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单词 colonization
释义

colonization


col·o·ni·za·tion

C0487700 (kŏl′ə-nĭ-zā′shən)n. The act or process of establishing a colony or colonies.

col·o·ni·za·tion

(kŏl′ə-nĭ-zā′shən) Ecology The spreading of a species into a new habitat.
Thesaurus
Noun1.colonization - the act of colonizingcolonization - the act of colonizing; the establishment of colonies; "the British colonization of America"colonisation, settlementestablishment, constitution, formation, organisation, organization - the act of forming or establishing something; "the constitution of a PTA group last year"; "it was the establishment of his reputation"; "he still remembers the organization of the club"population - the act of populating (causing to live in a place); "he deplored the population of colonies with convicted criminals"
Translations

colony

(ˈkoləni) plural ˈcolonies noun1. (a group of people who form) a settlement in one country etc which is under the rule of another country. France used to have many colonies in Africa. 殖民地 殖民地2. a group of people having the same interests, living close together. a colony of artists. 因有志一同而群居的一群人 有同类兴趣的一群人3. a collection of animals, birds etc, of one type, living together. a colony of gulls. 群,群落 集群coˈlonial (-ˈlou-) adjectiveBritain was formerly a colonial power. 殖民地的 殖民地的coˈlonialism noun 殖民主義 殖民主义coˈlonialist noun and adjective. 殖民主義者(的) 殖民主义者(的) ˈcolonize, ˈcolonise verb to establish a colony in (a place). The English colonized New England in 1620. 將(某地)變成殖民地 开拓殖民地于(某地区) ˈcolonist noun 殖民者 殖民者ˌcoloniˈzation, ˌcoloniˈsation noun 殖民化 殖民地的开拓

colonization


colonization,

extension of political and economic control over an area by a state whose nationals have occupied the area and usually possess organizational or technological superiority over the native population. It may consist simply in a migration of nationals to the territory, or it may be the formal assumption of control over the territory by military or civil representatives of the dominant power (see colonycolony,
any nonself-governing territory subject to the jurisdiction of a usually distant country. The term is also applied to a group of nationals who settle in a foreign country or territory but retain political or cultural connections with their parent state.
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).

Overpopulation, economic distress, social unrest, and religious persecution in the home country may be factors that cause colonization, but imperialismimperialism,
broadly, the extension of rule or influence by one government, nation, or society over another. Early Empires

Evidence of the existence of empires dates back to the dawn of written history in Egypt and in Mesopotamia, where local rulers extended their
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, more or less aggressive humanitarianism, and a desire for adventure or individual improvement are also causes. Colonization may be state policy, or it may be a private project sponsored by chartered corporations or by associations and individuals. Before colonization can be effected, the indigenous population must be subdued and assimilated or converted to the culture of the colonists; otherwise, a modus vivendi must be established by the imposition of a treaty or an alliance.

Early Colonization

As early as the 10th cent. B.C., the Phoenicians founded trading posts throughout the Mediterranean area and later exercised political dominion over these commercial colonies. The Greeks, from a desire for wealth or as a result of the expulsion of a political faction or the defeated inhabitants of a city, established colonies in Asia Minor and Italy, spreading Hellenic culture and stimulating trade. Greek colonies were patterned after the parent state and were at first subject to its jurisdiction. Colonization was an integral part of Roman policy, providing land for the poor, supporting Roman garrisons, and again spreading Roman culture. In their colonization the Romans sought to assimilate the native culture into their own, and in some cases they bestowed Roman citizenship upon natives of the colony. Medieval colonization began with the Crusades and was mainly Italian. The Venetians and Genoese established commercial colonies along trade routes and exercised strict supervision over them.

The Portuguese and Spanish

The Portuguese and Spanish became great colonizing nations at the end of the Middle Ages. Portuguese colonization, which received impetus from the development of greatly improved methods of navigation, began with the establishment of trading ports in Africa and the East, while the Spanish concentrated most of their efforts in the Americas. Both the Spanish and the Portuguese exercised strict governmental control over their colonies and used them primarily as a basis for rich commerce with the parent government. They discouraged them from becoming economically self-sufficient.

The English, Dutch, and French

In the late 16th and early 17th cent., the English, Dutch, and French began to undertake colonization through the agency of chartered companieschartered companies,
associations for foreign trade, exploration, and colonization that came into existence with the formation of the European nation states and their overseas expansion. An association received its charter from the state and sometimes had state support.
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. The greatest of these private trading companies was the British East India CompanyEast India Company, British,
1600–1874, company chartered by Queen Elizabeth I for trade with Asia. The original object of the group of merchants involved was to break the Dutch monopoly of the spice trade with the East Indies.
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, which played a vital role in the history of the British EmpireBritish Empire,
overseas territories linked to Great Britain in a variety of constitutional relationships, established over a period of three centuries. The establishment of the empire resulted primarily from commercial and political motives and emigration movements (see
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.

The French generally adhered to mercantilist theory in establishing their colonies, using them mainly for the economic advantage of France. The English colonists in North America, however, were, in many respects, virtually independent of the parent country, the most serious restriction being the establishment of a trade monopoly by the home government through the Navigation ActsNavigation Acts,
in English history, name given to certain parliamentary legislation, more properly called the British Acts of Trade. The acts were an outgrowth of mercantilism, and followed principles laid down by Tudor and early Stuart trade regulations.
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. Because their territory was suitable for settlement, rather than exploitation, the residence of the British colonists in America tended to be permanent. The increase in overseas trade and colonial consumption helped to stimulate the Industrial RevolutionIndustrial Revolution,
term usually applied to the social and economic changes that mark the transition from a stable agricultural and commercial society to a modern industrial society relying on complex machinery rather than tools.
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, which in turn, because of the increased technological superiority afforded Europe, especially Great Britain, and because of the greater desire for markets and raw materials, gave added impetus to colonization and made it easier to accomplish.

Although Great Britain lost most of its North American colonies as a result of the American Revolution, other acquisitions (most notably in India) soon made it the greatest colonial power in the world. The French, stripped of one colonial empire in the colonial wars of the 18th cent., established another in the 19th cent.

The Germans and Japanese

Germany emerged as an industrial empire in the late 19th cent., but found the colonies of other powers closed to German products and, therefore, embarked upon its own colonial adventures. Japan, also recently industrialized, followed the same path. These ambitions helped to bring on World Wars I and II. Germany was stripped of its colonies after the first conflict; Japan lost its colonies after the second.

Decline of Colonization

Modern colonization, frequently preceded by an era in which missionaries and traders were active, was largely exploitative, but it did not in the long run prove directly lucrative to the colonial power, because it involved a heavy drain on the treasury of the home government. After World War II, there was increasing agitation and violence in the European colonial empires as subject peoples demanded their independence. Most colonies were granted or won independence from the imperial powers; those belonging to Portugal were among the last major colonies to become independent. Today, only a few remnants of the great colonial empires survive, mainly as self-governing dependencies (e.g., ArubaAruba
, island, autonomous part of the Netherlands (2015 est. pop. 104,000), 69 sq mi (179 sq km), in the Lesser Antilles off the coast of Venezuela. Oranjestad is the capital and main port. The population is largely of mixed European and indigenous Caribbean descent.
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, BermudaBermuda
, British dependency (2015 est. pop. 70,000), 21 sq mi (53 sq km), comprising some 150 coral rocks, islets, and islands (of which some 20 are inhabited), in the Atlantic Ocean, c.570 mi (920 km) SE of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina.
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, and French GuianaFrench Guiana
, Fr. La Guyane française, officially Department of Guiana, French overseas department (2015 est. pop. 269,000), 35,135 sq mi (91,000 sq km), NE South America, on the Atlantic Ocean.
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). Colonization in its classical form is rarely practiced today and is widely considered to be immoral.

See also mandatesmandates,
system of trusteeships established by Article 22 of the Covenant of the League of Nations for the administration of former Turkish territories and of former German colonies.
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; trusteeship, territorialtrusteeship, territorial,
system of UN control for territories that were not self-governing. It replaced the mandates of the League of Nations. Provided for under chapters 12 and 13 of the Charter of the United Nations, the trusteeship system was intended to promote the welfare
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.

Bibliography

See D. K. Fieldhouse, The Colonial Empire (1965); C. Verlinden, The Beginnings of Modern Colonization (1970); J. H. Parry, Trade and Dominion (1971).

Colonization

 

the settlement and economic development of the uninhabited borderlands of a country (internal colonization) or the establishment of settlements (engaging primarily in agricultural activity) beyond the frontiers of a country (external colonization). In societies characterized by class antagonisms the latter is usually intertwined with the compulsory subjugation, and sometimes even the destruction, of the local population, and it is a tool of expansion.

Colonization was already widely developed in ancient times. During the Middle Ages the Crusades to the Near East (11th to 13th centuries) had a colonial as well as a military purpose; that is, a large number of peasants who went on the campaigns settled down in the new lands. The Drang nach Osten—the colonization of newly conquered lands that accompanied German feudal aggression against the Polabian Slavs and the Baltic tribes—reached its culmination in the 13th century! Although the German colonists, who included peasants and artisans, brought with them a degree of economic expertise, German colonization was, on the whole, a form of feudal expansion—its organizers were the German feudal lords, who pursued aggressive aims. The apologists of German feudal aggression have exaggerated the Kulturträger character of the colonization in every possible way and concealed its aggressive, expansionist character.

The internal colonization that enjoyed notable success in the Western European countries in the 12th and 13th centuries provides evidence of progress in the productive forces of feudal society. During internal colonization fallow land was cleared and forests were uprooted, and in their place fields and numerous villages were created. For a number of reasons the peasantry played a decisive role in internal colonization. It provided them not only with the means of expanding their farming but also with the means of reducing their feudal dependence, since the feudal lords gave them newly developed lands on advantageous terms.

European colonization of other regions of the globe flowered after the great geographic discoveries of the mid-15th through the mid-17th century, when military expeditions for the sake of plunder and the establishment of military and commercial strongholds gave way to agricultural (and later, industrial) development of the new lands by the labor of the local population or by the efforts of the European settlers themselves. During the formation of colonies by the Europeans (for example, British North America and Australia and Dutch South Africa) the indigenous peoples were driven back onto poor land or destroyed; later, they were settled on reservations. The colonization of the so-called free Western lands of North America, which in fact belonged to the Indians, played an important role in the socioeconomic development of the USA at the end of the 18th century and during the 19th century, contributing to the victory of the “American” way of developing capitalism in agriculture. In a number of countries in Asia, Africa, and Latin America the organization of colonies settled by European emigrants promoted the colonial enslavement of the native peoples. The elite of the European colonists, which concentrated in its own hands the best lands and political privileges, was until recently (for example, in Algeria until independence was won) or remains (for example, in the Republic of South Africa or Southern Rhodesia) the bastion of colonialism and racism.

V. I. KOZLOV

Russia Between the ninth and 12th centuries the Slavic population of ancient Rus’ gradually colonized the territory of the Oka, Upper Volga, and Viatka river basins as well as the territory of the Dvina and Onega and Pomor’e. Because masses of people were forced to leave their settlements in the wake of the Mongol-Tatar conquest, colonization increased in the 13th to 15th centuries. Abandoning their ruined villages and towns, these refugees moved to the north and northeast. At the same time, large areas of the steppe and forest-steppe zone south of the Oka were depopulated. At first, this territory was exposed to frequent raids; later, it became the land of the nomadic conquerors, which came to be known as Dikoe pole (literally, wild field).

From the 16th century to the first half of the 19th century colonization by the Russian population was directed primarily to the south and east and to Siberia, the Far East, the Don, the Kuban’, the Black Sea shore, Ciscaucasia, and the Volga. The migration was induced by the growing feudal, serf-owning oppression at the center of the country and by relative overpopulation in the countryside. In the 16th and 17th centuries peasants and townspeople who fled to the borderlands of the Russian state were forced to wage a continuous struggle, chiefly against the plundering raids of the Tatars and other feudal lords of the steppe. Under the circumstances, colonization took the form of cossack military communes. Relying on the population that had settled south of the Oka and along the abatis lines built to protect Russia’s southern and southeastern frontiers from Tatar invasions, the government of Russia consolidated its hold on the Dikoe pole. Colonization of these regions led to the establishment of many towns, the tilling of the soil, and the development of agriculture. From the second half of the 17th century, these regions supplied grain and cattle to the center of the country. The feudal lords also penetrated the area, receiving from the government already developed and settled lands as pomest’ia (fiefs) or votchiny (patrimonial estates). After the khanates of Kazan and Astrakhan were conquered in the 1550’s, the Middle and Lower Volga and the Urals region were intensively colonized.

The colonization of Siberia and the Far East began at the end of the 16th century. Russians founded towns in Siberia and introduced agriculture, farming tools, and methods of working the land. Subsequently, representatives of the various peoples of Siberia, including the Iakuts and the Buriats, began to engage in agriculture. Internal colonization of the south in the 18th century and the first half of the 19th century was carried out by the pomeshchiki (landlords), who transferred their serf peasants from the center of the country. Siberia was colonized by the government, which exiled ordinary criminals and those who rebelled against serfdom to that region. Resettlement from the central provinces and the economic development of the vast territory of Siberia, the Far East, and the Northern Caucasus became more important especially in the 19th century and continued through the early 20th century, acquiring an increasingly capitalist character. Thus, the growing intensity of capitalism led to its territorial spread by means of colonization.

REFERENCES

Lenin, V. I. “Razvitie kapitalizma v Rossii.” Poln. sobr. soch., 5th ed. vol. 3.
Lenin, V. I. “Agrarnyi vopros v Rossii k kontsu XIX v.” Ibid., vol. 17.
Lenin, V. I. “Pereselencheskii vopros.” Ibid., vol. 21.
Lenin, V. I. “Znachenie pereselencheskogo dela.” Ibid., vol. 23.
Lenin, V. I. “K voprosu ob agrarnoi politike (obshchei) sovremennogo pravitel’stva.” Ibid.
Ocherki po istorii kolonizatsii Severa, book 1. Petrograd, 1922.
Liubavskii, M. K. Obrazovanie osnovnoi gosudarstvennoi territorii velikorusskoi narodnosti. Leningrad, 1929.
Tikhomirov, M. N. Rossiia v XVI st. Moscow, 1962.
Shunkov, V. I. Ocherki po istorii kolonizatsii Sibiri v XVII-nachale XVIII vv. Moscow-Leningrad, 1946.
Fadeev, A. V. Ocherkiekonomicheskogo razvitiia stepnogo Predkavkaz’ia v doreformennyi period. Moscow, 1957.
Kabuzan, V. M. Izmeneniia v razmeshchenii naseleniia Rossii v XVIII-pervoi polovine XIX vv. (Po materialam revizii). Moscow, 1971.

colonization

[‚käl·ə·nə′zā·shən] (ecology) The establishment of an immigrant species in a peripherally unsuitable ecological area; occasional gene exchange with the parental population occurs, but generally the colony evolves in relative isolation and in time may form a distinct unit.

Colonization

Comedy (See ZANINESS.)Comeuppance (See LAST LAUGH.)Comfort (See LUXURY.)Commerce (See FINANCE.)Companionship (See FRIENDSHIP.)Compassion (See KINDNESS.)Compromise (See PEACEMAKING.)EvanderArcadian, founded settlement in Italy. [Gk. Myth.: Kravitz, 100]Jamestown, Virginiafirst permanent English settlement in New World (1607). [Am. Hist.: Jameson, 255]Mayflowership which brought Pilgrims to New World (1620). [Am. Hist.: NCE, 1730]Plymouth Plantationfirst English settlement in New England (1620). [Am. Hist.: Major Bradford’s Town]thirteen original coloniesearliest settlements became first states in U.S. [Am. Hist.: NCE, 2733]Williamsburgmonument of American colonial period; settled in 1632. [Am. Hist.: Hart, 930]

colonization


colonization

 [kol″ŏ-nĭ-za´shun] the development of a bacterial infection on an individual, as demonstrated by a positive culture. The infected person may have no signs or symptoms of infection while still having the potential to infect others.

col·o·ni·za·tion

(kol'on-i-zā'shŭn), 1. Synonym(s): innidiation2. The formation of compact population groups of the same type of microorganism, such as the colonies that develop when a bacterial cell begins reproducing. 3. The care of certain people, for example, patients with Hansen disease, patients with mental illness, in community groups.

col·on·i·za·tion

(kol'ǒn-ī-zā'shŭn) 1. Synonym(s): innidiation. 2. The formation of compact population groups of the same type of microorganism, such as the colonies that develop when a bacterial cell begins reproducing. 3. The care of certain people, e.g., patients with Hansen disease, patients with mental illness, in community groups.

colonization

The establishment of a colony of micro-organisms at a particular site, such as inside the nostrils or in the large intestine.

colonization

the initial establishment of an organism within a particular habitat.

Colonization

The presence of bacteria on a body surface (like on the skin, mouth, intestines or airway) without causing disease in the person.Mentioned in: Meningococcemia

col·on·i·za·tion

(kol'ǒn-ī-zā'shŭn) Formation of compact population groups of same type of microorganism.

Patient discussion about colonization

Q. How is colon cancer diagnosed? A. thank you lamsophie, great answer...

Q. how successful is the treatment of removing the colon? Are there any people who have had their colons removed successfullly? What other treatment options are there and how successful are they?A. colon removal is a treatment for various situation, usually a last resort treatment...when anything else just wouldn't or couldn't work.
it's "success" as a treatment depends on the cause. i can tell you that this is the area that absorbs B12 and bile and most of the water, so expect a shortage of that three. in the water and bile case- expect watery stool...
sorry all that doesn't seem such a nice state but when Dr. come to the point they have to do it- there must be a good enough reason.

Q. Is colon cancer hereditary? My uncle died of colon cancer and as I've been having some unexplained problems these days- of vomiting etc I'm really afraid I may have it as well. Is it hereditary? What are the first symptoms?A. Thank you Bianca for your answers! helped a lot...this is a great site!

More discussions about colonization
LegalSeeColony

colonization


  • noun

Synonyms for colonization

noun the act of colonizing

Synonyms

  • colonisation
  • settlement

Related Words

  • establishment
  • constitution
  • formation
  • organisation
  • organization
  • population
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