Assignment
Assignment
Hunter Commission (1882): Emphasized primary Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan (2001): Massive program
education and female education. for universalizing elementary education.
Saddler Commission (1917–19): Reforms for Right to Education Act (2009): Made education a
university education and curriculum. fundamental right for children aged 6–14.
Government of India Act, 1935: Transferred Rashtriya Madhyamik Shiksha Abhiyan (2009):
education to provincial control. Strengthened secondary education.
Senegal 5. Oceania
Mali New Caledonia (still French)
Niger
French Polynesia (still French) Suriname (Dutch Guiana; kept until 1975
Wallis and Futuna (still French) independence)
Clipperton Island (still French) Parts of Guyana (formerly Essequibo,
Short-lived presence in parts of Australia Demerara, Berbice)
(early explorers, not permanent colonies) Parts of Brazil (New Holland, 1630–1654
— Pernambuco, Recife, and surrounding
6. Current French Overseas Territories
areas)
Americas: Guadeloupe, Martinique, Saint Pierre
and Miquelon, French Guiana, Saint Barthélemy,
Saint Martin 3. Africa
DUTCH COLONIES
4. Asia
1. North America
Indian Subcontinent:
New Netherland (1614–1664):
Cochin (Kochi, Kerala)
New Amsterdam (now New York City)
Nagapattinam (Tamil Nadu)
Parts of New Jersey
Tuticorin (Tamil Nadu)
Parts of Delaware
Masulipatnam (Andhra Pradesh)
Parts of Connecticut
Surat (Gujarat)
Caribbean / West Indies (Dutch West India Pulicat (Tamil Nadu) — main VOC
Company): headquarters in India
Curaçao (still Dutch)
Aruba (still Dutch) Sri Lanka (Dutch Ceylon, 1658–1796)
Bonaire (still Dutch)
Indonesia (Dutch East Indies — the largest
Sint Eustatius (still Dutch)
colony):
Saba (still Dutch)
Sint Maarten (still Dutch) Java
Tobago (briefly) Sumatra
Tortola (briefly) Borneo (Kalimantan)
Saint Croix (briefly) Sulawesi
Saint Thomas (briefly) Maluku Islands (Spice Islands)
Bali
Timor (western part)
2. South America
Malaysia:
Malacca (1641–1824)
Taiwan (Formosa, 1624–1662)
2. Asia
6. Present Dutch Territories
Middle East & Persian Gulf:
These remain part of the Kingdom of the
Ormuz (Iran, 1515–1622)
Netherlands:
Muscat (Oman, 1507–1650)
In the Caribbean: Bahrain (1521–1602)
Qeshm Island (Iran, briefly)
Aruba
Curaçao Indian Subcontinent:
Sint Maarten
Goa (1510–1961)
Bonaire
Daman and Diu (until 1961)
Sint Eustatius
Dadra and Nagar Haveli (until 1961)
Saba
Chaul (Maharashtra, until 1740s)
Vasai (Bassein, Maharashtra, until 1739)
Mangalore (briefly)
PORTUGUESE COLONIES
Cochin (Kochi, until 1663)
1. Africa Cannanore (Kannur, until 1663)
Surat (briefly)
West Africa:
Bombay (given to Britain in 1661 as part of
Ceuta (1415–1640) – first overseas colony Catherine of Braganza’s dowry)
Tangier (Morocco, 1471–1661)
Sri Lanka:
Arguin (Mauritania, 1445–1633)
São Tomé and Príncipe (still Portuguese Colombo, Galle, and coastal areas (1505–
until 1975) 1658)
Annobón (now Equatorial Guinea)
Guinea-Bissau (Portuguese Guinea, until
1974) Southeast Asia:
Cape Verde (until 1975)
Malacca (Malaysia, 1511–1641)
Elmina (Ghana, 1482–1637)
Timor (East Timor, until 1975)
Angola (until 1975)
Flores and Solor (Indonesia)
Makassar (Sulawesi, briefly) Texas (as part of New Spain)
California (Alta California)
China & East Asia:
New Mexico
Macau (1557–1999) Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Colorado (parts)
Ningbo, Quanzhou, and other early trade Louisiana (1762–1800)
bases in China (brief) Northern Mexico (Baja California, Sonora,
Nagasaki (Dejima, Japan — shared trade Chihuahua, etc.)
rights)
Caribbean:
Taiwan (brief presence in 1626–1642 in
Keelung & Tamsui) Cuba (1492–1898)
Hispaniola (Dominican Republic and Haiti’s
western part briefly)
3. Americas Puerto Rico (1493–1898)
Jamaica (until 1655)
South America:
Trinidad (until 1797)
Brazil (1500–1822) — included vast The Bahamas (briefly)
Amazon and inland areas Cayman Islands (briefly)
North America & Caribbean: Central America:
Newfoundland (Canada, fishing Guatemala
settlements) Belize (partially, before British takeover)
Barbados (briefly) Honduras
Trinidad (briefly) El Salvador
Nicaragua
Costa Rica
4. Pacific & Other Territories Panama
Several islands in the Pacific discovered South America:
and claimed but not colonized
Venezuela
permanently (Marianas, Caroline Islands
Colombia
— later taken by Spain)
Ecuador
Parts of Papua New Guinea (briefly)
Peru
Bolivia
5. Present Portuguese Territories Paraguay
Argentina
Madeira Chile
Azores Uruguay
2. Africa
SPANISH COLONIES North Africa:
1. Americas (Largest Part of the Spanish Empire) Ceuta (held briefly before Portuguese took
North America: it)
Melilla (still Spanish)
Florida (1513–1763; 1783–1821)
Oran, Mers El Kébir (Algeria, 1509–1708; Alhucemas, Chafarinas Islands, Peñón de
1732–1792) Vélez de la Gomera (small North African
Tripoli (briefly) enclaves)
West Africa:
Canary Islands (still Spanish)
Spanish Sahara (now Western Sahara) BRITISH COLONIES
Equatorial Guinea (Fernando Po / Bioko,
1.Americas
Annobón, Río Muni)
Cape Verde (briefly, before Portuguese North America:
control)
Thirteen Colonies (USA): Virginia,
Massachusetts, New Hampshire,
Maryland, Connecticut, Rhode Island,
3. Asia
Delaware, North Carolina, South Carolina,
South Asia: New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
Georgia
No permanent mainland colonies, but
Canada: Newfoundland, Nova Scotia,
Manila–Acapulco trade route brought
Prince Edward Island, Quebec, Ontario,
Spanish presence to India’s Goa and
Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, British
Gujarat via Portuguese alliance.
Columbia
Southeast Asia: Bermuda (still British Overseas Territory)
3. Asia
5. Present British Overseas Territories
South Asia:
Anguilla
India (British Raj: present-day India, Bermuda
Pakistan, Bangladesh) British Antarctic Territory
Burma (Myanmar) British Indian Ocean Territory
Ceylon (Sri Lanka) British Virgin Islands
Maldives (protectorate) Cayman Islands
Falkland Islands
Desiderius Erasmus (1466–1536): Scholar
Gibraltar
Montserrat from Holland who defined the humanist
Pitcairn Islands movement in Northern Europe. Translator
Saint Helena, Ascension, Tristan da Cunha of the New Testament into Greek.
South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands
Rene Descartes (1596–1650): French
Sovereign Base Areas of Akrotiri and
Dhekelia (Cyprus) philosopher and mathematician regarded as
Turks and Caicos Islands the father of modern philosophy. Famous
for stating, “I think; therefore I am.”