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A protectorate, in the context of international relations, is a state that is under protection by another state for defence against aggression and other violations of law.[1] It is a dependent territory that enjoys autonomy over most of its internal affairs, while still recognizing the suzerainty of a more powerful sovereign state without being a possession.[2][3][4] In exchange, the protectorate usually accepts specified obligations depending on the terms of their arrangement.[4] Usually protectorates are established de jure by a treaty.[2][3] Under certain conditions—as with Egypt under British rule (1882–1914)—a state can also be labelled as a de facto protectorate or a veiled protectorate.[5][6][7]
A protectorate is different from a colony as it has local rulers, is not directly possessed, and rarely experiences colonization by the suzerain state.[8][9] A state that is under the protection of another state while retaining its "international personality" is called a "protected state", not a protectorate.[10][lower-alpha 1]
Contents
1History
2Typology
2.1Foreign relations
2.2Protected state
2.3Colonial protection
2.4Amical protection
3Argentina's protectorates
3.1De facto
4Brazil's protectorates
5British Empire's protectorates and protected states
5.1Americas
5.2Europe
5.3South Asia
5.4Western Asia
5.5Africa
5.5.1De facto
5.6Oceania
5.7East and Southeast Asia
6China's protectorates
7Dutch Empire's protectorates
7.1Sumatra
7.2Riau Archipelago
7.3Java
7.4Bali
7.5Lombok
7.6Flores & Solor
7.7Borneo
7.8Celebes
7.8.1Ajattappareng Confederacy (1905-c. 1949)
7.8.2Mabbatupappeng Confederacy (1906-c. 1949)
7.8.3Mandar Confederacy (1906-c. 1949)
7.8.4Massenrempulu Confederacy (1905-c. 1949)
7.9The Moluccas
7.10West Timor & Alor
7.11New Guinea
8France's protectorates and protected states
8.1Africa
8.2Americas
8.3Asia
8.4Europe
8.5Oceania
9Germany's protectorates and protected states
10India's protectorates
11Italy's protectorates and protected states
12Japan's protectorates
13Poland's protectorates
14Portugal's protectorates
15Russia's and the Soviet Union's protectorates and protected states
15.1De facto
16Spain's protectorates
17Turkey's and the Ottoman Empire's protectorates and protected states
17.1De facto
18United Nations' protectorates
19United States' protectorates and protected states
19.1Contemporary usage by the United States
20Joint protectorates
21See also
22Notes
23References
24Bibliography
History
Protectorates are one of the oldest features of international relations, dating back to the Roman Empire. Civitates foederatae were cities that were subordinate to Rome for their foreign relations. In the Middle Ages, Andorra was a protectorate of France and Spain . Modern protectorate concepts were devised in the nineteenth century.[11]
Typology
Foreign relations
In practice, a protectorate often has direct foreign relations only with the protector state, and transfers the management of all its more important international affairs to the latter.[12][4][2][3] Similarly, the protectorate rarely takes military action on its own but relies on the protector for its defence. This is distinct from annexation, in that the protector has no formal power to control the internal affairs of the protectorate.
Protectorates differ from League of Nations mandates and their successors, United Nations Trust Territories, whose administration is supervised, in varying degrees, by the international community. A protectorate formally enters into the protection through a bilateral agreement with the protector, while international mandates are stewarded by the world community-representing body, with or without a de facto administering power.
Protected state
A protected state has a form of protection where it continues to retain an "international personality" and enjoys an agreed amount of independence in conducting its foreign policy.[10][13]
For political and pragmatic reasons, the protection relationship is not usually advertised, but described with euphemisms such as "an independent state with special treaty relations" with the protecting state.[14] A protected state appears on world maps just as any other independent state.[lower-alpha 1]
International administration of a state can also be regarded as an internationalized form of protection, where the protector is an international organisation rather than a state.[15]
Colonial protection
Multiple regions—such as the Colony and Protectorate of Nigeria, the Colony and Protectorate of Lagos, and similar—were subjects of colonial protection.[16][17] Conditions of protection are generally much less generous for areas of colonial protection. The protectorate was often reduced to a de facto condition similar to a colony, but with the pre-existing native state continuing as the agent of indirect rule. Occasionally, a protectorate was established by another form of indirect rule: a chartered company, which becomes a de facto state in its European home state (but geographically overseas), allowed to be an independent country with its own foreign policy and generally its own armed forces.[citation needed]
In fact, protectorates were often declared despite no agreement being duly entered into by the state supposedly being protected, or only agreed to by a party of dubious authority in those states. Colonial protectors frequently decided to reshuffle several protectorates into a new, artificial unit without consulting the protectorates, without being mindful of the theoretical duty of a protector to help maintain a protectorate's status and integrity. The Berlin agreement of February 26, 1885, allowed European colonial powers to establish protectorates in Black Africa (the last region to be divided among them) by diplomatic notification, even without actual possession on the ground. This aspect of history is referred to as the Scramble for Africa. A similar case is the formal use of such terms as colony and protectorate for an amalgamation—convenient only for the colonizer or protector—of adjacent territories, over which it held (de facto) sway by protective or "raw" colonial power.[citation needed]
Amical protection
In amical protection—as of United States of the Ionian Islands by Britain—the terms are often very favourable for the protectorate.[18][19] The political interest of the protector is frequently moral (a matter of accepted moral obligation, prestige, ideology, internal popularity, or dynastic, historical, or ethnocultural ties). Also, the protector's interest is in countering a rival or enemy power—such as preventing the rival from obtaining or maintaining control of areas of strategic importance. This may involve a very weak protectorate surrendering control of its external relations but may not constitute any real sacrifice, as the protectorate may not have been able to have a similar use of them without the protector's strength.
Amical protection was frequently extended by the great powers to other Christian (generally European) states, and to states of no significant importance.[ambiguous] After 1815, non-Christian states (such as the Chinese Qing dynasty) also provided amical protection of other, much weaker states.
In modern times, a form of amical protection can be seen as an important or defining feature of microstates. According to the definition proposed by Dumienski (2014): "microstates are modern protected states, i.e. sovereign states that have been able to unilaterally depute certain attributes of sovereignty to larger powers in exchange for benign protection of their political and economic viability against their geographic or demographic constraints".[20]
Argentina's protectorates
Liga Federal (1815–1820)
Peru (1820–1822)
Template:Country data Riograndense Republic Riograndense Republic (1836–1845)
Template:Country data Juliana Republic Juliana Republic (1839–1845)
Gobierno del Cerrito (1843–1851)
Paraguay (1876)
De facto
Republic of Tucumán (1820–1821)
National Territory of Misiones (1865–1954)
National Territory of the Gran Chaco (1874–1884)
National Territory of the Patagonia (1878–1884)
National Territory of the Tierra del Fuego, Antarctica and South Atlantic Islands (1884–1991)
Brazil's protectorates
Template:Country data Republic of Acre Republic of Acre (1899—1903)
Paraguay (1869—1876)
Uruguay (1828—1835)
British Empire's protectorates and protected states
Americas
Template:Country data Mosquito Coast Mosquitia (1638–1860; over Central America's Miskito Indian nation)
Europe
Template:Country data Two Sicilies Malta Protectorate (1800–1813); Crown Colony of Malta proclaimed in 1813) (de jure part of the Kingdom of Sicily but under British protection)
Ionian islands (1815–1864) (a Greek state and amical protectorate of Great Britain between 1815 and 1864)
British Cyprus (1871–1914) (put under British military administration 1914–22 then proclaimed a Crown Colony 1922–60)
South Asia
Cis-Sutlej states[21][22] (1809–1862)
Template:Country data Kingdom of Sikkim (1861–1947),(1947—1972)[23]
Template:Country data Emirate of Afghanistan (1879–1919; protected state)[14]
Afghanistan (1919 —1947,1948 ,1950,1956)
Various British Raj Princely States (1845-1947)
Bhutan (1906–1947,1948; protected state)[14]
Western Asia
British Residency of the Persian Gulf (1822–1971); headquarters based in Bushire, Persia
Bahrain, protected state (1880–1971)[14]
Sheikhdom of Kuwait, protected state (1899–1961)[14]
Qatar, protected state (1916–1971)
Trucial States; precursor state of the UAE, protected states (1892–1971)[14]
Abu Dhabi (1820–1971)
Ajman (1820–1971)
Dubai (1835–1971)
Fujairah (1952–1971)
Ras Al Khaimah (1820–1971)
Sharjah (1820–1971)
Kalba (1936–1951)
Umm al-Qaiwain (1820–1971)
Template:Country data Muscat and Oman (1892–1971; informal, protected state)[25][26]
Aden Protectorate (1872–1963); precursor state of South Yemen[27]
Eastern Protectorate States (mostly in Haudhramaut); later the Protectorate of South Arabia (1963–1967)
Kathiri
Mahra
Qu'aiti
Upper Yafa (consisted of five Sheikhdoms: Al-Busi, Al-Dhubi, Hadrami, Maflahi, and Mawsata)
Hawra
Irqa
Western Protectorate States; later the Federation of South Arabia (1959/1962–1967), including Aden Colony
Wahidi Sultanates (these included: Balhaf, Azzan, Bir Ali, and Habban)
Beihan
Dhala and Qutaibi
Fadhli
Lahej
Lower Yafa
Audhali
Haushabi
Upper Aulaqi Sheikhdom
Upper Aulaqi Sultanate
Lower Aulaqi
Alawi
Aqrabi
Dathina
Shaib
Africa
1960 stamp of Bechuanaland Protectorate with the portraits of Queen Victoria and Queen Elizabeth II
Template:Country data British Somaliland (1884–1960)[27]
Bechuanaland Protectorate (1885–1966)
Template:Country data Barotseland Protectorate (1889–1964)
Template:Country data Nyasaland Nyasaland Protectorate (1893–1964) ( British Central Africa Protectorate from 1889 until 1907)
Template:Country data Sultanate of Zanzibar (1890–1963)
Sultanate of Wituland (1890–1923)
Gambia Colony and Protectorate* (1894–1965)
Uganda Protectorate (1894–1962)
East Africa Protectorate (1895–1920)
Sierra Leone Protectorate* (1896–1961)
Nigeria* (1914–1960)
Northern Nigeria Protectorate (1900–1914)
Swaziland (1903–1968)
Southern Nigeria Protectorate (1900–1914)
Northern Territories of the Gold Coast (British protectorate) (1901–1957)
Sultanate of Egypt (1914–1922)
Kenya Protectorate* (1920–1963)
Template:Country data Kingdom of Egypt (1922–1936)
Template:Country data Northern Rhodesia (1924–1964)
*protectorates which existed alongside a colony of the same name
De facto
Khediviate of Egypt (1882–1913)
Oceania
Template:Country data Territory of Papua (1884–1888)
Tokelau (1877–1916)
Cook Islands (1888–1893)
Template:Country data Gilbert and Ellice Islands (1892–1916)
British Solomon Islands (1893–1978)
Niue (1900–1901)
Tonga (1900–1970)
East and Southeast Asia
Template:Country data North Borneo British North Borneo (1888–1946)
Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destinationBrunei (1888–1984)
Template:Country data Raj of Sarawak (1888–1946)
Template:Country data Malaya Federation of Malaya (1948–1957)
Template:Country data Federated Malay States (1895–1946)
Template:Country data Negeri Sembilan (1888–1895)
Sungai Ujong (1874–1888)
Jelebu (1886–1895)
Template:Country data Pahang (1888–1895)
Template:Country data Perak (1874–1895)
Template:Country data Selangor (1874–1895)
Unfederated Malay States (1904/09–1946)
Template:Country data Johor (1914–1946)
Template:Country data Johor Muar (1897–1909)
Template:Country data Kedah (1909–1946)
Template:Country data Kedah Kulim (1894–1909)
Template:Country data Kelantan (1909–1946)
Template:Country data Perlis (1909–1946)
Template:Country data Terengganu (1909–1946)
China's protectorates
Han dynasty:
Protectorate of the Western Regions
Tang dynasty:
Protectorate General to Pacify the West
Protectorate General to Pacify the North
Protectorate General to Pacify the East
Yuan dynasty:
Goryeo (1270–1356)[28]
Qing dynasty:
Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination Tibet[29][30][31][lower-alpha 2]
Dutch Empire's protectorates
Various sultanates in the Dutch East Indies (present day Indonesia):[35][36][37]
Sumatra
Tarumon Kingdom (1830-1946)
Langkat Sultanate (26 October 1869-December 1945)
Deli Sultanate (22 August 1862-December 1945)
Asahan Sultanate (27 September 1865-December 1945)
Bila (1864-1946)
Tasik (Kota Pinang) (1865-December 1945)
Siak Sultanate (1 February 1858-1946)
Sungai Taras (Kampong Raja) (1864-1916)
Panei (1864-1946)
Sultanate of Serdang (1865-December 1945)
Indragiri (1838-September 1945)
Jambi (1833-1899)
Kuala (1886-1946)
Pelalawan (1859-November 1945)
Siantar (1904-1946)
Tanah Jawa (1904-1946)
Riau Archipelago
Lingga-Riau (1819-1911)
Java
Banten (1682-1811)
Cirebon (1684-1819)
Yogjakarta Sultanate (13 February 1755-1942)
Mataram Sultanate (later Surakarta Sunanate) (26 February 1677-19 August 1945)
Principality of Mangkunegara (24 February 1757-1946)
Duchy of Pakualaman (22 June 1812-1942)
Semarang (1682-1809)
Bali
Klungkung (1843-1908)
Badung (1843-1906)
Bangli (1843-1908)
Buleleng (1841-1872; 1890-1893)
Gianyar (1843-1908)
Jembrana (1849-1882)
Karang Asem (1843-1908)
Tabanan (1843-1906)
Lombok
Lombok (1843-1894)
Sumbawa (1908-c. 1948)
Bima (8 December 1669-1949)
Dompu (1905-1942)
Flores & Solor
Larantuka (1860-c. 1947)
Tanah Kuna Lima (1917-1924)
Ndona (1917-1924)
Sikka (1879-c. 1947)
Borneo
Banjarmasin (1787-1860)
Pontianak Sultanate (16 August 1819-1942)
Sambas Sultanate (1819 - 1949)
Kubu (4 June 1823-1949)
Landak (1819-c. 1949)
Mempawah Kingdom (1819-1942)
Sanggau Kingdom (182? - 1949)
Sekadau (182?-c. 1949)
Simpang (1822-c. 1949)
Sintang (1822-1949)
Sukadana (1828-c.1949)
Kota Waringin Sultanate (1824-1949)
Kutai Kertanegara Sultanate (8 August 1825-1949)
Gunung Tabur (1844-c.1945)
Bulungan Sultanate (1844-c.1949)
Simbaliung (1844-c. 1949)
Kubu (1823-1949)
Tayan (1823-c. 1949)
Celebes
Gowa Sultanate (1669-1906; 1936-1949)
Bone Sultanate (1669-1905)
Bolaang Mongonduw (1825-c. 1949)
Laiwui (1858-c. 1949)
Luwu (1861-c. 1949)
Soppeng (1860-c. 1949)
Butung (1824-c. 1949)
Siau (1680-c. 1949)
Banggai (1907-c. 1949)
Tallo (1668-1780)
Wajo (1860-c. 1949)
Tabukan (1677-c. 1949)
Ajattappareng Confederacy (1905-c. 1949)
Malusetasi
Rapang
Swaito (union of Sawito & Alita, 1908)
Sidenreng
Supa
Mabbatupappeng Confederacy (1906-c. 1949)
Barru
Soppengriaja (union of Balusu, Kiru, & Kamiri, 1906)
Tanette
Mandar Confederacy (1906-c. 1949)
Balangnipa
Binuang
Cenrana
Majene
Mamuju
Pambauang
Tapalang
Massenrempulu Confederacy (1905-c. 1949)
Allah
Batulapa
Bontobatu
Enrekang
Kasa
Maiwa
Malua
The Moluccas
Ternate Sultanate (12 October 1676-1949)
Bacan Sultanate (1667-1949)
Tidore (1657-c.1949)
West Timor & Alor
Amanatun (1749-c. 1949)
Amanuban (1749-c. 1949)
Amarasi (1749-c. 1949)
Amfoan (1683-c. 1949)
Beboki (1756-c. 1949)
Belu (1756-c.1949)
Insana (1756-c.1949)
Sonbai Besar (1756-1906)
Sonbai Kecil (1659-1917)
Roti (Korbafo before 1928) (c. 1750-c.1949)
TaEbenu (1688-1917)
New Guinea
Dutch New Guinea:
Kaimana Sultanate (????-1949)
France's protectorates and protected states
Africa
"Protection" was the formal legal structure under which French colonial forces expanded in Africa between the 1830s and 1900. Almost every pre-existing state that was later part of French West Africa was placed under protectorate status at some point, although direct rule gradually replaced protectorate agreements. Formal ruling structures, or fictive recreations of them, were largely retained—as with the low-level authority figures in the French Cercles—with leaders appointed and removed by French officials.[38]
Benin traditional states
Independent of Danhome, under French protectorate, from 1889
Porto-Novo a French protectorate, 23 February 1863 – 2 January 1865. Cotonou a French Protectorate, 19 May 1868. Porto-Novo French protectorate, 14 April 1882.
Central African Republic traditional states:
French protectorate over Dar al-Kuti (1912 Sultanate suppressed by the French), 12 December 1897
French protectorate over the Sultanate of Bangassou, 1894
Burkina Faso was from 20 February 1895 a French protectorate named Upper Volta (Haute-Volta)
Chad: Baghirmi state 20 September 1897 a French protectorate
Côte d'Ivoire: 10 January 1889 French protectorate of Ivory Coast
Guinea: 5 August 1849 French protectorate over coastal region; (Riviéres du Sud).
Niger, Sultanate of Damagaram (Zinder), 30 July 1899 under French protectorate over the native rulers, titled Sarkin Damagaram or Sultan
Senegal: 4 February 1850 First of several French protectorate treaties with local rulers
Comoros21 April 1886 French protectorate (Anjouan) until 25 July 1912 when annexed.
Present Djibouti was originally, from 24 June 1884, the Territory of Obock and Protectorate of Tadjoura (Territoires Français d'Obock, Tadjoura, Dankils et Somalis), a French protectorate recognized by Britain on 9 February 1888, renamed on 20 May 1896 as French Somaliland (Côte Française des Somalis).
Mauritania: 12 May 1903 French protectorate; within Mauritania several traditional states:
Adrar emirate from 9 January 1909 French protectorate (before Spanish)
The Taganit confederation's emirate (founded by Idaw `Ish dynasty), from 1905 under French protectorate.
Brakna confederation's emirate
Emirate of Trarza: 15 December 1902 placed under French protectorate status.
Morocco – most of the sultanate was under French protectorate (30 March 1912 – 7 April 1956) although, in theory, it remained a sovereign state under the Treaty of Fez;[39] this[which?] fact was confirmed by the International Court of Justice in 1952.[40]
The northern part of Morocco was under Spanish protectorate in the same period.
Traditional Madagascar States
Kingdom of Imerina under French protectorate, 6 August 1896. French Madagascar colony, 28 February 1897.
Template:Country data Kingdom of Tunisia Tunisia (12 May 1881 – 20 March 1956): became a French protectorate by treaty
Americas
Template:Country data Second Mexican Empire Second Mexican Empire (1863–1867), established by Emperor Napoleon III during the Second French intervention in Mexico and ruled by the Austrian-born, French puppet monarch Maximilian I
Asia
1 Sapèque - Protectorate of Tonkin (1905)
French Indochina until 1953/54:
Annam and Tonkin 6 June 1884
Cambodia 11 August 1863
Laos 3 October 1893
Vietnam 6 June 1884
Europe
Template:Country data North Rhine-Westphalia Rhenish Republic (1923–1924)
Template:Country data Saar Protectorate Saar Protectorate (1946–1956), not colonial or amical, but a former part of Germany that would by referendum return to it, in fact a re-edition of a former League of Nations mandate. Most French protectorates were colonial.
Oceania
French Polynesia, mainly the Society Islands (several others were immediately annexed).[41] All eventually were annexed by 1889.
Otaheiti (native king styled Ari`i rahi) becomes a French protectorate known as Tahiti, 1842–1880
Raiatea and Tahaa (after temporary annexation by Otaheiti; (title Ari`i) a French protectorate, 1880)
Mangareva (one of the Gambier Islands; ruler title `Akariki) a French protectorate, 16 February 1844 (unratified) and 30 November 1871[42]
Wallis and Futuna:
Wallis declared to be a French protectorate by King of Uvea and Captain Mallet, 4 November 1842. Officially in a treaty becomes a French protectorate, 5 April 1887.
Sigave and Alo on the islands of Futuna and Alofi signed a treaty establishing a French protectorate on 16 February 1888.
Germany's protectorates and protected states
Banknotes of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, 1939–1945
The German Empire used the word Schutzgebiet, literally protectorate, for all of its colonial possessions until they were lost during World War I, regardless of the actual level of government control. Cases involving indirect rule included:
Template:Country data German New Guinea German New Guinea (1884–1920), now part of Papua New Guinea
German South West Africa (1884–1920), present-day Namibia
Togoland (1884–1914), now part of Ghana and Togo
North Solomon Islands (1885–1920), now part of Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands
Wituland (1885–1890), now part of Kenya
Ruanda-Urundi (1894–1920)
German Samoa (1900–1920), present-day Samoa
Marshall Islands
Template:Country data German New Guinea Nauru, various officials posted with the Head Chiefs
Gando Emirate (1895–1897)[43]
Gulmu (1895–1897)[43]
Before and during World War II, Nazi Germany designated the rump of occupied Czechoslovakia and Denmark as protectorates:
Template:Country data Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia (1939–1945), however it was also considered a partially annexed territory of Germany
Denmark (1940–1943)
India's protectorates
Bhutan (1947–2007).
Kingdom of Sikkim (1950–1975), later acceded to India as State of Sikkim.[44]
Italy's protectorates and protected states
The Albanian Republic (1917–1920) and the Albanian Kingdom (1939–1943)
Monaco under amical Protectorate of the Kingdom of Sardinia 20 November 1815 to 1860.
Ethiopia : 2 May 1889 Treaty of Wuchale, in the Italian language version, stated that Ethiopia was to become an Italian protectorate, while the Ethiopian Amharic language version merely stated that the Emperor could, if he so chose, go through Italy to conduct foreign affairs. When the differences in the versions came to light, Emperor Menelik II abrogated first the article in question (XVII), and later the whole treaty. The event culminated in the First Italo-Ethiopian War, in which Ethiopia was victorious and defended her sovereignty in 1896.
Libya: on 15 October 1912 Italian protectorate declared over Cirenaica (Cyrenaica) until 17 May 1919.
Benadir Coast in Somalia: 3 August 1889 Italian protectorate (in the northeast; unoccupied until May 1893), until 16 March 1905 when it changed to Italian Somaliland.
Majeerteen Sultanate since 7 April 1889 under Italian protectorate (renewed 7 April 1895), then in 1927 incorporated into the Italian colony.
Sultanate of Hobyo since December 1888 under Italian protectorate (renewed 11 April 1895), then in October 1925 incorporated into the Italian colony (known as Obbia).
Japan's protectorates
Korean Empire (1905–1910)
Manchukuo (1932–1945)
Template:Country data Mengjiang Mengjiang (1939–1945)
Poland's protectorates
Kaffa (1462–1475)
Portugal's protectorates
Cabinda (Portuguese Congo) (1885–1974), Portugal first claimed sovereignty over Cabinda in the February 1885 Treaty of Simulambuco, which gave Cabinda the status of a protectorate of the Portuguese Crown under the request of "the princes and governors of Cabinda".
Kingdom of Kongo (1857–1914)
Gaza Empire (1824–1895), now part of Mozambique
Angoche Sultanate (1903–1910)
Kingdom of Larantuka (1515–1859)
Russia's and the Soviet Union's protectorates and protected states
Cossack Hetmanate (1654–1764)
Kingdom of Kartli-Kakheti (1783–1801)
Kingdom of Imereti (1804–1810)
Revolutionary Serbia (1807–1812)
Template:Country data Principality of Serbia Principality of Serbia (1826–1856), now part of Serbia
Principality of Moldova (1829–1856), now part of Moldova, Romania and Ukraine
Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination Principality of Wallachia (1829–1856)
Emirate of Bukhara (1873–1920)
Khanate of Khiva (1873–1920)
Uryankhay Krai (1914)
Second East Turkestan Republic (1944–1949), now part of Xinjiang, China
De facto
Some sources mention the following territories as de facto Russian protectorates:
South Ossetia (2008–present)[45]
Transnistria (1992–present)[46]
Abkhazia (1994–present)[45]
Donetsk People's Republic (2015–2022)[47]
Luhansk People's Republic (2015–2022)[48]
Republic of Artsakh (2020–2023)[49][50][51]
Spain's protectorates
Spanish Morocco protectorate from 27 November 1912 until 2 April 1958 (Northern zone until 7 April 1956, Southern zone (Cape Juby) until 2 April 1958).
Sultanate of Sulu (1851–1899)
Turkey's and the Ottoman Empire's protectorates and protected states
Template:Country data Aceh Sultanate Aceh Sultanate (1569–1903)
Maldives (1560–1590)
Cossack Hetmanate (1669–1685)
De facto
Northern Cyprus (1983–present)
United Nations' protectorates
United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor (1999–2002)[52][53]
United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia (1992–1993)
United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (1999–present) (only de jure since 2008)
United Nations Temporary Executive Authority (1962–1963)
United Nations Transitional Administration for Eastern Slavonia, Baranja and Western Sirmium (1996–1998)
United States' protectorates and protected states
After becoming independent nations in 1902 and 1903 respectively, Cuba and Panama became protectorates of the United States . In 1903, Cuba and the U.S. signed the Cuban–American Treaty of Relations, which affirmed the provisions of the Platt Amendment, including that the U.S. had the right to intervene in Cuba to preserve its independence, among other reasons (the Platt Amendment had also been integrated into the 1901 constitution of Cuba). Later that year, Panama and the U.S. signed the Hay–Bunau-Varilla Treaty, which established the Panama Canal Zone and gave the U.S. the right to intervene in the cities of Panama and Colón (and the adjacent territories and harbors) for the maintenance of public order. The 1904 constitution of Panama, in Article 136, also gave the U.S. the right to intervene in any part of Panama "to reestablish public peace and constitutional order." Haiti later also became a protectorate after the ratification of the Haitian–American Convention (which gave the U.S. the right to intervene in Haiti for a period of ten years, which was later expanded to twenty years through an additional agreement in 1917) on September 16, 1915.
Cuba (1904–1934)[54][55]
Panama (1904–1939)
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Contemporary usage by the United States
Some agencies of the United States government, such as the Environmental Protection Agency, refer to the District of Columbia and insular areas of the United States—such as American Samoa and the U.S. Virgin Islands—as protectorates.[56] However, the agency responsible for the administration of those areas, the Office of Insular Affairs (OIA) within the United States Department of Interior, uses only the term "insular area" rather than protectorate.
District of Columbia
American Samoa
Guam
Northern Mariana Islands
Puerto Rico
U.S. Virgin Islands
Joint protectorates
Further information: Social:Condominium (international law)
Template:Country data Republic of Ragusa Republic of Ragusa (1684–1798), a joint Habsburg Austrian–Ottoman Turkish protectorate
The United States of the Ionian Islands and the Septinsular Republic were federal republics of seven formerly Venetian (see Provveditore) Ionian Islands (Corfu, Cephalonia, Zante, Santa Maura, Ithaca, Cerigo, and Paxos), officially under joint protectorate of the allied Christian powers, de facto a British amical protectorate from 1815 to 1864.
Anglo-Egyptian Sudan (1899–1956)
Independent State of Croatia (1941–1943)
Allied-occupied Germany (1945–1949)
Allied-occupied Austria (1945–1955)
See also
British Protected Person
Client state
European Union Police Mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina
EUFOR Althea
High Representative for Bosnia and Herzegovina
League of Nations mandate
Peace Implementation Council
Protector (titles for Heads of State and other individual persons)
Protectorate (imperial China)
Timeline of national independence
Tribute
Notes
↑ 1.01.1Protected state in this technical sense is distinguished from the informal usage of "protected state" to refer to a state receiving protection.
↑Some scholars regard the relationship as one of Priest-patron rather than a protectorate.[32][33][34]
References
↑Hoffmann, Protectorates (1987), p. 336.
↑ 2.02.12.2Fuess, Albrecht (1 January 2005). "Was Cyprus a Mamluk protectorate? Mamluk policies toward Cyprus between 1426 and 1517" (in en). Journal of Cyprus Studies11 (28–29): 11–29. ISSN 1303-2925. https://go.gale.com/ps/anonymous?id=GALE|A144051591&sid=googleScholar&v=2.1&it=r&linkaccess=abs&issn=13032925&p=AONE&sw=w. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
↑ 3.03.13.2Reisman, W. (1 January 1989). "Reflections on State Responsibility for Violations of Explicit Protectorate, Mandate, and Trusteeship Obligations". Michigan Journal of International Law10 (1): 231–240. ISSN 1052-2867. https://repository.law.umich.edu/mjil/vol10/iss1/21/. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
↑ 4.04.14.2Bojkov, Victor D.. "Democracy in Bosnia and Herzegovina: Post-1995 political system and its functioning". Southeast European Politics 4.1: 41–67. https://homepage.univie.ac.at/vedran.dzihic/bojkov_2003.pdf.
↑Leys, Colin (2014). "The British ruling class" (in en). Socialist Register50. ISSN 0081-0606. https://socialistregister.com/index.php/srv/article/view/20194. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
↑Kirkwood, Patrick M. (21 July 2016). ""Lord Cromer's Shadow": Political Anglo-Saxonism and the Egyptian Protectorate as a Model in the American Philippines" (in en). Journal of World History27 (1): 1–26. doi:10.1353/jwh.2016.0085. ISSN 1527-8050. https://muse.jhu.edu/article/625981/summary. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
↑Rubenson, Sven (1966). "Professor Giglio, Antonelli and Article XVII of the Treaty of Wichale". The Journal of African History7 (3): 445–457. doi:10.1017/S0021853700006526. ISSN 0021-8537. https://www.jstor.org/stable/180113. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
↑Archer, Francis Bisset (1967) (in en). The Gambia Colony and Protectorate: An Official Handbook. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-0-7146-1139-6. https://books.google.com/books?id=wk6o1XniPsQC.
↑Johnston, Alex. (1905). "The Colonization of British East Africa". Journal of the Royal African Society5 (17): 28–37. ISSN 0368-4016. https://www.jstor.org/stable/715150. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
↑ 10.010.1Meijknecht, Towards International Personality (2001), p. 42.
↑Willigen, Peacebuilding and International Administration (2013), p. 16.
↑Yoon, Jong-pil (17 August 2020). "Establishing expansion as a legal right: an analysis of French colonial discourse surrounding protectorate treaties". History of European Ideas46 (6): 811–826. doi:10.1080/01916599.2020.1722725. ISSN 0191-6599. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/01916599.2020.1722725. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
↑
Willigen, Peacebuilding and International Administration (2013), p. 16: "First, protected states are entities which still have substantial authority in their internal affairs, retain some control over their foreign policy, and establish their relation to the protecting state on a treaty or another legal instrument. Protected states still have qualifications of statehood."
↑ 14.014.114.214.314.414.5Onley, The Raj Reconsidered (2009), p. 50.
↑Willigen, Peacebuilding and International Administration (2013), pp. 16–17.
↑Onah, Emmanuel Ikechi (9 January 2020). "Nigeria: A Country Profile" (in en). Journal of International Studies10: 151–162. doi:10.32890/jis.10.2014.7954. ISSN 2289-666X. http://e-journal.uum.edu.my/index.php/jis/article/view/7954. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
↑Moloney, Alfred (1890). "Notes on Yoruba and the Colony and Protectorate of Lagos, West Africa". Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society and Monthly Record of Geography12 (10): 596–614. doi:10.2307/1801424. ISSN 0266-626X. https://www.jstor.org/stable/1801424. Retrieved 21 September 2021.
↑Wick, Alexis (2016), The Red Sea: In Search of Lost Space, Univ of California Press, pp. 133–, ISBN 978-0-520-28592-7, https://books.google.com/books?id=haowDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA133
↑Αλιβιζάτου, Αικατερίνη (12 March 2019) (in en). Use of GIS in analyzing archaeological sites: the case study of Mycenaean Cephalonia, Greece. https://amitos.library.uop.gr/xmlui/handle/123456789/5063. Retrieved 2 July 2022.
↑Dumieński, Zbigniew (2014). Microstates as Modern Protected States: Towards a New Definition of Micro-Statehood (Report). Occasional Paper. Centre for Small State Studies. http://ams.hi.is/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/Microstates_OccasionalPaper.pdf. Retrieved 2 July 2022.
↑Cunningham, Joseph Davy (1849). A History of the Sikhs: From the Origin of the Nation to the Battles of the Sutlej. John Murray. https://archive.org/details/historyofsikhsfr01cunn.
↑"Ferozepur district". The Imperial Gazetteer of India. XII. 1908. p. 90. https://dsal.uchicago.edu/reference/gazetteer/pager.html?objectid=DS405.1.I34_V12_096.gif. "But the British Government, established at Delhi since 1803, intervened with an offer of protection to all the CIS-SUTLEJ STATES; and Dhanna Singh gladly availed himself of the promised aid, being one of the first chieftains to accept British protection and control."
↑Mullard, Saul (2011), Opening the Hidden Land: State Formation and the Construction of Sikkimese History, BRILL, p. 184, ISBN 978-90-04-20895-7, https://books.google.com/books?id=G_1J4tgrYDUC&pg=PA184
↑"Timeline – Story of Independence". https://maldivesindependent.com/politics/timeline-story-of-independence-115638.
↑Francis Carey Owtram (1999). "Oman and the West: State Formation in Oman since 1920". University of London. http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/1556/1/U126805.pdf.
↑Onley, The Raj Reconsidered (2009), pp. 50–51.
↑ 27.027.1Onley, The Raj Reconsidered (2009), p. 51.
↑"A History of Korea: From Antiquity to the Present, by Michael J. Seth", p112
↑Goldstein, Melvyn C. (April 1995), Tibet, China and the United States, The Atlantic Council, p. 3, https://case.edu/affil/tibet/documents/ReflectionsontheTibetQuestion1995.pdf
↑Norbu, Dawa (2001), China's Tibet Policy, Routledge, p. 78, ISBN 978-1-136-79793-4, https://books.google.com/books?id=EGqyIgOlUCIC&pg=PA78
↑Lin, Hsaio-ting (2011). Tibet and Nationalist China's Frontier: Intrigues and Ethnopolitics, 1928–49. UBC Press. p. 8. ISBN 978-0-7748-5988-2. https://books.google.com/books?id=osn1WrRCelcC&pg=PA8.
↑Sloane, Robert D. (Spring 2002), "The Changing Face of Recognition in International Law: A Case Study of Tibet", Emory International Law Review16 (1): note 93, p. 135: "This ["priest-patron"] relationship reemerged during China's prolonged domination by the Manchu Ch'ing dynasty (1611-1911).", https://heinonline.org/HOL/Print?collection=journals&handle=hein.journals/emint16&id=113
↑Karan, P. P. (2015), "Suppression of Tibetan Religious Heritage", in S.D. Brunn, The Changing World Religion Map, Spriger Science, p. 462, doi:10.1007/978-94-017-9376-6_23, ISBN 978-94-017-9375-9
↑Sinha, Nirmal C. (May 1964), "Historical Status of Tibet", Bulletin of Tibetology1 (1): 27, http://himalaya.socanth.cam.ac.uk/collections/journals/bot/pdf/bot_01_01_04.pdf
↑"Indonesian traditional polities". https://rulers.org/indotrad.html.
↑"Indonesian Traditional States part 1". https://www.worldstatesmen.org/Indonesia_princely_states1.html.
↑"Indonesian Traditional States Part 2". https://www.worldstatesmen.org/Indonesia_princely_states2.html.
↑See the classic account on this in Robert Delavignette. Freedom and Authority in French West Africa. London: Oxford University Press, (1950). The more recent standard studies on French expansion include: Robert Aldrich. Greater France: A History of French Overseas Expansion. Palgrave MacMillan (1996) ISBN:0-312-16000-3. Alice L. Conklin. A Mission to Civilize: The Republican Idea of Empire in France and West Africa 1895–1930. Stanford: Stanford University Press (1998), ISBN:978-0-8047-2999-4. Patrick Manning. Francophone Sub-Saharan Africa, 1880–1995. Cambridge University Press (1998) ISBN:0-521-64255-8. Jean Suret-Canale. Afrique Noire: l'Ere Coloniale (Editions Sociales, Paris, 1971); Eng. translation, French Colonialism in Tropical Africa, 1900 1945. (New York, 1971).
↑Bedjaoui, Mohammed (1 January 1991). International Law: Achievements and Prospects. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. ISBN 9231027166. https://books.google.com/books?id=jrTsNTzcY7EC&pg=PA51.
↑Capaldo, Giuliana Ziccardi (1 January 1995). Repertory of Decisions of the International Court of Justice (1947–1992). Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. ISBN 0792329937. https://books.google.com/books?id=esfISSxc13cC&pg=PA453.
↑C. W. Newbury. Aspects of French Policy in the Pacific, 1853–1906. The Pacific Historical Review, Vol. 27, No. 1 (Feb., 1958), pp. 45–56
↑Gonschor, Lorenz Rudolf (August 2008). Law as a Tool of Oppression and Liberation: Institutional Histories and Perspectives on Political Independence in Hawaiʻi, Tahiti Nui/French Polynesia and Rapa Nui (Thesis). Honolulu: University of Hawaii at Manoa. pp. 56–59. hdl:10125/20375.
↑ 43.043.1Gründer, Horst (2004) (in de). Geschichte der deutschen Kolonien. Schöningh. ISBN 978-3-8252-1332-9. https://books.google.com/books?id=rKfe8UOC6cAC.
↑Hofmann, Protectorates (1987), pp. 336–339.
↑ 45.045.1Gerrits, Andre W. M.; Bader, Max (2 July 2016). "Russian patronage over Abkhazia and South Ossetia: implications for conflict resolution". East European Politics32 (3): 297–313. doi:10.1080/21599165.2016.1166104. ISSN 2159-9165.
↑Pieńkowski, Jakub (2016). "Renewal of Negotiations on Resolving the Transnistria Conflict" (in en). https://www.ceeol.com/search/gray-literature-detail?id=598329.
↑Greene, Sam (26 April 2019). "Putin's 'Passportization' Move Aimed At Keeping the Donbass Conflict on Moscow's Terms" (in en). The Moscow Times. https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2019/04/26/putins-passportization-move-aimed-at-keeping-the-donbass-conflict-on-moscows-terms-a65405.
↑Robinson, Paul (1 October 2016). "Russia's role in the war in Donbass, and the threat to European security". European Politics and Society17 (4): 506–521. doi:10.1080/23745118.2016.1154229. ISSN 2374-5118. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/23745118.2016.1154229.
↑"Putin's Karabakh victory sparks alarm in Ukraine". Atlantic Council. 12 November 2020. https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/ukrainealert/putins-karabakh-victory-sparks-alarm-in-ukraine/.
↑Goble, Paul (25 November 2020). "Nagorno-Karabakh Now A Russian Protectorate – OpEd". Eurasia Review. https://www.eurasiareview.com/25112020-nagorno-karabakh-now-a-russian-protectorate-oped/.
↑Socor, Vladimir. "Russia's 'Peacekeeping' Operation in Karabakh: Foundation of a Russian Protectorate (Part Two)". Jamestown. https://jamestown.org/program/russias-peacekeeping-operation-in-karabakh-foundation-of-a-russian-protectorate-part-two/.
↑"From the Archive 1999: Timor the defiant". The Sydney Morning Herald. 30 August 2019. https://www.smh.com.au/world/asia/from-the-archive-1999-timor-the-defiant-20190823-p52k3d.html.
↑"East Timor". Human Rights Watch. https://www.hrw.org/legacy/wr2k1/asia/etimor.html.
↑Gould, Lewis L. (4 October 2016). "William McKinley: Foreign Affairs". Miller Center. https://millercenter.org/president/mckinley/foreign-affairs.
↑"Notice of Finding of Failure To Submit State Plans for the Municipal Solid Waste Landfills Emission Guidelines". Environmental Protection Agency. 12 March 2020. https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2020/03/12/2020-05079/notice-of-finding-of-failure-to-submit-state-plans-for-the-municipal-solid-waste-landfills-emission.
Bibliography
Hoffmann, Gerhard (1987). "Protectorates". Encyclopedia of Disputes Installment 10 (Elsevier): 336–339. doi:10.1016/B978-0-444-86241-9.50085-3. ISBN 9780444862419. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/B9780444862419500853. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
Meijknecht, Anna (2001), Towards International Personality: The Position of Minorities and Indigenous Peoples in International Law, Intersentia NV, ISBN 978-90-5095-166-1, https://books.google.com/books?id=b3NnYzUWxtoC&pg=PA42
Onley, James (March 2009), "The Raj Reconsidered: British India's Informal Empire and Spheres of Influence in Asia and Africa", Asian Affairs11 (1), https://socialsciences.exeter.ac.uk/iais/downloads/Onley_Raj_Reconsidered.pdf, retrieved 2020-12-24
Reisman, W. (1989), "Reflections on state responsibility for violations of explicit protectorate, mandate, and trusteeship obligations", Michigan Journal of International Law10 (1): 231–240
Willigen, Niels van (2013), Peacebuilding and International Administration: The Cases of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo, Routledge, ISBN 978-1-134-11718-5, https://books.google.com/books?id=UsLN-YFLKRUC&pg=PA16
Larousse, Pierre; Paul Augé; Claude Augé (1925) (in fr). Nouveau Petit Larousse Illustré: Dictionnaire Encyclopédique. Larousse.
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