The Protectorate reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
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Protectorate

Table of contents
1 Protectorate of Oliver Cromwell
2 19th Century revival of term
3 The League of Nations
4 Legal Definition
5 US use of term

Protectorate of Oliver Cromwell

The Protectorate, in English history, was the period during which Oliver Cromwell was declared 'Lord Protector' of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland, under the terms of a constitutional document entitled the 'Instrument of Government', which had been drawn up by a group of his army officers. Under the Protectorate, Cromwell was dictator, backed by the army with a council of state and an ineffectual single-house Parliament under his control. Using a royalist uprising for a pretext, he swept away the traditional shire governments in 1655, replacing them with military districts administered by army officers.

The Protectorate is associated with the most rigidly enforced puritan legislation. Religious toleration was extended to Jews and most Protestant sects, but not to Anglicans or Catholics. After Cromwell's death in 1658, the Protectorate devolved upon his son, Richard Cromwell, who was unable to control the army and resigned in May, 1659. After a chaotic interregnum, the Restoration of the monarchy was effected in May 1660, largely through the initiative of General George Monck.


19th Century revival of term

The British revived the term after 1815, in ordering and validating their de facto occupation of Corfu and the seven Ionian islands during the last days of Napoleonic hegemony. The islands were constituted by the Treaty of Paris in 1815 as the independent 'United States of the Ionian Islands' under British protection.

Other British protectorates followed. In 1894 Prime Minister William Gladstone's government officially announced that Uganda was to become a British Protectorate, where Muslim and Christian strife had attracted international attention. The British administration installed carefully selected local kings under a program of indirect rule through the local oligarchy, creating a network of British-controlled civil service.


The League of Nations

The League of Nations established protectorates for "responsible" European powers in various areas of the non-European world.


Legal Definition

In international law, a protectorate is a state or territory controlled by a more powerful state. The controlled state generally retains some degree of autonomy over internal affairs and is not a possession of the controlling state. The controlling state typically directs foreign relations and defense. The relationship is established by treaty. In this sense a protectorate is a type of dependendent area.


US use of term

Some agencies of the United States government, such as the United States Environmental Protection Agency, use the term protectorate to refer to insular areas of the United States such as Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. However, the agency responsible for the administration of those areas, the Office of Insular Affairs (OIA) within the United States Department of Interior exclusively uses the term insular area rather than protectorate.