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Thedecolonisation of Asia was the gradual growth ofindependence movements inAsia, concluding withthe independence of the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste from Indonesia in 2002. It led ultimately to the retreat of foreign powers and the creation of several nation-states in the region.
The decline of Spain and Portugal in the 17th century paved the way for other European powers, namely the Netherlands, France and England. ThePortuguese Empire would lose influence in all but three of its colonies,Portuguese India,Macau andTimor.
By the end of the 17th century, the Dutch had taken over much of the old Portuguese colonies, and had established a strong presence in present-day Indonesia, with colonies inAceh,Bantam,Makassar andJakarta. The Dutch also had trade links withSiam, Japan, China andBengal.
The British had competed with Portuguese, Spanish and Dutch for their interests in Asia since the early 17th century and by the mid-19th century held much of India (via theBritish East India Company), as well asBurma,Ceylon,Malaya andSingapore. AfterThe Indian Rebellion of 1857,Queen Victoria was declared Empress of India, thus solidifying the British rule on the subcontinent. The last British acquisition in Asia was theNew Territories of Hong Kong, which was leased from theQing emperor in 1897, expanding the British colony originally ceded in theTreaty of Nanking in 1842.
The French had little success in India following defeats against the British in the 17th century, though they held onto possessions on the east coast of India (such asPondicherry andMahar) until decolonisation. The French established their most lucrative and substantial colony in Indochina in1862 (→French Indochina), eventually occupying the present-day areas ofVietnam,Laos andCambodia by 1887.
Japan's first colony was theisland of Taiwan, occupied in 1874 and officiallyceded by theQing emperor in 1894. Japan continued its early imperialism with theannexation of Korea in 1910.
The United States entered the region in 1898 during theSpanish–American War, taking thePhilippines as its sole colony after amock battle in the capital and the later formal acquisition of the Philippines from Spain through the 1898Treaty of Paris.
The following list shows the colonial powers following the end ofWorld War II in 1945, their colonial or administrative possessions and the date of decolonisation.[1]
| Country | Date of acquisition of sovereignty | Acquisition of sovereignty |
|---|---|---|
| 1919 | Treaty of Rawalpindi ends British control of foreign policy | |
| 15 August 1971 | End of treaties with theUnited Kingdom | |
| 26 March 1971 | Independence from Pakistan declared | |
| 1885 | Ugyen Wangchuck ends a period of civil war and unites Bhutan | |
| 1 January 1984 | Brunei regains its independence after an agreement with the British on 4 January 1979 | |
| 9 September 1953 | France grants Cambodia independence | |
| 26 September 1989 | Becomes free fromVietnamese occupation; it gets back its name instead of thePeople's Republic of Kampuchea | |
| 1 January 1912 | On the first day of January 1912 TheRepublic of China unilaterally declared their independence. | |
| 7 December 1949 | On the 1st of October 1949 the Chinese Communist Party wins against the Kuomintang which then retreats to the island of Taiwan. | |
| 15 August 1947 | Independence from theBritish Empire | |
| 27 December 1949 | Independence from theKingdom of the Netherlands following their unilateralProclamation of Indonesian Independence on 17 August 1945 and subsequentDutch–Indonesian Round Table Conference inThe Hague. | |
| 609 BC | After the fall of Assyria between 616 BC and 609 BC, a unified Median state was formed, which together with Babylonia, Lydia, and ancient Egypt became one of the four major powers of the ancient Near East. | |
| 762 | TheAbbasid Caliphate built the city ofBaghdad along the Tigris in the 8th century as its capital, and the city became the leading metropolis of theArab andMuslim world for five centuries | |
| 3 October 1932 | Kingdom of Iraq | |
| 14 May 1948 | Upon the end of theBritish Mandate, Jewsdeclared independence, forming theState of Israel; the remainder of Palestine came under control of Egypt (Gaza Strip) andTransjordan (West Bank) | |
| 4th century CE | During the subsequentKofun period, most of Japan gradually unified under a single kingdom | |
| 25 May 1946 | End of theBritish Mandate | |
| 1752 | Establishment of theSheikhdom of Kuwait | |
| 31 August 1991 | Independence from the Soviet Union | |
| 22 October 1953 | Independence from France | |
| 26 November 1941 | Independence from France declared | |
| 22 November 1943 | Independence from France recognised | |
| 31 August 1957 | Malayan independence from the United Kingdom was declared inDataran Merdeka (Independence Square) | |
| 16 September 1963 | Malaysia was formed by the federation ofNorth Borneo,Sarawak andSingapore with the existing States of theFederation of Malaya. | |
| 26 July 1965 | Independence from the United Kingdom | |
| 1206 | Mongol Empire formed | |
| 29 December 1911 | Proclamation of Mongolian independence fromManchu'sQing dynasty | |
| 4 January 1948 | Myanmar (Burma) declares independence from theBritish Empire | |
| 25 September 1768 | Nepali unification | |
| 26 January 1650 | Expulsion of thePortuguese Army from Oman | |
| 14 August 1947 | Independence fromBritish India inthe Partition | |
| 15 November 1988 | Palestinian Declaration of Independence | |
| 12 June 1898 | Theevolving revolutionary movement in Philippine revolutionariesdeclared independence from theSpanish Empire but sovereignty remained with Spain, which ceded the country to the United States. | |
| 4 July 1946 | The United States recognises independence under the provisions of theTreaty of Manila (1946). The1935 Constitution remained in effect until 1973, when theMarcos regime promulgateda newer one, replaced in turn by the present1987 Constitution. | |
| 18 December 1878 | Independence from the Ottoman Empire | |
| 1744 | Establishment of the First Saudi State | |
| 3 June 1959 | Self-government under the United Kingdom | |
| 9 August 1965 | Malaysia unilaterally expels Singapore from the federation of Malaysian states, creating an independent Singaporean state | |
| 4 February 1948 | Independence from the United Kingdom | |
| 17 April 1946 | End of theFrench Mandate | |
| 28 September 1961 | End of theUnited Arab Republic | |
| 9 September 1991 | Independence from the Soviet Union | |
| 6 November 1767 | King Taksin the Great reunifies Thailand, establishing anew kingdom and repelling Burmese invasions | |
| 28 November 1975 | East Timor declares its independence but wasoccupied by Indonesia | |
| 20 May 2002 | Independence was recognised by the international community following theUN-sponsored act of self-determination of 1999 | |
| 27 October 1991 | Independence from the Soviet Union | |
| 2 December 1971 | End of a treaty relationship with the United Kingdom | |
| 31 August 1991 | Independence from the Soviet Union declared | |
| 7th century BC | Hùng king establishedVan Lang, the first kingdom of Vietnam | |
| 1 November 1918 | Independence ofNorth Yemen from theTurkish Empire | |
| 30 November 1967 | Independence ofSouth Yemen from theUnited Kingdom |
Burma was almost completely occupied by theImperial Japanese Army during the Second World War. Many Burmese fought alongside Japan in the initial stages of the war, though the Burmese Army and most Burmese switched sides in 1945.
A transitional government sponsored by the British government was formed in the years following the Second World War, ultimately leading to Burma's independence in January 1948.
Following the capitulation of France and the formation of theVichy regime, France's Indochinese possessions were given to Japan. While there was some argument that Indochina should not be returned to France, particularly from the United States, Cambodia nevertheless remained under French rule after the end of hostilities.
France had placedNorodom Sihanouk on the throne in 1941 and was hoping for a puppet monarch. They were mistaken. However, the King led the way to Cambodian independence in 1953, taking advantage of the background of theFirst Indochina War being fought inVietnam.
Ceylon was an important base of operations for theWestern Allies during the Second World War. The British gave in to popular pressure for independence and in February 1948, the country won its independence as theDominion of Ceylon.
For some clarification and more detail including the sovereignty status of theRepublic of China, see the following articles:History of China,Cross-Strait relations,One-China policy andPolitical status of Taiwan. Hong Kong was returned to the United Kingdom following itsoccupation by the Japanese during the Second World War.[2] It was controlled directly by a British governor until the expiry of the ninety-nine-year lease of theNew Territories, which occurred in 1997. From that date, the territory was returned toPeople's Republic of China and controlled as aSpecial Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China.
Philippine revolutionaries unilaterralydeclared independence from Spain in 1898, during theSpanish–American War, but sovereignty remained with Spain. Spain ceded the Philippines to the United States in the 1898Treaty of Paris that concluded that war. In 1899, Philippine revolutionaries established theFirst Philippine Republic. Shortly thereafter, thePhilippine–American War began, ending in 1901 with a U.S. victory, though isolated fighting continued for several years thereafter.
In 1902, the Philippines became aU.S. territory with the ratification of the Treaty of Paris on April 11, 1899, later becoming aU.S. Commonwealth in 1936. It wasoccupied by the Japanese during the Second World War. In 1943, with Japan granting it a short-lived nominal independence. In 1944, theAllied invasion of the Philippines by combined U.S. and Filipino troops began, which resulted in Americans and Filipinos regaining full control of the nation. In 1946, the United States recognised Philippine independence in the 1946Treaty of Manila.
The "colonial power" and "colonial name" columns are merged when required to denote territories, where current countries are established, that have not been decolonised but achieved independence in different ways.
The 9 states may be divided into the following five regional categories. The distinguishing traits of each region result from geographic and cultural factors as well as their respective historical relations withRussia. Not included in these categories are the severalde facto independent states presently lacking international recognition (read below:Separatist conflicts).
| Region | Country name | First flag | Current flag | Capital | Independence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asia | Russia(Russian Federation) | Moscow | 12 December 1991 | ||
| Central Asia | Uzbekistan(Republic of Uzbekistan) | Tashkent | 31 August 1991 | ||
| Kazakhstan(Republic of Kazakhstan) | Astana | 16 December 1991 | |||
| Kyrgyzstan(Kyrgyz Republic) | Bishkek | 31 August 1991 | |||
| Tajikistan(Republic of Tajikistan) | Dushanbe | 9 September 1991 | |||
| Turkmenistan | Ashgabat | 27 October 1991 | |||
| Transcaucasia | Georgia(formerly the Republic of Georgia) | Tbilisi | 9 April 1991 | ||
| Azerbaijan(Republic of Azerbaijan) | Baku | 30 August 1991 | |||
| Armenia(Republic of Armenia) | Yerevan | 21 September 1991 | |||
| Total former Soviet Union | |||||
| Country | Pre-independence name (different) | Date | Year of independence or first stage | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Northern Persia | 19 August | 1919 | Anglo-Afghan Treaty of 1919 | |
| 15 August | 1971 | |||
| 1 January | 1984 | |||
| 16 August | 1960 | Cyprus Independence Day is commonly celebrated on 1 October. | ||
| 28 February | 1922 | Control over the Suez Canal Zone was maintained until 1952. | ||
| British India | 15 August | 1947 | Independence Day (India) | |
| 3 October | 1932 | |||
| Mandatory Palestine | 14 May | 1948 | End of British mandate Independence Day (Israel) | |
| Transjordan | 25 May | 1946 | ||
| 19 June | 1961 | |||
| Four parts: Malaya North Borneo Singapore Sarawak | 31 August | 1957 | As theFederation of Malaya (Federation of Malaya Independence Act 1957).North Borneo (nowSabah),Sarawak andSingapore gained full independence and joined Malaysia on 16 September 1963 under theMalaysia Agreement (Malaysia Act 1963). | |
| 26 July | 1965 | |||
| 12 March | 1968 | |||
| British Burma | 4 January | 1948 | Gained independence as Burma. Renamed Myanmar in 1989, but still officially known by the United Kingdom government as Burma. | |
| Sultanate of Muscat and Oman | 20 December | 1951 | ||
| British India | 14 August | 1947 | Partition of India | |
| British Qatari Protectorate | 3 September | 1971 | ||
| 29 June | 1976 | |||
| 3 June | 1959 | Became self-governing on 3 June 1959 and gained independence from Malaysia on 9 August 1965. | ||
| Ceylon | 4 February | 1948 | Gained independence as theDominion of Ceylon. Renamed Sri Lanka in 1972. | |
| Trucial States | 2 December | 1971 | National Day (United Arab Emirates) | |
| Protectorate of South Arabia Federation of South Arabia | 30 November | 1967 | South Yemen 1967 |
British colonies inSouth Asia,East Asia, AndSoutheast Asia:
French colonies in South and Southeast Asia:
Dutch, British, Portuguese colonies and Russian territories in Asia:
The following list shows the colonial powers following the end ofWorld War II in 1945, their colonial or administrative possessions and the date of decolonisation.
| Territory | Date | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| South Sakhalin | 1905–1945 | |
| Mainland China | 1931–1945 | Manchukuo 50 million (1940),Jehol,Kwantung Leased Territory, Jiangsu, Shanghai, Shandong, Hebei, Beijing, Tianjin, plus parts of Guangdong, Guangxi, Hubei, Hunan, Fujian, Guizhou, Inner Mongolia |
| Japan | Prewar–1945 | Present day Japan, Kuril and Ryukyu Islands |
| Korea | 1910–1945 | Both North and South |
| Taiwan | 1895–1945 | |
| Hong Kong | 25 December 1941 – 30 August 1945 | Hong Kong (UK) |
| ::East Asia (subtotal) | – | |
| Vietnam | 22 September 1940 – August 1945 | AsFrench Indochina (FR),Empire of Vietnam |
| Cambodia | July 1941 – August 1945 | AsFrench Indochina,Japanese occupation of Cambodia, |
| Laos | July 1941 - August 1945 | AsFrench Indochina,Japanese occupation of Laos,Kingdom of Luang Prabang |
| Thailand | 8 December 1941 – 15 August 1945 | Independent State but Allied with Japan |
| Malaya | 8 December 1941 - 2 September 1945 (Malaya), 16 December 1941 – 12 September 1945 (Sarawak, Brunei, Labuan, North Borneo) | AsMalaya (UK),British Borneo (UK),Brunei (UK) |
| Philippines | 8 December 1941 – 2 September 1945 | Philippines (US),Second Philippine Republic |
| Dutch East Indies | 11 January 1942 - September 1945 | Dutch East Indies (NL) |
| Singapore | 8 February 1942 – 12 September 1945 | Singapore (UK) |
| Burma | 14 December 1941 – 13 September 1945 | Burma (UK),State of Burma |
| Portuguese Timor | 19 February 1942 – 11 September 1945 | Portuguese Timor (PT) |
| ::Southeast Asia (subtotal) | – | |
| New Guinea | December 1941 – September 1945 | AsNew Guinea (AU) |
| Guam | 8 December 1941 – 10 August 1944 | FromGuam (US) |
| South Seas Mandate | 1919–1945 | FromGermany |
| Nauru | 26 August 1942 – 13 September 1945 | FromNauru (AU, UK, NZ) |
| Wake Island, US | 8 December 1941 – 4 September 1945 | US |
| Kiribati | December 1941 – 1945 | FromGilbert Islands (UK) |
| ::Pacific Islands (subtotal) | – |
Disclaimer: Not all areas were considered part ofImperial Japan but rather part of puppet states & sphere of influence, allies, included separately for demographic purposes. Sources: POPULSTAT Asia Oceania
Other occupied World War 2 islands:
| Name of territory | Dates | Status | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Aden | 1839 | Colony subordinate toBombay Presidency British India | |
| 1932 | Separate province ofBritish India | ||
| 1937 | Separate Crown colony | ||
| 1963 | Part ofFederation of South Arabia | ||
| Afghanistan | 1839–1842 | Protectorate | |
| 1879 | Protectorate | ||
| 1919 | Independence | ||
| Assam | 1874–1905 | Province ofBritish India | |
| 1905–1912 | Incorporated into the new province of Eastern Bengal and Assam | ||
| 1912–1947 | Province of British India | Now a state of theRepublic of India | |
| Bahrain | 1880 | Protectorate | |
| 1961–1971 | Autonomous | ||
| 1971 | Independence | Invited to join theTrucial States, but declined | |
| Baluchistan | 1877–1896 | Province | |
| 1896–1947 | Province ofBritish India | ||
| 1947 | Part of Pakistan | Now part ofBalochistan and theFederally Administered Tribal Areas, inPakistan | |
| Bantam | 1603–1609 | Station | |
| 1609–1617 | Factory | ||
| 1617–1621 | Presidency | ||
| 1621 | Expelled by the Dutch | ||
| 1630–1634 | Subordinated toSurat | ||
| 1634–1652 | Presidency | ||
| 1652–1682 | Subordinated to Surat | ||
| 1682 | Expelled by the Dutch | Now inIndonesia | |
| Bencoolen ("Fort York", later "Fort Marlborough") | 1685–1760 | Coastal settlements of southwestern Sumatra, subordinated toMadras | |
| 1760–1785 | Presidency | ||
| 1785–1825 | Subordinated toBengal Presidency | ||
| 1825 | Part ofDutch East Indies | NowBengkulu, inIndonesia | |
| Bengal ("Fort William") | 1634–1658 | Factories | |
| 1658–1681 | Subordinated toMadras | ||
| 1681–82 | Agency | ||
| 1682–1694 | Presidency ofCoromandel and Bengal Settlements | ||
| 1694–1698 | Subordinated toMadras | ||
| 1698–1700 | Presidency of Coromandel and Bengal Settlements | ||
| 1700–1774 | Presidency | ||
| 1774–1905 | Presidency ofBritish India | ||
| 1905–1912 | Partitioned between [West] Bengal and Eastern Bengal and Assam | ||
| 1912–1937 | Presidency of British India | ||
| 1937–1947 | Province of British India | ||
| 1947 | Divided betweenIndia (West Bengal) andPakistan (East Bengal) | NowBangladesh, and part ofWest Bengal, Bihar,Odisha, andJharkhand, inIndia | |
| Brunei | 1888 | Protectorate | |
| 1967 | Protected state | ||
| 1984 | Independence | ||
| Burma (now called Myanmar) | 1824–1852 | Arakan,Tenasserim | |
| 1852–1886 | Lower Burma | ||
| 1885–1886 | Upper Burma | ||
| 1886 | Lower and Upper Burma United as a province ofBritish India | ||
| 1937 | Separate Crown Colony | ||
| 1948 | Independence | Name changed to Myanmar after a military junta in 1989. | |
| Eastern Bengal and Assam | 1905–1912 | Province ofBritish India | Established upon thepartition of Bengal (1905) |
| 1912 | Partition reversed | Split between the re-established province of Assam and the re-constituted presidency of Bengal | |
| Ceylon | 1795 | Ceded by the Dutch and subordinated to theMadras presidency ofBritish India | |
| 1798 | Separate Crown colony | ||
| 1948 | Independence | Now the Democratic Socialist Republic ofSri Lanka | |
| Dansborg | 1801–02 | Occupied | |
| 1808–1815 | Occupied | ||
| 1845 | purchased and incorporated intoBritish India | Now inTamil Nadu state, India | |
| Frederiksnagore | 1801–02 | Occupied | |
| 1808–1815 | Occupied | ||
| 1845 | Purchased and incorporated intoBritish India | Now inWest Bengal state, India | |
| Hong Kong | 1841 | Hong Kong Island occupied | |
| 1843–1982 | Crown colony | ||
| 1860 | Kowloon and Stonecutters Island ceded by China | ||
| 1898 | New Territories leased from China for 99 years | ||
| 1942–1945 | Occupied by Japan | ||
| 1945–1946 | Military administration | ||
| 1983–1997 | Dependent territory | ||
| 1997 | Handover to China as aspecial administrative region | ||
| Kuwait | 1899 | Protectorate | |
| 1961 | Independence | ||
| Indian Empire (British Raj) | 1613 | Company rule in India | |
| 1858 | Crown rule over theIndian Princely states, thePresidencies and provinces of British India | ||
| 1947 | Independent asIndia &Pakistan afterpartition | ||
| Mandatory Iraq | 1920–1932 | League of Nations mandate never passed, replaced byAnglo-Iraqi treaty with theKingdom of Iraq | |
| Java | 1811–1816 | Territory of theEast India Company | restored to theNetherlands |
| Malaya | 1824 | Transferred followingAnglo-Dutch Treaty of 1824 | |
| 1824–1867 | Territory ofBritish East India Company | ||
| 1867–1946 | Straits Settlements, Crown colony | ||
| 1895–1946 | Federated Malay States, protectorate | ||
| 1885–1946 | Johor, protectorate (part ofUnfederated Malay States) | ||
| 1909–1946 | Kedah, protectorate (part of Unfederated Malay States) | ||
| 1909–1946 | Kelantan, protectorate (part of Unfederated Malay States) | ||
| 1909–1946 | Perlis, protectorate (part of Unfederated Malay States) | ||
| 1909–1946 | Terengganu, protectorate (part of Unfederated Malay States) | ||
| 1942–1945 | Japanese occupation | ||
| 1945–1946 | Military Administration | ||
| 1946–1948 | Malayan Union | ||
| 1948–1957 | Federation of Malaya | ||
| 1957–1963 | Independent state | ||
| 1963 | AnnexNorth Borneo andSarawak forming the renamed federation ofMalaysia | ||
| North Borneo | 1882–1946 | Protectorate | |
| 1945–1946 | Military administration | Labuan to British N. Borneo on 15 July 1946 | |
| 1946–1963 | Crown colony | Labuan to British N. Borneo on 15 July 1946 | |
| 1963 | Self-government | ||
| 1963 | Annexed by Malaya intoMalaysia | ||
| Palestine | 1920 | Mandate | |
| 1948 | British sovereignty relinquished; the proposed partition between a Jewish and an Arab state never fully materialised; the Jewish state –Israel – was established immediately after British withdrawal, with the short-livedAll-Palestine government following six months later | ||
| 1949 | Two sections of the former Palestine Mandate outside Israel – theWest Bank and theGaza Strip – were occupied byJordan andEgypt respectively following the collapse of theAll-Palestine government | ||
| 1956 | Gaza Strip briefly falls under Israeli occupation during theSuez Crisis | ||
| 1967 | West Bank andGaza Strip fall under Israeli occupation as a consequence of theSix-Day War | ||
| 1993 | APalestinian National Authority is declared in theWest Bank andGaza Strip; most matters regarding the day-to-day governance of these territories fell under its jurisdiction, in anticipation of a future Palestinian state | ||
| 2005 | Israel formally withdraws from theGaza Strip, placing it under full PNA control; despite this, Gazan waters are still under Israeli military control | ||
| Pulo Condore Island (Côn Đảo) | 1702 | Possession ofBritish East India Company | |
| 1705 | Abandoned | Now Côn Đảo, inVietnam | |
| Sarawak | 1888–1946 | Protected States | |
| 1945–1946 | Military administration | ||
| 1946–1963 | Crown colony | ||
| 1963 | Self-government | ||
| 1963 | Annexed by Malaya intoMalaysia | ||
| Straits Settlements | 1826–1858 | Possession underBritish East India Company | |
| 1858–1867 | Subordinated toBritish India | ||
| 1867–1946 | Crown colony | ||
| 1942–1945 | Occupied by Japan | ||
| 1946 | Dissolved | Now divided betweenMalacca andPenang, inMalaysia, and Singapore | |
| Qatar | 1916–1971 | Protectorate | |
| 1971 | Independence | Invited to join theTrucial States, but declined | |
| Surat | 1612–1658 | Factory | |
| 1658–1668 | Presidency | ||
| 1668–1685 | Possession underBritish East India Company | ||
| 1685–1703 | Subordinated toBombay | ||
| 1703 | Incorporated into Bombay | Now inIndia | |
| Singapore | 1824 | Purchased | |
| 1824 | Part of Straits Settlements (as residency of thePresidency of Bengal) | ||
| 1867–1946 | Part of Straits Settlements (crown colony) | ||
| 1946–1955 | Crown colony | ||
| 1955–1959 | self-governing colony | ||
| 1959–1963 | State of Singapore | ||
| 1963–1965 | Part of Malaysia | ||
| 1965 | Independence | ||
| Transjordan | 1920 | Part ofPalestine Mandate | |
| 1923 | Formally separated from Palestine | ||
| 1928 | Emirate independent, except for military and financial control | ||
| 1946 | Formal independence | Now known asJordan | |
| Trucial States | 1892 | Protectorate | |
| 1971 | Formation of Federation of Arab Emirates | Now part of theUnited Arab Emirates | |
| Weihaiwei | 1898–1930 | Leased fromChina | |
| 1930 | Returned to theRepublic of China | Now part of thePeople's Republic of China | |
| West Bengal ("Bengal") | 1905–1912 | Province of British India | Established by the partition of Bengal. Abolished with the reversal of the partition and the creation of the new province ofBihar and Orissa. |
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