in the southern region. Again, events in Spain intervened, with an uprising of military men against Ferdinand VII and the restoration of the liberal Spanish Constitution of 1812, which mandated a constitutional monarchy and curtailed the power of the Roman Catholic Church. The monarch repudiated the constitution once the Spanish monarchy was restored in 1814. For conservatives in New Spain, these changed political circumstances threatened the institutions of church and state. Royal military officer Agustín de Iturbide seized the opportunity to lead, allying with his former enemy Guerrero. Iturbide proclaimed the Plan de Iguala, which called for independence, equality of peninsular and American-born Spaniards, and a monarchy with a prince from Spain as king. He persuaded the insurgent Guerrero to ally with him and create the Army of the Three Guarantees. Crown rule in New Spain collapsed when the incoming Viceroy Juan O'Donojú signed the Treaty of Córdoba recognizing Mexico's sovereignty. With no European monarch presenting himself for the crown of Mexico, Iturbide himself was proclaimed emperor Agustín I in 1822. He was overthrown in 1823 and Mexico was established as a republic. Decades of political and economic instability ensued which resulted in a population decline.

Paraguay edit

Paraguay gained its independence on the night of May 14 and the morning of May 15, 1811, after a plan organized by various pro-independence nationalists including Fulgencio Yegros and José Gaspar Rodríguez de Francia.

Peru edit

 
Painting of José de San Martín's proclamation of the independence of Peru on 28 July 1821 in Lima

Spain initially had the support of the Lima oligarchs because of their opposition to the commercial interests of Buenos Aires and Chile. Therefore, the Viceroyalty of Peru became the last redoubt of the Spanish Monarchy in South America. Nevertheless, a Creole rebellion arose in 1812 in Huánuco and another in Cusco between 1814 and 1816. Both were suppressed. These rebellions were supported by the armies of Buenos Aires.

Peru finally succumbed after the decisive continental campaigns of José de San Martín (1820–1823) and Simón Bolívar (1824). While San Martín was in charge of the land campaign, a newly-built Chilean Navy led by Lord Cochrane transported the fighting troops and launched a sea campaign against the Spanish fleet in the Pacific. San Martín, who had displaced the royalists of Chile after the Battle of Maipú, and who had disembarked in Paracas in 1820, proclaimed the independence of Peru in Lima on 28 July 1821. Four years later, the Spanish Monarchy was defeated definitively at the Battle of Ayacucho in late 1824.

After independence, the conflicts of interests that faced different sectors of Creole Peruvian society and the particular ambitions of the caudillos, made the organization of the country excessively difficult. Only three civilians — Manuel Pardo, Nicolás de Piérola, and Francisco García Calderón — acceded to the presidency in the first seventy-five years of Peru's independence. The Republic of Bolivia was created in Upper Peru. In 1837, a Peru-Bolivian Confederation was also created, but was dissolved two years later due to Chilean military intervention.

Uruguay edit

Following the events of the May Revolution, in 1811 José Gervasio Artigasled a successful revolt against the Spanish forces in the Provincia Oriental, now Uruguay, joining the independentist movement that was taking place in the Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata at the time. In 1821, the Provincia Oriental was invaded by Portugal, trying to annex it into Brazil under the name of Província Cisplatina.

The former Vice-royalty of the Río de la Plata, United Provinces of the Río de la Plata, fought back against Brazil in a war that lasted over 2 years, eventually turning into a stalemate. The Brazilian forces withdrew with the United Provinces keeping them at bay but failing to win any decisive victory. With neither side gaining the upper hand and the economic burden of the war crippling the United Provinces economy, the Treaty of Montevideo was signed in 1828, fostered by Britain, declaring Uruguay as an independent state.[10]

Venezuela edit

According to the Encyclopedia Americana of 1865, General Francisco de Miranda, already a hero to the French, Prussians, English, and Americans had garnered a series of successes against the Spanish between 1808 and 1812. He had effectively negated their access to all the ports in the Caribbean, thus preventing them from receiving reinforcements and supplies, and was essentially conducting mopping-up operations throughout the country. At that point, he convinced Simon Bolívar to join the struggle and put him in charge of the fort at Puerto Cabello. This was all at once a supply and arms depot, a strategic port, and the central holding facility for Spanish prisoners. Through what amounts to a gross dereliction of duty, Simon Bolívar neglected to enforce the customary security dispositions before departing to a social event. During the night there was an uprising of the Spanish prisoners and they managed to subdue the Independentist garrison and gain control of the supplies, arms and ammunition, and the port. The Loyalist forces progressively regained control of the country and eventually, Monteverde's successes forced the newly formed congress of the republic to ask Miranda that he sign a capitulation at La Victoria in Aragua, on July 12, 1812, thus ending the first phase of the revolutionary war.

After the capitulation of 1812, Simón Bolívar turned over Francisco de Miranda to the Spanish authorities, secured a safe passage for himself and his closest officers, and fled to New Granada. He later returned with a new army, while the war had entered a tremendously violent phase. After much of the local aristocracy had abandoned the cause of independence, blacks and mulattoes carried on the struggle. Elites reacted with open distrust and opposition to the efforts of these common people. Bolívar's forces invaded Venezuela from New Granada in 1813, waging a campaign with a ferocity captured perfectly by their motto of "war to the death". Bolívar's forces defeated Domingo Monteverde's Spanish army in a series of battles, taking Caracas on August 6, 1813, and besieging Monteverde at Puerto Cabello in September 1813.

 
Battle of Carabobo

With loyalists displaying the same passion and violence, the rebels achieved only short-lived victories. The army led by the loyalist José Tomás Boves demonstrated the key military role that the Llaneros came to play in the region's struggle. Turning the tide against independence, these highly mobile, ferocious fighters made up a formidable military force that pushed Bolívar out of his home country once more. In 1814, heavily reinforced Spanish forces in Venezuela lost a series of battles to Bolívar's forces but then decisively defeated Bolivar at La Puerta on June 15, took Caracas on July 16, and again defeated his army at Aragua on August 18, for 2,000 Spanish casualties out of 10,000 soldiers as well as most of the 3,000 in the rebel army. Bolívar and other leaders then returned to New Granada. Later that year the largest expeditionary force ever sent by Spain to America arrived under the command of Pablo Morillo. This force effectively replaced the improvised llanero units, who were disbanded by Morillo.

Bolívar and other republican leaders returned to Venezuela in December 1816, leading a largely unsuccessful insurrection against Spain from 1816 to 1818 from bases in the Llanos and Ciudad Bolívar in the Orinoco River area.

In 1819 Bolívar successfully invaded New Granada, and returned to Venezuela in April 1821, leading an army of 7,000. At Carabobo on June 24, his forces decisively defeated Spanish and colonial forces, winning Venezuelan independence, although hostilities continued.

Brazil edit

 
Prince Pedro in São Paulo after giving the news of the Brazilian independence on 7 September 1822

Unlike the Spanish, the Portuguese did not divide their colonial territory in the Americas. The captaincies they created were subdued to a centralized administration in Salvador which reported directly to the Crown in Lisbon. Therefore, it is not common to refer to "Portuguese America" (like Spanish America, Dutch America, etc.), but rather to Brazil, as a unified colony since its very beginnings.

As a result, Brazil did not split into several states by the time of independence (1822), as happened to its Spanish-speaking neighbors. The adoption of a monarchy instead of a federal republic in the first six decades of Brazilian political sovereignty also contributed to the nation's unity.[citation needed]

After several failed revolts in the Portuguese colony, Dom Pedro I (also Pedro IV of Portugal), son of the Portuguese king Dom João VI, proclaimed the country's independence in 1822 and became Brazil's first Emperor. This began when Napoleon Bonaparte forced the Portuguese court out of their capital city of Lisbon and into exile in Brazil. Over the next eight years, the capital of the Portuguese empire would be located in Rio de Janeiro. In 1815, after Lisbon was reclaimed from the French by the Portuguese, King Dom João VI declared that Rio and Lisbon would become equal centers of the empire. King João VI was forced back to Lisbon in 1821 by the Portuguese Cortes but left his son Dom Pedro behind to run Rio. A year later, Dom Pedro declared independence for Brazil and officially became emperor Pedro I. Although Brazil's independence was met with little resistance from Portugal, several small-scale battles were fought against Portuguese loyalist forces until 1824 to bring the rest of the Brazilian territories under the control of the new Brazilian government, and they were officially recognized by their former colonial overlords in 1825. [11]

Canada edit

Canada's transition from colonial rule to independence occurred gradually over many decades and was achieved mostly through political means, as opposed to the violent revolutions that marked the end of colonialism in other North and South American countries. Attempts at revolting against the British, such as the Rebellions of 1837–1838, were brief and quickly put down. Canada was declared a dominion within the British Empire in 1867. Originally, the Canadian Confederation included just a few of what are now Canada's eastern provinces; other British colonies in modern-day Canada, such as British Columbia, Prince Edward Island, and Newfoundland, would join later (the last only in 1949). Additionally, Britain's and Norway's claims to Arctic lands were ceded to Canada in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. By 1931, the United Kingdom had relinquished its control over Canada's foreign policy. What few political links that remained between Canada and the UK were formally severed in 1982 with the Canada Act.

20th century edit

Other countries did not gain independence until the 20th century:

From Spain:

From the United Kingdom:

From the Netherlands:

Current non-sovereign territories edit

Some parts of the Americas are still administered by European countries or the United States:

Some of the remaining non-sovereign territories of the Americas have retained this status by choice, and enjoy a significant degree of self-government. (Some have nevertheless been placed on the U.N. list of non-self-governing territories, an ongoing subject of controversy.) Aruba, for example, seceded from the Netherlands Antilles on January 1, 1986, and became a separate, self-governing member of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. A movement toward full independence by 1996 was halted at Aruba's request in 1990. French Guiana, Guadeloupe and Martinique are not considered dependent territories of France, but have been "incorporated" into France itself, as overseas départements (départements d'outre-mer, or DOM). Other regions however have had or currently have movements to change their political status, for example, different movements to change the political status of Puerto Rico and intermittent calls for independence in other non-sovereign territories such as Martinique and others, with differing amounts of support.

Timeline edit

Country[note 1] Colonial name Colonial power[note 2] Independence date[note 3] First head of state[note 4] Independence won through
  United States Thirteen Colonies   British Empire July 4, 1776; September 3, 1783[note 5] George Washington[note 6] American Revolutionary War, Siege of Yorktown
  Haiti Saint-Domingue   Kingdom of France (until 1792)
  French First Republic
January 1, 1804[note 7] Jean-Jacques Dessalines[note 8] Haitian Revolution
  Argentina Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata   Spanish Empire May 25, 1810; July 9, 1816[note 9] Juan Martín de Pueyrredón[note 10] Argentine War of Independence
  Paraguay May 14, 1811 Junta[note 11] Paraguay campaign
  Chile Captaincy General of Chile February 12, 1818[note 12] Bernardo O'Higgins[note 13] Chilean War of Independence
  Colombia
as part of   Gran Colombia
Viceroyalty of New Granada August 7, 1819[note 14] Simón Bolívar Bolívar's campaign to liberate New Granada
  Venezuela
as part of   Gran Colombia
Captaincy General of Venezuela June 24, 1821 [note 15] Simón Bolívar Venezuelan War of Independence, Battle of Carabobo
  Costa Rica
as part of   Federal Republic of Central America
Captaincy General of Guatemala September 15, 1821[note 16][note 17] Gabino Gaínza[note 18][note 19] Act of Independence of Central America
  Guatemala
as part of   Federal Republic of Central America
September 15, 1821[note 16][note 20] Gabino Gaínza[note 18][note 21]
  Nicaragua
as part of   Federal Republic of Central America
September 15, 1821[note 16] Gabino Gaínza[note 18]
  Honduras
as part of   Federal Republic of Central America
September 15, 1821[note 16][note 22] Gabino Gaínza[note 18][note 23]
  El Salvador
as part of   Federal Republic of Central America
September 15, 1821[note 16][note 24] Gabino Gaínza[note 18][note 25]
  Mexico Viceroyalty of New Spain September 27, 1821 Agustín I Mexican War of Independence
  Dominican Republic[note 26] Captaincy General of Santo Domingo November 20, 1821[note 27] José Núñez de Cáceres[note 28] -
  Panama
as part of   Gran Colombia
Viceroyalty of New Granada November 28, 1821 Simón Bolívar -
  Ecuador
as part of   Gran Colombia
May 24, 1822[note 29] Simón Bolívar[note 30] Ecuadorian War of Independence
  Peru Viceroyalty of Peru December 9, 1824 Simón Bolívar Peruvian War of Independence
  Bolivia Real Audiencia of Charcas August 6, 1825[note 31] Simón Bolívar[note 32] Bolivian War of Independence
  Brazil[note 33] United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves   Portuguese Empire August 29, 1825[note 34] Pedro I Brazilian War of Independence
  Uruguay Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata;
Cisplatina Province
  Spanish Empire;
  Empire of Brazil
August 27, 1828[note 35] José Gervasio Artigas;
Juan Antonio Lavalleja
Battle of Las Piedras;
Cisplatine War
  Dominican Republic[note 36] Captaincy General of Santo Domingo   Spanish Empire August 16, 1865[note 37] José María Cabral Dominican Restoration War
  Canada   Province of Canada
  New Brunswick
  Nova Scotia
  United Kingdom July 1, 1867[note 38] John A. Macdonald[note 39] Canadian Confederation[note 40]
  Cuba   Captaincy General of Cuba   Spain[note 41] December 10, 1898[note 42] Tomás Estrada Palma[note 43] Cuban War of Independence[note 44]
  Jamaica   Jamaica   United Kingdom August 6, 1962 Alexander Bustamante -[note 45]
  Trinidad and Tobago   Trinidad and Tobago August 31, 1962[note 46] Eric Williams -
  Guyana   British Guiana May 26, 1966[note 47] Forbes Burnham[note 48] -
  Barbados   Barbados November 30, 1966[note 49][12] Errol Barrow Barbados Independence Act 1966
  Bahamas   Bahamas July 10, 1973 Lynden Pindling -
  Grenada   British Windward Islands February 7, 1974 Eric Gairy -
  Suriname   Dutch Guiana   Netherlands November 25, 1975 Johan Ferrier -
  Dominica   British Windward Islands   United Kingdom November 3, 1978 Patrick John -
  Saint Lucia February 22, 1979 John Compton -
  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines October 27, 1979 Milton Cato -
  Belize   British Honduras September 21, 1981 George Cadle Price -
  Antigua and Barbuda   British Leeward Islands November 1, 1981 Vere Bird -
  Saint Kitts and Nevis September 19, 1983 Robert Llewellyn Bradshaw -

Gained independence from Spain, United States edit

Country Colonial name Colonial power Independence date First head of state War for independence
  Cuba Cuba   Spanish Empire;   United States 10 October 1868
December 10, 1898
May 20, 1902
6 February 1909
Tomás Estrada Palma Spanish–American War

Gained independence from the United States edit

1898-1965 edit

1907–1919 (miscellaneous) edit

Occupied territory Years Occupied state Occupying state Event Part of war(s) Subsequently annexed?
Nicaragua 1912–1933   Nicaragua   United States Occupation of Nicaragua Banana Wars No
Veracruz 1914   Mexico   United States Occupation of Veracruz Mexican Revolution No

World War I and immediate aftermath edit

Occupied territory Years Occupied state Occupying state Event Part of war(s) Subsequently annexed?
Haiti 1915–1934   Haiti   United States Occupation of Haiti Banana Wars No
Dominican Republic 1916–1924   Dominican Republic Occupation of the Dominican Republic No
Cuba 1917–1922   Cuba Sugar Intervention No

1960–1979 edit

Occupied territory Years Occupied state Occupying state Event Part of war(s) Subsequently annexed?
Dominican Republic 1965–1966   Dominican Republic   United States Invasion of the Dominican Republic Dominican Civil War No

1980–1999 edit

Occupied territory Years Occupied state Occupying state Event Part of war(s) Subsequently annexed?
Falkland Islands 1982   United Kingdom   Argentina Occupation of the Falkland Islands Falklands War No
Grenada 1983   Grenada   United States Invasion of Grenada Grenadian Revolution No
Panama 1989–1990   Panama   United States Invasion of Panama War on drugs No
Haiti 1994–1995   Haiti Operation Uphold Democracy 1991 Haitian coup d'état No

Gained independence from France, Spain edit

Gained independence from the British Empire/United Kingdom edit

Country Colonial name Colonial power Independence date First head of state War for independence
  United States Thirteen Colonies   British Empire September 3, 1783[13] George Washington American Revolutionary War
  Jamaica   Jamaica   United Kingdom August 6, 1962 Alexander Bustamante -
  Trinidad and Tobago   Trinidad and Tobago   United Kingdom August 31, 1962 Eric Williams -
  Guyana   British Guiana   United Kingdom May 26, 1966 Forbes Burnham -
  Barbados Barbados   United Kingdom November 30, 1966 Errol Barrow -
  Bahamas   Bahamas   United Kingdom July 10, 1973 Lynden Oscar Pindling -
  Grenada   British Windward Islands   United Kingdom February 7, 1974 Eric Matthew Gairy -
  Dominica   British Windward Islands   United Kingdom November 3, 1978 Louis Cools-Lartigue -
  Saint Lucia   British Windward Islands   United Kingdom February 22, 1979 John Compton -
  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines   British Windward Islands   United Kingdom October 27, 1979 Milton Cato -
  Belize   British Honduras   United Kingdom September 21, 1981 George Cadle Price -
  Antigua and Barbuda   British Leeward Islands   United Kingdom November 1, 1981 Vere Cornwall Bird -
  Canada   Dominion of Canada   United Kingdom 1867/1931/1982 John A. Macdonald/R. B. Bennett/Pierre Trudeau -[14]
  Saint Kitts and Nevis   British Leeward Islands   United Kingdom September 19, 1983 Robert L. Bradshaw -

Gained independence from Portugal edit

Country Colonial name Colonial power Independence date First head of state War for independence
  Brazil United Kingdom of Portugal, Brazil and the Algarves   Portuguese Empire September 7, 1822 Pedro I Brazilian War of Independence
  Uruguay Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata;

Cisplatina Province

  Spanish Empire;

  Empire of Brazil in 1828

May 18, 1811;

August 27, 1828 [15]

José Gervasio Artigas;

Juan Antonio Lavalleja

Battle of Las Piedras;

Cisplatine War

Gained independence from Mexico edit

Country[16] Colonial name Colonial power[17] Independence date[18] First head of state[19]
  Costa Rica as part of   United Provinces of Central America Viceroyalty of New Spain   Spanish Empire in 1821;

  First Mexican Empire in 1823

September 15, 1821 Gabino Gaínza
  Guatemala as part of   United Provinces of Central America Viceroyalty of New Spain   Spanish Empire in 1821;

  First Mexican Empire in 1823

September 15, 1821 Gabino Gaínza
  Nicaragua as part of   United Provinces of Central America Viceroyalty of New Spain   British Empire (Mosquito Coast) in 1787;

  Spanish Empire in 1821;   First Mexican Empire in 1823

September 15, 1821 Gabino Gaínza
  Honduras as part of   United Provinces of Central America Viceroyalty of New Spain   British Empire (Mosquito Coast) in 1787;

  Spanish Empire in 1821;   First Mexican Empire in 1823

September 15, 1821 Gabino Gaínza
  El Salvador as part of   United Provinces of Central America Viceroyalty of New Spain   Spanish Empire in 1821;

  First Mexican Empire in 1823

September 15, 1821 Gabino Gaínza

Gained independence from the Netherlands edit

Country[20] Colonial name Colonial power[21] Independence date[22] First head of state[23]
  Suriname Suriname   Netherlands November 25, 1975 Johan Ferrier

Gained independence from Spain edit

No Country Modern state Pre-independence name

(if different)

Date year note
1   Saint-Domingue   Haiti   Captaincy General of Santo Domingo ? 1795 Peace of Basel, ceded eastern portion to France
2   First Republic of Paraguay   Paraguay   Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata 14 May 1811 May Revolution part of Spanish American wars of independence
3   First Republic of Venezuela   Venezuela   Captaincy General of Venezuela 5 July 1811 Venezuelan wars of independence
4   Uruguay   Uruguay   Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata ? 1811 Uruguay gained independence from Spain, was annexed by the Empire of Brazil, then regained independence in 1825.
5   United Provinces of the Río de la Plata   Argentina   Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata 9 July 1816 Argentine wars of independence
6   State of Chile   Chile   Captaincy General of Chile 12 February 1818 Chilean wars of independence
7   Gran Colombia   Colombia   Viceroyalty of New Granada 17 December 1819 Bolívar's campaign to liberate New Granada
8   Protectorate of Peru   Peru   Viceroyalty of Peru 28 July 1821 Peruvian War of Independence
9   First Mexican Empire   Mexico   New Spain 15 September 1821 Mexican War of Independence
10   Costa Rica 15 September 1821 Costa Rica part of 1st Mexican Empire. Then later got independence and creation of Federal Republic of Central America in 1823. Then later dissolved in 1841 creation of Costra Rica.
11   El Salvador 15 September 1821 El Salvador part of 1st Mexican Empire. Then later got independence and creation of Federal Republic of Central America in 1823. Then later dissolved in 1841 creation of El Salvador.
12   Guatemala


  Belize

15 September 1821 Guatemala part of 1st Mexican Empire. Then later got independence and creation of Federal Republic of Central America in 1823. Then later dissolved in 1841 creation of Guatemala. late British annexed north-east Guatemala and made colony of British Honduras
13   Honduras 15 September 1821 Honduras part of 1st Mexican Empire. Then later got independence and creation of Federal Republic of Central America in 1823. Then later dissolved in 1841 creation of Honduras.
14   Nicaragua 15 September 1821 Nicaragua part of 1st Mexican Empire. Then later got independence and creation of Federal Republic of Central America in 1823. Then later dissolved in 1841 creation of Nicaragua.
15   Panama   Panama   Viceroyalty of New Granada November 28 1821 Independence of Panama (Bloodless revolution)
16   Ecuador   Ecuador   Viceroyalty of New Granada 24 May 1822 Ecuadorian War of Independence
17   Bolivian Republic   Bolivia   Viceroyalty of the Río de la Plata 6 August 1825 Bolivia war of independence
18   Second Dominican Republic   Dominican Republic   Captaincy General of Santo Domingo

(Spanish occupation of the Dominican Republic)

15 July 1865 Spain ceded the island to France in the Peace of Basel. Spain recaptured the eastern portion of Santo Domingo 1809-1821 (the España Boba period). The Republic of Spanish Haiti gained independence from Spain in 1821, was occupied by Haiti, then gained independence as the First Dominican Republic; reoccupied by Spain 1861-1865, the Second Dominican Republic gained independence but was occupied by the United States 1916-1924. The Third Dominican Republic followed the U.S. occupation.
19    Cuba   Cuba   Captaincy General of Cuba 10 October 1868 Cuba got independence from Spain. But United States occupied Cuban (USA and Spain has sigin deal of Treaty of Paris (1898). Spain give Cuba to USA to end Spanish American war) . Then later Cuba got independence from USA in 1902 and established First Cuba Republic.
20 11 April 1899 Treaty of Paris (1898)

North America edit

This is a list of all present sovereign states in North America and their predecessors. The division between North and South America is unclear, generally viewed as lying somewhere in the Isthmus of Panama, however, the Caribbean Islands, Central America including the whole of Panama is considered to be part of North America as its southernmost nation. The continent was colonized by the Europeans: Mainly by the Spaniards, the French, the English and the Dutch. The United States of America gained its independence in American Revolutionary War; most of nations in Central America gained independence in the early 19th century; Canada and many other island countries in the Caribbean Sea (most of them were British colonies) gained their independence in 20th century. Today, North America consists of twenty-two sovereign states with common government system being some form of presidential republic.

Sovereign state Predecessors
Antigua and Barbuda   Colony of Antigua (1671–1816; 1833–1958) (part of British Leeward Islands)
  Colony of Barbuda (1671–1816; 1833–1958) (part of British Leeward Islands)
  Part of West Indies Federation (1958–1962)
  Colony of Antigua (1962–1981) (Associated State since 1967)
  Antigua and Barbuda (1981–present) (Commonwealth realm)
Bahamas, The   Colony of the Bahamas (1648–1717)
    Colony of the Bahamas (1717–1973)
  Commonwealth of the Bahamas (1973–present)
Barbados   Colony of Barbados (1625–1885) (part of British Windward Islands)
  Colony of Barbados (1885–1958; 1962–1966) (separated Crown colony)
  Part of West Indies Federation (1958–1962)
  Barbados (1966–present)
Belize   British Honduras (1862–1973)
  Belize (1973–1981) (British self-governing colony)
  Belize (1981–present) (Commonwealth realm)
Canada   New France (1535–1763) (a French colony)
  Province of Quebec (1763–1791)
  Province of Upper Canada (1791–1841)
  Province of Lower Canada (1791–1841)
  United Province of Canada (1841–1867)
  Rupert's Land (1670–1870) (a territory of the Hudson's Bay Company)
  North-Western Territory (1859–1870)
  Colony of British Columbia (1858–1871) (included the Colony of Vancouver Island and former British Columbia since 1866)
Provisional Government of Saskatchewan (1885) (unrecognized Métis republic defeated in the North-West Rebellion)
  Newfoundland Colony (1610–1907)
  Dominion of Newfoundland (1907–1949) (a dominion within British Empire 1907–1934, a dependency of United Kingdom 1934–1949)
          Canada (1867–present) (before the Second World War the term Dominion of Canada were also used)
Costa Rica   Part of Real Audiencia of Guatemala (1543–1609) (part of New Spain)
  Part of Captaincy General of Guatemala (1609–1821) (part of New Spain)
  Part of Mexican Empire (1822–1823)
  Part of Federal Republic of Central America (1823–1838)
  Free State of Costa Rica (1838–1847)
 First Costa Rican Republic (1848–1948)
  Second Costa Rican Republic (1949–present)
Cuba   Part of Captaincy General of Santo Domingo (1512–1607)
  Captaincy General of Cuba (1607–1898)
  United States Military Government in Cuba (1898–1902)
  Republic of Cuba (1902–1959) (1902–1959)
  Republic of Cuba (1959–present)
Dominica   Colony of Dominica (part of British Leeward Islands 1871–1958) (1763–1958)
  Part of West Indies Federation (1958–1962)
  Dominica (1962–1978) (Associated State since 1967)
  Commonwealth of Dominica (1978–present)
Dominican Republic   Captaincy General of Santo Domingo (1492–1795)
    Colony of Saint-Domingue (1795–1809)
  Captaincy General of Santo Domingo (1809–1821)
  Republic of Spanish Haiti (1821–1822)
  Occupied by Haiti (1822–1844)
  Dominican Republic (1844–1861)
  Occupied by Spain (1861–1865)
  Dominican Republic (1865–present)
El Salvador   Part of Real Audiencia of Guatemala (1543–1609) (part of New Spain)
  Part of Captaincy General of Guatemala (1609–1821) (part of New Spain)
  Part of Mexican Empire (1822–1823)
  Part of Federal Republic of Central America (1823–1841)
        Republic of El Salvador (1841–present) (before 1890 referred to as Republic of Salvador in English)
Grenada   French Grenada (1649–1763)
  British Grenada (1763–1958) part of   British Windward Islands 1833–1958)
  Part of West Indies Federation (1958–1962)
    British Grenada (1962–1974) (Associated State (since 1967)
  Grenada (Commonwealth realm) (1974–present)
Guatemala   Part of Real Audiencia of Guatemala (1543–1609)
  Part of Captaincy General of Guatemala (1609–1821)
  Part of Mexican Empire (1822–1823)
  Part of Federal Republic of Central America (1823–1839)
          Republic of Guatemala (1839–present)
Haiti     Colony of Saint-Domingue (1625–1804)
  Empire of Haiti (1804–1806)
  State of Haiti (1806–1811) (northern Haiti)
  Kingdom of Haiti (1811–1820)
  Republic of Haiti (1806–1849) (included northern Haiti since 1820; with Dominican Republic annexed 1822–1844)
  Empire of Haiti (1849–1859)
    Republic of Haiti (1859–present) (occupied by United States 1915–1934)
Honduras   Part of Real Audiencia of Guatemala (1543–1609)
  Part of Captaincy General of Guatemala (1609–1821)
  Part of Mexican Empire (1822–1823)
  Part of Federal Republic of Central America (1823–1838)
        Republic of Honduras (1838–present)
Jamaica         Colony of Jamaica (1655–1962)
  Jamaica (1962–present) (Commonwealth realm)
Mexico Aztec Empire
  Viceroyalty of New Spain (1521–1821)
  Mexican Empire (1821–1823)
  Provisional Government of Mexico (1823–1824)
  United Mexican States (1824–1835)
  Mexican Republic (1835–1846)
  United Mexican States (1846–1863)
  Mexican Empire (1863–1867)
  United Mexican States (1867–present)
Nicaragua   Part of Real Audiencia of Guatemala (1543–1609)
  Part of Captaincy General of Guatemala (1609–1821)
  Part of Mexican Empire (1822–1823)
  Part of Federal Republic of Central America (1823–1838)
      Republic of Nicaragua (1838–present)
Saint Kitts and Nevis   Colony of Saint Christopher (1623–1882) (since 1833 part of   British Leeward Islands)
  Colony of Nevis (1628–1882) (since 1833 part of   British Leeward Islands)
  Colony of Saint Christopher-Nevis-Anguilla (1882–1958) (part of   British Leeward Islands; Anguilla separated from 1882 to 1951)
  Part of West Indies Federation (1958–1962)
  Saint Christopher-Nevis-Anguilla (1962–1983) (Associated State since 1967; Anguilla separated since 1980)
  Federation of Saint Kitts and Nevis (1983–present) (also known as the Federation of Saint Christopher and Nevis)
Saint Lucia   Colony of Sainte Lucie (1674–1814)
  Colony of Saint Lucia (1814–1958) (since 1838 part of   British Windward Islands)
  Part of West Indies Federation (1958–1962)
    Colony of Saint Lucia (1962–1979) (Associated State since 1967)
  Saint Lucia (Commonwealth realm) (1979–present)
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines   Colony of Saint Vincent (1763–1958) (since 1838 part of   British Windward Islands)
  Part of West Indies Federation (1958–1962)
  Colony of Saint Vincent (1962–1979) (Associated State since 1967)
      Saint Vincent and the Grenadines (1979–present) (Commonwealth realm)
United States   Thirteen Colonies (1732–1776)
-Province of New Hampshire
-Province of Massachusetts Bay
-Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations
-Connecticut Colony
-Province of New York
-Province of New Jersey
-Province of Pennsylvania
-Delaware Colony
-Province of Maryland
-Colony of Virginia
-Province of Carolina
-Province of North Carolina
-Province of South Carolina
-Province of Georgia
decolonization, americas, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, d. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Decolonization of the Americas news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2007 Learn how and when to remove this template message The decolonization of the Americas occurred over several centuries as most of the countries in the Americas gained their independence from European rule The American Revolution was the first in the Americas and the British defeat in the American Revolutionary War 1775 1783 was a victory against a great power aided by France and Spain Britain s enemies The French Revolution in Europe followed and collectively these events had profound effects on the Spanish Portuguese and French colonies in the Americas A revolutionary wave followed resulting in the creation of several independent countries in Latin America The Haitian Revolution lasted from 1791 to 1804 and resulted in the independence of the French slave colony The Peninsular War with France which resulted from the Napoleonic occupation of Spain caused Spanish Creoles in Spanish America to question their allegiance to Spain stoking independence movements that culminated in various Spanish American wars of independence 1808 33 which were primarily fought between opposing groups of colonists and only secondarily against Spanish forces At the same time the Portuguese monarchy fled to Brazil during the French invasion of Portugal After the royal court returned to Lisbon the prince regent Pedro remained in Brazil and in 1822 successfully declared himself emperor of a newly independent Brazilian Empire 1 Spain would lose all three of its remaining Caribbean colonies by the end of the 1800s Santo Domingo declared independence in 1821 as the Republic of Spanish Haiti After unification and then split from the former French colony of Haiti the President of the Dominican Republic signed an agreement that reverted the country to a Spanish colony in 1861 This triggered the Dominican Restoration War which resulted in the Dominican Republic s second independence from Spain in 1865 Cuba fought for independence from Spain in the Ten Years War 1868 78 and Little War 1879 80 and finally the Cuban War of Independence 1895 98 American intervention in 1898 became the Spanish American War and resulted in the United States gaining Puerto Rico Guam which are still U S territories and the Philippine Islands in the Pacific Ocean Under military occupation Cuba became a U S protectorate until its independence in 1902 Peaceful independence by the voluntary withdrawal of colonial powers then became the norm in the second half of the 20th century However there are still British and Dutch colonies in North America mostly Caribbean islands France has fully integrated most of its former colonies in the Americas French Guiana Guadeloupe and Martinique as fully constituent Departments of France Contents 1 Conditions before revolution 1 1 Undermining of metropolitan authority 1 2 Napoleonic Wars 1 3 Spanish military presence in its colonies 1 4 Other factors 2 United States 3 Haiti and the French Antilles 4 Spanish America 4 1 Argentina 4 2 Bolivia 4 3 Colombia 4 4 Chile 4 5 Ecuador 4 6 Guatemala 4 7 Mexico 4 8 Paraguay 4 9 Peru 4 10 Uruguay 4 11 Venezuela 5 Brazil 6 Canada 7 20th century 8 Current non sovereign territories 9 Timeline 10 Gained independence from Spain United States 11 Gained independence from the United States 11 1 1898 1965 11 2 1907 1919 miscellaneous 11 3 World War I and immediate aftermath 11 4 1960 1979 11 5 1980 1999 12 Gained independence from France Spain 13 Gained independence from the British Empire United Kingdom 14 Gained independence from Portugal 15 Gained independence from Mexico 16 Gained independence from the Netherlands 17 Gained independence from Spain 18 North America 19 South America 20 World reaction 20 1 United States and Great Britain 20 2 Attempts at hemispheric unity 21 See also 22 Notes 23 References 24 Further readingConditions before revolution editUndermining of metropolitan authority edit nbsp Political map of the Americas in 1794During the 18th century Spain recovered much of the strength it had lost in the 17th century but the country s resources were under strain because of the incessant warfare in Europe from 1793 This led to increased local participation in the financing of defense and increased participation in militias by the locally born Such development was at odds with the ideals of the centralized absolute monarchy The Spanish also made formal concessions to strengthen defense In Chiloe Spanish authorities promised freedom from the Encomienda for indigenous locals who settled near the new stronghold of Ancud founded in 1768 and contributed to its defense The increased local organization of the defenses would ultimately undermine the metropolitan authority and bolster the independence movement 2 Napoleonic Wars edit Main articles Napoleonic Wars and Peninsular War The Napoleonic Wars were a series of wars fought between France led by Napoleon Bonaparte and alliances involving Britain Prussia Spain Portugal Russia and Austria at different times from 1799 to 1815 In the case of Spain and its colonies in May 1808 Napoleon captured Carlos IV and King Fernando VII and installed his brother Joseph Bonaparte as Spanish monarch This event disrupted the political stability of Spain and broke the link with some of the colonies which were loyal to the Bourbon Dynasty The local elites the creoles took matters into their own hands organizing themselves into juntas to take in absence of the king Fernando VII their sovereignty devolved temporarily back to the community The juntas swore loyalty to the captive Fernando VII and each ruled different and diverse parts of the colony Most of Fernando s subjects were loyal to him in 1808 but after he was restored to the Spanish crown in 1814 his policy of restoring absolute power alienated both the juntas and his subjects He abrogated the Cadiz Constitution of 1812 and punished those who had supported it The violence used by royalist forces and the prospect of being ruled by Fernando shifted the majority of the colonist population in favor of separation from Spain 3 The local elites reacted to absolutism in much the same way that the British colonial elites Tory and Whig alike had reacted to London s interference before 1775 Spanish military presence in its colonies edit nbsp Graphs showing the make up of the royalist army at the time of the revolution The colonial army of the Spanish Empire in the Americas was made up of local American and European supporters of King Ferdinand The Royalists were made up of a cross section of society loyal to the crown with Americans composing the majority of the royalist forces on all fronts There were two types of military units from the regular Spanish army which were sent out or formed with local Europeans and called Expidicionarios and units called veterans or militias created in the Americas The militias included some veteran units and were called the disciplined militia Only 11 of the personnel in the militias were European or American whites After Rafael del Riego s revolution in 1820 no more Spanish soldiers were sent to the wars in the Americas In 1820 there were only 10 000 soldiers in Royal Army in Colombia and Venezuela and Spaniards formed only 10 of all the royalist armies and only half of the soldiers of the expeditionary units were European By the Battle of Ayacucho in 1824 less than 1 of the soldiers were European citation needed Other factors edit Main articles Enlightenment Spain and Bourbon Reforms The Enlightenment spurred the desire for social and economic reform to spread throughout the Americas and the Iberian Peninsula Ideas about free trade and physiocratic economics were raised by the Enlightenment Independence movements in South America can be traced back to slave revolts in plantations in the northernmost part of the continent and the Caribbean In 1791 a massive slave revolt sparked a general insurrection against the plantation system and French colonial power 4 These events were followed by a violent uprising led by Jose Leonardo Chirino and Jose Caridad Gonzalez that sprung up in 1795 Venezuela allegedly inspired by the revolution in Haiti Toussaint L Ouverture was born a slave in Saint Domingue where he developed labor skills that would give him higher privileges than other slaves He intellectually and physically advanced resulting in promotion land of his own and owning slaves In 1791 slaves in Haiti formed a revolution to seek independence from their French owners L Ouverture joined the rebellion as a top military official to abolish slavery without complete independence However through a series of letters written by Toussaint it became clear that he grew open to equal human rights for all that live in Haiti Similar to how the United States Constitution was ratified the enlightenment ideas of equality and representation of the people created an impact of change against the status quo that sparked the revolution The letter details the great concerns he felt due to a conservative shift in France s legislature after the revolution in 1797 The greatest fear was that these conservative values could give ideas to the French Government to bring back slavery The enlightenment has proven to forever change the way a captive society thinks after L Ouverture refuses to let the French send him and his people back into slavery W hen finally the rule of law took the place of anarchy under which the unfortunate colony had too long suffered what fatality can have led the greatest enemy of its prosperity and our happiness still to dare to threaten us with the return of slavery Ultimately slavery was abolished from French colonies in 1794 and Haiti declared Independence from France in 1804 5 United States editMain articles American Revolution and History of United States continental expansion The United States of America declared independence from Great Britain on July 4 1776 thus becoming the first independent foreign recognized nation in the Americas and the first European colonial entity to break from its mother country Britain formally acknowledged American independence in 1783 after its defeat in the American Revolutionary War The U S victory encouraged independence movements in other parts of the Americas Although initially occupying only the land east of the Mississippi between Canada and Florida the United States would later eventually acquire various other North American territories from the British French Spanish and Russians in succeeding years under the mantle of Manifest Destiny While ending European control over the region these events resulted in the expansion of settler colonialism against Native nations especially following the discovery of gold in regions such as the Dakotas and California as well as opportunities for American settlers to claim farmland in the Great Plains Land speculators and individual settlers both played a significant role in the expansion of America into what was then termed Indian Territory American encroachment on indigenous nations prompted the creation of several federations opposed to Manifest Destiny such as the Northwestern confederacy and Tecumseh s Confederacy Haiti and the French Antilles editMain article Haitian Revolution The American and French Revolutions had profound effects on the Spanish Portuguese and French colonies in the Americas Haiti a French slave colony was the first to follow the United States to independence during the Haitian Revolution which lasted from 1791 to 1804 Thwarted in his attempt to rebuild a French empire in North America Napoleon Bonaparte sold Louisiana to the United States and from then on focused on the European theater marking the end of France s ambitions of building a colonial empire in the Western Hemisphere Spanish America editMain article Spanish American wars of independence Further information Libertadores nbsp Places in the Americas by date of independence contradictory Note that the United States did not complete its continental territorial expansion until 1867 Canada did not complete sovereignty as an independent country until 1982 nbsp Intendecies provinces of the South American viceroyalties Except for Cuba and Puerto Rico the Spanish colonies in the Americas won their independence during the first quarter of the 19th century During the Peninsular War Napoleon installed his brother Joseph Bonaparte on the Spanish throne and captured the King Fernando VII The crisis of political legitimacy sparked a reaction in Spain s overseas empire Several assemblies were established after 1810 by the Criollos Latin Americans who are of full or near full Spanish descent to recover sovereignty and self government based on the Castilian law and to rule American lands in the name of Ferdinand VII of Spain This experience of self government along with the influence of Liberalism and the ideas of the French and American Revolutions brought about a struggle for independence led by the Libertadores The territories freed themselves often with help from foreign mercenaries and privateers The United States and Europe were neutral yet aimed to achieve political influence and trade without the Spanish monopoly In South America Simon Bolivar and Jose de San Martin led the final phase of the independence struggle Although Bolivar attempted to keep the Spanish speaking parts of the continent politically unified they rapidly became independent of one another as well and several further wars were fought such as the Paraguayan War and the War of the Pacific A related process took place in what is now Mexico Central America and parts of North America between 1810 and 1821 with the Mexican War of Independence Independence was achieved in 1821 by a coalition uniting under Agustin de Iturbide and the Army of the Three Guarantees Unity was maintained for a short period under the First Mexican Empire but within a decade the region fought against the United States over the borderlands losing the bordering lands of California and Texas Most of the heat was during the official Mexican American War from 1846 to 1848 6 In 1898 in the Greater Antilles the United States won the Spanish American War and occupied Cuba and Puerto Rico ending Spanish territorial control in the Americas Argentina edit Main article Argentine War of Independence After the defeat of Spain in the Peninsular War and the abdication of King Ferdinand VII the Spanish colonial government of the Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata present day Argentina majority of Bolivia parts of Chile Paraguay and Uruguay became greatly weakened Without a recognized king on the Spanish throne to render the office of the Viceroy legitimate the right of Viceroy Baltasar Hidalgo de Cisneros to govern came under fire The local elites tired of the Spanish trade restrictions and taxes seized the opportunity and during the May Revolution of 1810 removed Cisneros and created the first local government the Primera Junta nbsp Jose de San MartinFollowing half a decade of battles and skirmishes with provincial royalist forces within the former Vice royalty along with military expeditions across the Andes to Chile Peru and Bolivia led by General Jose de San Martin to finally end Spanish rule in America a formal declaration was signed on 9 July 1816 by an assembly in San Miguel de Tucuman declaring full independence with provisions for a national constitution The Argentine Constitution was signed in 1853 declaring the creation of the Argentine Republic Bolivia edit Main article Bolivian War of Independence Following upheaval caused by the May Revolution along with the independence movements in Chile and Venezuela a local struggle for independence kicked off with two failed revolutions Over sixteen years of struggle followed before the first steps toward the establishment of a republic were taken Formally it is considered that the fight for independence culminated in the Battle of Ayacucho on 9 December 1824 citation needed nbsp Retreat of European colonialism and change of political borders in South America 1700 presentColombia edit nbsp The Battle of Boyaca sealed Colombia s independenceMain articles Patria Boba Spanish reconquest of New Granada and Bolivar s campaign to liberate New Granada This section is empty You can help by adding to it August 2020 Chile edit Main article Chilean War of Independence The Chilean Independence campaign was led by Liberator General Jose de San Martin with the support of Chilean exiles such as Bernardo O Higgins The local independence movement was composed of Chilean born criollos who sought political and economic independence from Spain The independence movement was far from gaining unanimous support among Chileans who became divided between independentists and royalists What started as an elitist political movement against their colonial master finally ended as a full fledged civil war Traditionally the process is divided into three stages Patria Vieja Reconquista and Patria Nueva Ecuador edit Main article Ecuadorian War of Independence The first uprising against Spanish rule took place in 1809 and criollos in Ecuador set up a junta on 22 September 1810 to rule in the name of the Bourbon monarch but as elsewhere it allowed assertion of their power 7 Only in 1822 did Ecuador fully gain independence and became part of Gran Colombia from which it withdrew in 1830 8 At the Battle of Pichincha near present day Quito Ecuador on 24 May 1822 General Antonio Jose de Sucre s forces defeated a Spanish force defending Quito The Spanish defeat guaranteed the liberation of Ecuador Guatemala edit In 1821 the entire Kingdom of Guatemala was peacefully subject to Spanish rule With the innovations produced by the constitutional system the freedom of the press and the exaltation of the parties which were born in the popular elections opinion in favor of independence spread Those in favor of independence held meetings in Guatemala but they did not have the resources to rise up against the government They expected everything from the progress made in Mexico by the Plan of Iguala or Plan of Independence Likewise not all the independentists were in agreement with the system of government proclaimed by Iturbide much less by the dynasty called to the Mexican throne but then it was only about independence each one reserving their opinion regarding the forms of government On September 13 the minutes of Ciudad Real de Chiapas and other towns of that State adhering to the Plan of Iguala were received in Guatemala the advances that the army was making gave all their strength to the pronouncements of Chiapas which by itself never had any political importance in that kingdom The trustee of the Guatemala City Council Mr Mariano Aycinena requested an extraordinary session to present a petition in order to proclaim independence pp 85 90 lt ref gt 9 Mexico edit Main article Mexican War of Independence Independence in Mexico was a protracted struggle from 1808 until the fall of the royal government in 1821 and the establishment of independent Mexico In the Viceroyalty of New Spain as elsewhere in Spanish America in 1808 people reacted to the unexpected French invasion of the Iberian peninsula and the ouster of the Bourbon king replaced by Joseph Bonaparte Local American born Spaniards saw the opportunity to seize control from Viceroy Jose de Iturrigaray who may well have been sympathetic to creoles aspirations Iturrigaray was ousted by pro royalists A few from among the creole elites sought independence including Juan Aldama Ignacio Allende and the secular parish priest Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla Hidalgo made a proclamation in his home parish of Dolores which was not recorded in writing at the time but denounced the bad government and gachupines pejorative for peninsular born Spaniards and declared independence The unorganized hordes following Hidalgo wrought destruction on the property and the lives of whites in the region of the Bajio Hidalgo was caught defrocked and executed in 1811 along with Allende Their heads remained on display until 1821 His former student Jose Maria Morelos continued the rebellion and was himself caught and killed in 1815 The struggle of Mexican insurgents continued under the leadership of Vicente Guerrero and Guadalupe Victoria From 1815 to 1820 there was a stalemate in New Spain with royalist forces unable to defeat the insurgents and the insurgents unable to expand beyond their narrow territory in the southern region Again events in Spain intervened with an uprising of military men against Ferdinand VII and the restoration of the liberal Spanish Constitution of 1812 which mandated a constitutional monarchy and curtailed the power of the Roman Catholic Church The monarch repudiated the constitution once the Spanish monarchy was restored in 1814 For conservatives in New Spain these changed political circumstances threatened the institutions of church and state Royal military officer Agustin de Iturbide seized the opportunity to lead allying with his former enemy Guerrero Iturbide proclaimed the Plan de Iguala which called for independence equality of peninsular and American born Spaniards and a monarchy with a prince from Spain as king He persuaded the insurgent Guerrero to ally with him and create the Army of the Three Guarantees Crown rule in New Spain collapsed when the incoming Viceroy Juan O Donoju signed the Treaty of Cordoba recognizing Mexico s sovereignty With no European monarch presenting himself for the crown of Mexico Iturbide himself was proclaimed emperor Agustin I in 1822 He was overthrown in 1823 and Mexico was established as a republic Decades of political and economic instability ensued which resulted in a population decline Paraguay edit Paraguay gained its independence on the night of May 14 and the morning of May 15 1811 after a plan organized by various pro independence nationalists including Fulgencio Yegros and Jose Gaspar Rodriguez de Francia Peru edit Main article Peruvian War of Independence nbsp Painting of Jose de San Martin s proclamation of the independence of Peru on 28 July 1821 in LimaSpain initially had the support of the Lima oligarchs because of their opposition to the commercial interests of Buenos Aires and Chile Therefore the Viceroyalty of Peru became the last redoubt of the Spanish Monarchy in South America Nevertheless a Creole rebellion arose in 1812 in Huanuco and another in Cusco between 1814 and 1816 Both were suppressed These rebellions were supported by the armies of Buenos Aires Peru finally succumbed after the decisive continental campaigns of Jose de San Martin 1820 1823 and Simon Bolivar 1824 While San Martin was in charge of the land campaign a newly built Chilean Navy led by Lord Cochrane transported the fighting troops and launched a sea campaign against the Spanish fleet in the Pacific San Martin who had displaced the royalists of Chile after the Battle of Maipu and who had disembarked in Paracas in 1820 proclaimed the independence of Peru in Lima on 28 July 1821 Four years later the Spanish Monarchy was defeated definitively at the Battle of Ayacucho in late 1824 After independence the conflicts of interests that faced different sectors of Creole Peruvian society and the particular ambitions of the caudillos made the organization of the country excessively difficult Only three civilians Manuel Pardo Nicolas de Pierola and Francisco Garcia Calderon acceded to the presidency in the first seventy five years of Peru s independence The Republic of Bolivia was created in Upper Peru In 1837 a Peru Bolivian Confederation was also created but was dissolved two years later due to Chilean military intervention Uruguay edit Following the events of the May Revolution in 1811 Jose Gervasio Artigasled a successful revolt against the Spanish forces in the Provincia Oriental now Uruguay joining the independentist movement that was taking place in the Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata at the time In 1821 the Provincia Oriental was invaded by Portugal trying to annex it into Brazil under the name of Provincia Cisplatina The former Vice royalty of the Rio de la Plata United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata fought back against Brazil in a war that lasted over 2 years eventually turning into a stalemate The Brazilian forces withdrew with the United Provinces keeping them at bay but failing to win any decisive victory With neither side gaining the upper hand and the economic burden of the war crippling the United Provinces economy the Treaty of Montevideo was signed in 1828 fostered by Britain declaring Uruguay as an independent state 10 Venezuela edit Main articles Venezuelan War of Independence First Republic of Venezuela and Second Republic of Venezuela According to the Encyclopedia Americana of 1865 General Francisco de Miranda already a hero to the French Prussians English and Americans had garnered a series of successes against the Spanish between 1808 and 1812 He had effectively negated their access to all the ports in the Caribbean thus preventing them from receiving reinforcements and supplies and was essentially conducting mopping up operations throughout the country At that point he convinced Simon Bolivar to join the struggle and put him in charge of the fort at Puerto Cabello This was all at once a supply and arms depot a strategic port and the central holding facility for Spanish prisoners Through what amounts to a gross dereliction of duty Simon Bolivar neglected to enforce the customary security dispositions before departing to a social event During the night there was an uprising of the Spanish prisoners and they managed to subdue the Independentist garrison and gain control of the supplies arms and ammunition and the port The Loyalist forces progressively regained control of the country and eventually Monteverde s successes forced the newly formed congress of the republic to ask Miranda that he sign a capitulation at La Victoria in Aragua on July 12 1812 thus ending the first phase of the revolutionary war After the capitulation of 1812 Simon Bolivar turned over Francisco de Miranda to the Spanish authorities secured a safe passage for himself and his closest officers and fled to New Granada He later returned with a new army while the war had entered a tremendously violent phase After much of the local aristocracy had abandoned the cause of independence blacks and mulattoes carried on the struggle Elites reacted with open distrust and opposition to the efforts of these common people Bolivar s forces invaded Venezuela from New Granada in 1813 waging a campaign with a ferocity captured perfectly by their motto of war to the death Bolivar s forces defeated Domingo Monteverde s Spanish army in a series of battles taking Caracas on August 6 1813 and besieging Monteverde at Puerto Cabello in September 1813 nbsp Battle of CaraboboWith loyalists displaying the same passion and violence the rebels achieved only short lived victories The army led by the loyalist Jose Tomas Boves demonstrated the key military role that the Llaneros came to play in the region s struggle Turning the tide against independence these highly mobile ferocious fighters made up a formidable military force that pushed Bolivar out of his home country once more In 1814 heavily reinforced Spanish forces in Venezuela lost a series of battles to Bolivar s forces but then decisively defeated Bolivar at La Puerta on June 15 took Caracas on July 16 and again defeated his army at Aragua on August 18 for 2 000 Spanish casualties out of 10 000 soldiers as well as most of the 3 000 in the rebel army Bolivar and other leaders then returned to New Granada Later that year the largest expeditionary force ever sent by Spain to America arrived under the command of Pablo Morillo This force effectively replaced the improvised llanero units who were disbanded by Morillo Bolivar and other republican leaders returned to Venezuela in December 1816 leading a largely unsuccessful insurrection against Spain from 1816 to 1818 from bases in the Llanos and Ciudad Bolivar in the Orinoco River area In 1819 Bolivar successfully invaded New Granada and returned to Venezuela in April 1821 leading an army of 7 000 At Carabobo on June 24 his forces decisively defeated Spanish and colonial forces winning Venezuelan independence although hostilities continued Brazil editMain article Independence of Brazil nbsp Prince Pedro in Sao Paulo after giving the news of the Brazilian independence on 7 September 1822Unlike the Spanish the Portuguese did not divide their colonial territory in the Americas The captaincies they created were subdued to a centralized administration in Salvador which reported directly to the Crown in Lisbon Therefore it is not common to refer to Portuguese America like Spanish America Dutch America etc but rather to Brazil as a unified colony since its very beginnings As a result Brazil did not split into several states by the time of independence 1822 as happened to its Spanish speaking neighbors The adoption of a monarchy instead of a federal republic in the first six decades of Brazilian political sovereignty also contributed to the nation s unity citation needed After several failed revolts in the Portuguese colony Dom Pedro I also Pedro IV of Portugal son of the Portuguese king Dom Joao VI proclaimed the country s independence in 1822 and became Brazil s first Emperor This began when Napoleon Bonaparte forced the Portuguese court out of their capital city of Lisbon and into exile in Brazil Over the next eight years the capital of the Portuguese empire would be located in Rio de Janeiro In 1815 after Lisbon was reclaimed from the French by the Portuguese King Dom Joao VI declared that Rio and Lisbon would become equal centers of the empire King Joao VI was forced back to Lisbon in 1821 by the Portuguese Cortes but left his son Dom Pedro behind to run Rio A year later Dom Pedro declared independence for Brazil and officially became emperor Pedro I Although Brazil s independence was met with little resistance from Portugal several small scale battles were fought against Portuguese loyalist forces until 1824 to bring the rest of the Brazilian territories under the control of the new Brazilian government and they were officially recognized by their former colonial overlords in 1825 11 Canada editMain article Canadian Confederation Canada s transition from colonial rule to independence occurred gradually over many decades and was achieved mostly through political means as opposed to the violent revolutions that marked the end of colonialism in other North and South American countries Attempts at revolting against the British such as the Rebellions of 1837 1838 were brief and quickly put down Canada was declared a dominion within the British Empire in 1867 Originally the Canadian Confederation included just a few of what are now Canada s eastern provinces other British colonies in modern day Canada such as British Columbia Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland would join later the last only in 1949 Additionally Britain s and Norway s claims to Arctic lands were ceded to Canada in the late 19th and early 20th centuries By 1931 the United Kingdom had relinquished its control over Canada s foreign policy What few political links that remained between Canada and the UK were formally severed in 1982 with the Canada Act 20th century editOther countries did not gain independence until the 20th century From Spain CubaFrom the United Kingdom Jamaica from the United Kingdom in 1962 Trinidad and Tobago from the United Kingdom in 1962 Guyana formerly British Guiana from the United Kingdom in 1966 Barbados from the United Kingdom in 1966 Bahamas Granted internal self government in 1964 and then achieved full independence from the United Kingdom in 1973 Grenada from the United Kingdom in 1974 Dominica from the United Kingdom in 1978 Saint Lucia from the United Kingdom in 1979 St Vincent and the Grenadines from the United Kingdom in 1979 Antigua and Barbuda from the United Kingdom in 1981 Belize formerly British Honduras from the United Kingdom in 1981 Saint Kitts and Nevis from the United Kingdom in 1983From the Netherlands Suriname from the Netherlands in 1975Current non sovereign territories editSome parts of the Americas are still administered by European countries or the United States Anguilla United Kingdom Aruba Netherlands Bermuda United Kingdom Bonaire Netherlands British Virgin Islands United Kingdom Cayman Islands United Kingdom Curacao Netherlands Falkland Islands United Kingdom French Guiana France Greenland Kingdom of Denmark Guadeloupe France Martinique France Montserrat United Kingdom Puerto Rico United States Saba Netherlands Saint Barthelemy France Saint Martin France Saint Pierre and Miquelon France Sint Eustatius Netherlands Sint Maarten Netherlands South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands United Kingdom Turks and Caicos Islands United Kingdom United States Virgin Islands United States Some of the remaining non sovereign territories of the Americas have retained this status by choice and enjoy a significant degree of self government Some have nevertheless been placed on the U N list of non self governing territories an ongoing subject of controversy Aruba for example seceded from the Netherlands Antilles on January 1 1986 and became a separate self governing member of the Kingdom of the Netherlands A movement toward full independence by 1996 was halted at Aruba s request in 1990 French Guiana Guadeloupe and Martinique are not considered dependent territories of France but have been incorporated into France itself as overseas departements departements d outre mer or DOM Other regions however have had or currently have movements to change their political status for example different movements to change the political status of Puerto Rico and intermittent calls for independence in other non sovereign territories such as Martinique and others with differing amounts of support Timeline editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Country note 1 Colonial name Colonial power note 2 Independence date note 3 First head of state note 4 Independence won through nbsp United States Thirteen Colonies nbsp British Empire July 4 1776 September 3 1783 note 5 George Washington note 6 American Revolutionary War Siege of Yorktown nbsp Haiti Saint Domingue nbsp Kingdom of France until 1792 nbsp French First Republic January 1 1804 note 7 Jean Jacques Dessalines note 8 Haitian Revolution nbsp Argentina Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata nbsp Spanish Empire May 25 1810 July 9 1816 note 9 Juan Martin de Pueyrredon note 10 Argentine War of Independence nbsp Paraguay May 14 1811 Junta note 11 Paraguay campaign nbsp Chile Captaincy General of Chile February 12 1818 note 12 Bernardo O Higgins note 13 Chilean War of Independence nbsp Colombiaas part of nbsp Gran Colombia Viceroyalty of New Granada August 7 1819 note 14 Simon Bolivar Bolivar s campaign to liberate New Granada nbsp Venezuelaas part of nbsp Gran Colombia Captaincy General of Venezuela June 24 1821 note 15 Simon Bolivar Venezuelan War of Independence Battle of Carabobo nbsp Costa Ricaas part of nbsp Federal Republic of Central America Captaincy General of Guatemala September 15 1821 note 16 note 17 Gabino Gainza note 18 note 19 Act of Independence of Central America nbsp Guatemalaas part of nbsp Federal Republic of Central America September 15 1821 note 16 note 20 Gabino Gainza note 18 note 21 nbsp Nicaraguaas part of nbsp Federal Republic of Central America September 15 1821 note 16 Gabino Gainza note 18 nbsp Hondurasas part of nbsp Federal Republic of Central America September 15 1821 note 16 note 22 Gabino Gainza note 18 note 23 nbsp El Salvadoras part of nbsp Federal Republic of Central America September 15 1821 note 16 note 24 Gabino Gainza note 18 note 25 nbsp Mexico Viceroyalty of New Spain September 27 1821 Agustin I Mexican War of Independence nbsp Dominican Republic note 26 Captaincy General of Santo Domingo November 20 1821 note 27 Jose Nunez de Caceres note 28 nbsp Panamaas part of nbsp Gran Colombia Viceroyalty of New Granada November 28 1821 Simon Bolivar nbsp Ecuadoras part of nbsp Gran Colombia May 24 1822 note 29 Simon Bolivar note 30 Ecuadorian War of Independence nbsp Peru Viceroyalty of Peru December 9 1824 Simon Bolivar Peruvian War of Independence nbsp Bolivia Real Audiencia of Charcas August 6 1825 note 31 Simon Bolivar note 32 Bolivian War of Independence nbsp Brazil note 33 United Kingdom of Portugal Brazil and the Algarves nbsp Portuguese Empire August 29 1825 note 34 Pedro I Brazilian War of Independence nbsp Uruguay Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata Cisplatina Province nbsp Spanish Empire nbsp Empire of Brazil August 27 1828 note 35 Jose Gervasio Artigas Juan Antonio Lavalleja Battle of Las Piedras Cisplatine War nbsp Dominican Republic note 36 Captaincy General of Santo Domingo nbsp Spanish Empire August 16 1865 note 37 Jose Maria Cabral Dominican Restoration War nbsp Canada nbsp Province of Canada nbsp New Brunswick nbsp Nova Scotia nbsp United Kingdom July 1 1867 note 38 John A Macdonald note 39 Canadian Confederation note 40 nbsp Cuba nbsp Captaincy General of Cuba nbsp Spain note 41 December 10 1898 note 42 Tomas Estrada Palma note 43 Cuban War of Independence note 44 nbsp Jamaica nbsp Jamaica nbsp United Kingdom August 6 1962 Alexander Bustamante note 45 nbsp Trinidad and Tobago nbsp Trinidad and Tobago August 31 1962 note 46 Eric Williams nbsp Guyana nbsp British Guiana May 26 1966 note 47 Forbes Burnham note 48 nbsp Barbados nbsp Barbados November 30 1966 note 49 12 Errol Barrow Barbados Independence Act 1966 nbsp Bahamas nbsp Bahamas July 10 1973 Lynden Pindling nbsp Grenada nbsp British Windward Islands February 7 1974 Eric Gairy nbsp Suriname nbsp Dutch Guiana nbsp Netherlands November 25 1975 Johan Ferrier nbsp Dominica nbsp British Windward Islands nbsp United Kingdom November 3 1978 Patrick John nbsp Saint Lucia February 22 1979 John Compton nbsp Saint Vincent and the Grenadines October 27 1979 Milton Cato nbsp Belize nbsp British Honduras September 21 1981 George Cadle Price nbsp Antigua and Barbuda nbsp British Leeward Islands November 1 1981 Vere Bird nbsp Saint Kitts and Nevis September 19 1983 Robert Llewellyn Bradshaw Gained independence from Spain United States editCountry Colonial name Colonial power Independence date First head of state War for independence nbsp Cuba Cuba nbsp Spanish Empire nbsp United States 10 October 1868December 10 1898May 20 1902 6 February 1909 Tomas Estrada Palma Spanish American WarGained independence from the United States edit1898 1965 edit Country Event name Colonial power Independence date First head of state Part of war s nbsp Dominican Republic Santo Domingo Affair nbsp United States February 11 1904 Juan Isidro Jiminez Banana Wars nbsp Haiti United States occupation of Haiti nbsp United States August 1 1934 Stenio Vincent Banana Wars nbsp Dominican Republic United States occupation of the Dominican Republic 1916 1924 nbsp United States September 18 1924 Desiderio Arias Banana Wars nbsp Dominican Republic Dominican Civil War nbsp United States September 3 1965 Joaquin Balaguer Cold War1907 1919 miscellaneous edit Occupied territory Years Occupied state Occupying state Event Part of war s Subsequently annexed Nicaragua 1912 1933 nbsp Nicaragua nbsp United States Occupation of Nicaragua Banana Wars NoVeracruz 1914 nbsp Mexico nbsp United States Occupation of Veracruz Mexican Revolution NoWorld War I and immediate aftermath edit Occupied territory Years Occupied state Occupying state Event Part of war s Subsequently annexed Haiti 1915 1934 nbsp Haiti nbsp United States Occupation of Haiti Banana Wars NoDominican Republic 1916 1924 nbsp Dominican Republic Occupation of the Dominican Republic NoCuba 1917 1922 nbsp Cuba Sugar Intervention No1960 1979 edit Occupied territory Years Occupied state Occupying state Event Part of war s Subsequently annexed Dominican Republic 1965 1966 nbsp Dominican Republic nbsp United States Invasion of the Dominican Republic Dominican Civil War No1980 1999 edit Occupied territory Years Occupied state Occupying state Event Part of war s Subsequently annexed Falkland Islands 1982 nbsp United Kingdom nbsp Argentina Occupation of the Falkland Islands Falklands War NoGrenada 1983 nbsp Grenada nbsp United States Invasion of Grenada Grenadian Revolution NoPanama 1989 1990 nbsp Panama nbsp United States Invasion of Panama War on drugs NoHaiti 1994 1995 nbsp Haiti nbsp United States nbsp Poland nbsp Argentina Operation Uphold Democracy 1991 Haitian coup d etat NoGained independence from France Spain editCountry Colonial name Colonial power Independence date First head of state War for independence nbsp Haiti Saint Domingue nbsp First French Empire January 1 1804 Jean Jacques Dessalines Haitian Revolution nbsp Dominican Republic as the Republic of Spanish Haiti Captaincy General of Santo Domingo nbsp Spanish Empire November 20 1821 Jose Nunez de Caceres Haitian occupation of Santo Domingo nbsp Dominican Republic Captaincy General of Santo Domingo nbsp Haiti February 27 1844 Juan Pablo Duarte Dominican War of Independence nbsp Dominican Republic Captaincy General of Santo Domingo nbsp Spanish Empire August 16 1865 Jose Maria Cabral Dominican Restoration WarGained independence from the British Empire United Kingdom editCountry Colonial name Colonial power Independence date First head of state War for independence nbsp United States Thirteen Colonies nbsp British Empire September 3 1783 13 George Washington American Revolutionary War nbsp Jamaica nbsp Jamaica nbsp United Kingdom August 6 1962 Alexander Bustamante nbsp Trinidad and Tobago nbsp Trinidad and Tobago nbsp United Kingdom August 31 1962 Eric Williams nbsp Guyana nbsp British Guiana nbsp United Kingdom May 26 1966 Forbes Burnham nbsp Barbados Barbados nbsp United Kingdom November 30 1966 Errol Barrow nbsp Bahamas nbsp Bahamas nbsp United Kingdom July 10 1973 Lynden Oscar Pindling nbsp Grenada nbsp British Windward Islands nbsp United Kingdom February 7 1974 Eric Matthew Gairy nbsp Dominica nbsp British Windward Islands nbsp United Kingdom November 3 1978 Louis Cools Lartigue nbsp Saint Lucia nbsp British Windward Islands nbsp United Kingdom February 22 1979 John Compton nbsp Saint Vincent and the Grenadines nbsp British Windward Islands nbsp United Kingdom October 27 1979 Milton Cato nbsp Belize nbsp British Honduras nbsp United Kingdom September 21 1981 George Cadle Price nbsp Antigua and Barbuda nbsp British Leeward Islands nbsp United Kingdom November 1 1981 Vere Cornwall Bird nbsp Canada nbsp Dominion of Canada nbsp United Kingdom 1867 1931 1982 John A Macdonald R B Bennett Pierre Trudeau 14 nbsp Saint Kitts and Nevis nbsp British Leeward Islands nbsp United Kingdom September 19 1983 Robert L Bradshaw Gained independence from Portugal editCountry Colonial name Colonial power Independence date First head of state War for independence nbsp Brazil United Kingdom of Portugal Brazil and the Algarves nbsp Portuguese Empire September 7 1822 Pedro I Brazilian War of Independence nbsp Uruguay Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata Cisplatina Province nbsp Spanish Empire nbsp Empire of Brazil in 1828 May 18 1811 August 27 1828 15 Jose Gervasio Artigas Juan Antonio Lavalleja Battle of Las Piedras Cisplatine WarGained independence from Mexico editCountry 16 Colonial name Colonial power 17 Independence date 18 First head of state 19 nbsp Costa Rica as part of nbsp United Provinces of Central America Viceroyalty of New Spain nbsp Spanish Empire in 1821 nbsp First Mexican Empire in 1823 September 15 1821 Gabino Gainza nbsp Guatemala as part of nbsp United Provinces of Central America Viceroyalty of New Spain nbsp Spanish Empire in 1821 nbsp First Mexican Empire in 1823 September 15 1821 Gabino Gainza nbsp Nicaragua as part of nbsp United Provinces of Central America Viceroyalty of New Spain nbsp British Empire Mosquito Coast in 1787 nbsp Spanish Empire in 1821 nbsp First Mexican Empire in 1823 September 15 1821 Gabino Gainza nbsp Honduras as part of nbsp United Provinces of Central America Viceroyalty of New Spain nbsp British Empire Mosquito Coast in 1787 nbsp Spanish Empire in 1821 nbsp First Mexican Empire in 1823 September 15 1821 Gabino Gainza nbsp El Salvador as part of nbsp United Provinces of Central America Viceroyalty of New Spain nbsp Spanish Empire in 1821 nbsp First Mexican Empire in 1823 September 15 1821 Gabino GainzaGained independence from the Netherlands editCountry 20 Colonial name Colonial power 21 Independence date 22 First head of state 23 nbsp Suriname Suriname nbsp Netherlands November 25 1975 Johan FerrierGained independence from Spain editNo Country Modern state Pre independence name if different Date year note1 nbsp Saint Domingue nbsp Haiti nbsp Captaincy General of Santo Domingo 1795 Peace of Basel ceded eastern portion to France2 nbsp First Republic of Paraguay nbsp Paraguay nbsp Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata 14 May 1811 May Revolution part of Spanish American wars of independence3 nbsp First Republic of Venezuela nbsp Venezuela nbsp Captaincy General of Venezuela 5 July 1811 Venezuelan wars of independence4 nbsp Uruguay nbsp Uruguay nbsp Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata 1811 Uruguay gained independence from Spain was annexed by the Empire of Brazil then regained independence in 1825 5 nbsp United Provinces of the Rio de la Plata nbsp Argentina nbsp Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata 9 July 1816 Argentine wars of independence6 nbsp State of Chile nbsp Chile nbsp Captaincy General of Chile 12 February 1818 Chilean wars of independence7 nbsp Gran Colombia nbsp Colombia nbsp Viceroyalty of New Granada 17 December 1819 Bolivar s campaign to liberate New Granada8 nbsp Protectorate of Peru nbsp Peru nbsp Viceroyalty of Peru 28 July 1821 Peruvian War of Independence9 nbsp First Mexican Empire nbsp Mexico nbsp New Spain 15 September 1821 Mexican War of Independence10 nbsp Costa Rica nbsp New Spain nbsp Captaincy General of Guatemala 15 September 1821 Costa Rica part of 1st Mexican Empire Then later got independence and creation of Federal Republic of Central America in 1823 Then later dissolved in 1841 creation of Costra Rica 11 nbsp El Salvador nbsp New Spain nbsp Captaincy General of Guatemala 15 September 1821 El Salvador part of 1st Mexican Empire Then later got independence and creation of Federal Republic of Central America in 1823 Then later dissolved in 1841 creation of El Salvador 12 nbsp Guatemala nbsp Belize nbsp New Spain nbsp Captaincy General of Guatemala 15 September 1821 Guatemala part of 1st Mexican Empire Then later got independence and creation of Federal Republic of Central America in 1823 Then later dissolved in 1841 creation of Guatemala late British annexed north east Guatemala and made colony of British Honduras13 nbsp Honduras nbsp New Spain nbsp Captaincy General of Guatemala 15 September 1821 Honduras part of 1st Mexican Empire Then later got independence and creation of Federal Republic of Central America in 1823 Then later dissolved in 1841 creation of Honduras 14 nbsp Nicaragua nbsp New Spain nbsp Captaincy General of Guatemala 15 September 1821 Nicaragua part of 1st Mexican Empire Then later got independence and creation of Federal Republic of Central America in 1823 Then later dissolved in 1841 creation of Nicaragua 15 nbsp Panama nbsp Panama nbsp Viceroyalty of New Granada November 28 1821 Independence of Panama Bloodless revolution 16 nbsp Ecuador nbsp Ecuador nbsp Viceroyalty of New Granada 24 May 1822 Ecuadorian War of Independence17 nbsp Bolivian Republic nbsp Bolivia nbsp Viceroyalty of the Rio de la Plata 6 August 1825 Bolivia war of independence18 nbsp Second Dominican Republic nbsp Dominican Republic nbsp Captaincy General of Santo Domingo Spanish occupation of the Dominican Republic 15 July 1865 Spain ceded the island to France in the Peace of Basel Spain recaptured the eastern portion of Santo Domingo 1809 1821 the Espana Boba period The Republic of Spanish Haiti gained independence from Spain in 1821 was occupied by Haiti then gained independence as the First Dominican Republic reoccupied by Spain 1861 1865 the Second Dominican Republic gained independence but was occupied by the United States 1916 1924 The Third Dominican Republic followed the U S occupation 19 nbsp nbsp Cuba nbsp Cuba nbsp Captaincy General of Cuba 10 October 1868 Cuba got independence from Spain But United States occupied Cuban USA and Spain has sigin deal of Treaty of Paris 1898 Spain give Cuba to USA to end Spanish American war Then later Cuba got independence from USA in 1902 and established First Cuba Republic 20 nbsp United States nbsp Puerto Rico Unincorporated nbsp Spanish Empire nbsp Captaincy General of Puerto Rico nbsp Spanish East Indies 11 April 1899 Treaty of Paris 1898 North America editThis is a list of all present sovereign states in North America and their predecessors The division between North and South America is unclear generally viewed as lying somewhere in the Isthmus of Panama however the Caribbean Islands Central America including the whole of Panama is considered to be part of North America as its southernmost nation The continent was colonized by the Europeans Mainly by the Spaniards the French the English and the Dutch The United States of America gained its independence in American Revolutionary War most of nations in Central America gained independence in the early 19th century Canada and many other island countries in the Caribbean Sea most of them were British colonies gained their independence in 20th century Today North America consists of twenty two sovereign states with common government system being some form of presidential republic Sovereign state PredecessorsAntigua and Barbuda nbsp Colony of Antigua 1671 1816 1833 1958 part of British Leeward Islands nbsp Colony of Barbuda 1671 1816 1833 1958 part of British Leeward Islands nbsp Part of West Indies Federation 1958 1962 nbsp Colony of Antigua 1962 1981 Associated State since 1967 nbsp Antigua and Barbuda 1981 present Commonwealth realm Bahamas The nbsp Colony of the Bahamas 1648 1717 nbsp nbsp Colony of the Bahamas 1717 1973 nbsp Commonwealth of the Bahamas 1973 present Barbados nbsp Colony of Barbados 1625 1885 part of British Windward Islands nbsp Colony of Barbados 1885 1958 1962 1966 separated Crown colony nbsp Part of West Indies Federation 1958 1962 nbsp Barbados 1966 present Belize nbsp British Honduras 1862 1973 nbsp Belize 1973 1981 British self governing colony nbsp Belize 1981 present Commonwealth realm Canada nbsp New France 1535 1763 a French colony nbsp Province of Quebec 1763 1791 nbsp Province of Upper Canada 1791 1841 nbsp Province of Lower Canada 1791 1841 nbsp United Province of Canada 1841 1867 nbsp Rupert s Land 1670 1870 a territory of the Hudson s Bay Company nbsp North Western Territory 1859 1870 nbsp Colony of British Columbia 1858 1871 included the Colony of Vancouver Island and former British Columbia since 1866 Provisional Government of Saskatchewan 1885 unrecognized Metis republic defeated in the North West Rebellion nbsp Newfoundland Colony 1610 1907 nbsp Dominion of Newfoundland 1907 1949 a dominion within British Empire 1907 1934 a dependency of United Kingdom 1934 1949 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Canada 1867 present before the Second World War the term Dominion of Canada were also used Costa Rica nbsp Part of Real Audiencia of Guatemala 1543 1609 part of New Spain nbsp Part of Captaincy General of Guatemala 1609 1821 part of New Spain nbsp Part of Mexican Empire 1822 1823 nbsp Part of Federal Republic of Central America 1823 1838 nbsp nbsp Free State of Costa Rica 1838 1847 nbsp First Costa Rican Republic 1848 1948 nbsp Second Costa Rican Republic 1949 present Cuba nbsp Part of Captaincy General of Santo Domingo 1512 1607 nbsp Captaincy General of Cuba 1607 1898 nbsp United States Military Government in Cuba 1898 1902 nbsp Republic of Cuba 1902 1959 1902 1959 nbsp Republic of Cuba 1959 present Dominica nbsp Colony of Dominica part of British Leeward Islands 1871 1958 1763 1958 nbsp Part of West Indies Federation 1958 1962 nbsp Dominica 1962 1978 Associated State since 1967 nbsp Commonwealth of Dominica 1978 present Dominican Republic nbsp Captaincy General of Santo Domingo 1492 1795 nbsp nbsp Colony of Saint Domingue 1795 1809 nbsp Captaincy General of Santo Domingo 1809 1821 nbsp Republic of Spanish Haiti 1821 1822 nbsp Occupied by Haiti 1822 1844 nbsp Dominican Republic 1844 1861 nbsp Occupied by Spain 1861 1865 nbsp Dominican Republic 1865 present El Salvador nbsp Part of Real Audiencia of Guatemala 1543 1609 part of New Spain nbsp Part of Captaincy General of Guatemala 1609 1821 part of New Spain nbsp Part of Mexican Empire 1822 1823 nbsp Part of Federal Republic of Central America 1823 1841 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Republic of El Salvador 1841 present before 1890 referred to as Republic of Salvador in English Grenada nbsp French Grenada 1649 1763 nbsp British Grenada 1763 1958 part of nbsp British Windward Islands 1833 1958 nbsp Part of West Indies Federation 1958 1962 nbsp nbsp British Grenada 1962 1974 Associated State since 1967 nbsp Grenada Commonwealth realm 1974 present Guatemala nbsp Part of Real Audiencia of Guatemala 1543 1609 nbsp Part of Captaincy General of Guatemala 1609 1821 nbsp Part of Mexican Empire 1822 1823 nbsp Part of Federal Republic of Central America 1823 1839 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Republic of Guatemala 1839 present Haiti nbsp nbsp Colony of Saint Domingue 1625 1804 nbsp Empire of Haiti 1804 1806 nbsp State of Haiti 1806 1811 northern Haiti nbsp Kingdom of Haiti 1811 1820 nbsp Republic of Haiti 1806 1849 included northern Haiti since 1820 with Dominican Republic annexed 1822 1844 nbsp Empire of Haiti 1849 1859 nbsp nbsp Republic of Haiti 1859 present occupied by United States 1915 1934 Honduras nbsp Part of Real Audiencia of Guatemala 1543 1609 nbsp Part of Captaincy General of Guatemala 1609 1821 nbsp Part of Mexican Empire 1822 1823 nbsp Part of Federal Republic of Central America 1823 1838 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Republic of Honduras 1838 present Jamaica nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Colony of Jamaica 1655 1962 nbsp Jamaica 1962 present Commonwealth realm Mexico Aztec Empire nbsp Viceroyalty of New Spain 1521 1821 nbsp Mexican Empire 1821 1823 nbsp Provisional Government of Mexico 1823 1824 nbsp United Mexican States 1824 1835 nbsp Mexican Republic 1835 1846 nbsp United Mexican States 1846 1863 nbsp Mexican Empire 1863 1867 nbsp United Mexican States 1867 present Nicaragua nbsp Part of Real Audiencia of Guatemala 1543 1609 nbsp Part of Captaincy General of Guatemala 1609 1821 nbsp Part of Mexican Empire 1822 1823 nbsp Part of Federal Republic of Central America 1823 1838 nbsp nbsp nbsp Republic of Nicaragua 1838 present Saint Kitts and Nevis nbsp Colony of Saint Christopher 1623 1882 since 1833 part of nbsp British Leeward Islands nbsp Colony of Nevis 1628 1882 since 1833 part of nbsp British Leeward Islands nbsp Colony of Saint Christopher Nevis Anguilla 1882 1958 part of nbsp British Leeward Islands Anguilla separated from 1882 to 1951 nbsp Part of West Indies Federation 1958 1962 nbsp Saint Christopher Nevis Anguilla 1962 1983 Associated State since 1967 Anguilla separated since 1980 nbsp Federation of Saint Kitts and Nevis 1983 present also known as the Federation of Saint Christopher and Nevis Saint Lucia nbsp Colony of Sainte Lucie 1674 1814 nbsp Colony of Saint Lucia 1814 1958 since 1838 part of nbsp British Windward Islands nbsp Part of West Indies Federation 1958 1962 nbsp nbsp Colony of Saint Lucia 1962 1979 Associated State since 1967 nbsp Saint Lucia Commonwealth realm 1979 present Saint Vincent and the Grenadines nbsp Colony of Saint Vincent 1763 1958 since 1838 part of nbsp British Windward Islands nbsp Part of West Indies Federation 1958 1962 nbsp Colony of Saint Vincent 1962 1979 Associated State since 1967 nbsp nbsp nbsp Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 1979 present Commonwealth realm United States nbsp Thirteen Colonies 1732 1776 Province of New Hampshire Province of Massachusetts Bay Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations Connecticut Colony Province of New York Province of New Jersey Province of Pennsylvania Delaware Colony Province of Maryland Colony of Virginia Province of Carolina Province of North Carolina Province of South 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