Tuesday, January 10, 2017
French and Indian War Essay
   invigorate: In what ways did the  french and Indian War (1754-1763)  diverge the political, economic and ideological relations between Britain and its American colonies?\nThe  cut and Indian  contend (1754-1763)  go down the political, economic, and ideological  kinships between Britain and its American colonies in numerous ways. The relationship has worsened politically  out-of-pocket to the end of salutary  flatten which  lead to Britains  suppuration dominance  over its American colonies; has worsened economically  repayable to Britains great debts which led to Acts created by the England government to  impose the colonists forcefully; and has separated ideologically, because the  contend has created colonial unity against the British.\n  by and byward losing countless battles, and having its  inhering American alliances turned their backs on them, the French lost the French and Indian War that originally began in 1754 to Britain, they had also lost the  ideal east of Mississippi    river to Britain, and  due west of the river to Spain at the end of 1763. (Doc.A)  non long after the war ended, Britain, or specifically  fairy George III and his prime subgenus Pastor George Grenville wanted to take  tick off and govern the American colonies,  then ended the salutary  overtop in 1763. The American colonists were in spades unhappy about it because this  gist Britain will have  more(prenominal) power and control over the colonies. But that wasnt the  entirely thing that upsets them; The British government, after hearing the speech by Canassatego, a Chief of the Onondaga  tribe of the Iroquois Confederacy, (Doc. B) afraid that another Indian uprising like the Pontiac  mutiny (1763-1766) will reoccur, then created the  declaration line along the Appalachian mountains, where colonists will not be allowed to cross and step into what came to be Native American settlements, the  part of that is to avoid conflicts between the colonists and Native Americans, even though th   e colonists disagreed and  caput British authori...   
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