Ireland as a whole has never been a British colony. It has been invaded numerous times, dating back to an 1171 occupation, but during the time of the British empire it went from a kingdom (similar to modern Commonwealth countries, it was under the reigning monarch but not the country itself) to Northern Ireland, while the remainder of Ireland expanded to fill much of the island.
Very incorrect. Ireland did not gain independence from the British Crown until 1922 following the Anglo-Irish War - when 26 of the 32 counties - those in the East, South, West and Northwest became the Dominion of the "Irish Free State" leaving the other 6 counties of the Northeast to become the modern state of "Northern Ireland" and one of the four constituent countries of the United Kingdom.
The Irish Free State finally broke from all British control in 1949 when it became the fully independent republic we know of today, "The Republic of Ireland".
The author of this quiz is not relating the facts as they happened in their bizarre answer to 'bezz' on May 3, 2017. No, Ireland did not "expand" in the way you described. That answer is an insult to Ireland and to known history. I am surprised no one called "foul" on that in 4 years. I don't know what led you to these conclusions. If you need a brief history refresher:
I do second that some Irish will likely be quite offended by leaving them out of this quiz. As they are still proving in Derry county for one. (Read IRA).
And whilst the semantics do sound right, they are very much not. The counties that make up the current Republic of Ireland where very much under direct control of the Westminster government.
The fact that in 1870, 1873, 1882, 1886, 1893, 1912, 1916 (quite famous actually something with easter and 'rebellion' on netflix). There was a home-rule movement strongly suggests this fact. Moreover the party with still the Republican thought is called Sinn Fein which translates into 'we for ourselves' from Gaelic (Irish) again implying that self governance was not a thing for quite some time.
The famous potato famine too was caused by conscious choice from London not intervene in the dubbed 'economic downturn' because of liberalism.
Technically they were never administered as a colony but then again neither were Israel, Egypt.
I could go on naming reasons why your choice is incorrect.
I DO applaud the effort and the idea of creating this quiz
And I Do get the confusion since it was never a 'true' colony but if one of the high school students I teach would miss Ireland as an area formerly governed by the British empire is would very much cost them points. Or in your case a nomination.
The situation of Bangladesh is complicated, to say the least. It was never officially a colony but did gain independence from the U.K. I will add Singapore, however.
Bangladesh may not have been a direct colony, but it was still a territory within the British Raj until it's dissolution in 1947. So shouldn't it still count?
british raj was divided into two states, india and pakistan, the latter of which bangladesh was part of. bangladesh is obviously now not part of pakistan which is why it is excluded
Upon further investigation, Singapore went from a colony of Britain to being occupied by Japan to a semi-country state post-WWII to a merger with Malaysia and only then did it become a fully fledged country.
Did you leave out Hong Kong and Palestine because the British handed them over to other countries rather than granting them independence outright? If so, perhaps an additional explanatory note is in order, which would cover the Singapore case as well. Former colonies relinquished by Britian, which did not immediately become independent, sovereign nations are also excluded. Or something like that...
I'll add a note about this -- the quiz is just countries, not possessions which changed hands like Hong Kong or land claims like Palestine. (Although Palestine may have *some* claim to countryhood nowadays, though not much, it certainly didn't when it was released from British rule. It was then, officially speaking, part of the land area that was then declared Israel.)
British Cameroons? British Somaliland? Papua new guinea? Northern/Southern Cameroons were both separate colonies, British Somaliland was an official protectorate, and New Guinea was controlled by Australia. And the kingdom of Hanover was an English puppet until german unification in the late 1800s, but that wasn't significantly influential.
I think you should rephrase your second caveat that says 'colonies which were made part of Britain and never left', which I assume you mean the current British Overseas Territories. They were actually never a part of the United Kingdom and are not considered as such; they are dependent territories of the UK while not being a part of it.
The Irish Free State finally broke from all British control in 1949 when it became the fully independent republic we know of today, "The Republic of Ireland".
The author of this quiz is not relating the facts as they happened in their bizarre answer to 'bezz' on May 3, 2017. No, Ireland did not "expand" in the way you described. That answer is an insult to Ireland and to known history. I am surprised no one called "foul" on that in 4 years. I don't know what led you to these conclusions. If you need a brief history refresher:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_rule_in_Ireland
And whilst the semantics do sound right, they are very much not. The counties that make up the current Republic of Ireland where very much under direct control of the Westminster government.
The fact that in 1870, 1873, 1882, 1886, 1893, 1912, 1916 (quite famous actually something with easter and 'rebellion' on netflix). There was a home-rule movement strongly suggests this fact. Moreover the party with still the Republican thought is called Sinn Fein which translates into 'we for ourselves' from Gaelic (Irish) again implying that self governance was not a thing for quite some time.
The famous potato famine too was caused by conscious choice from London not intervene in the dubbed 'economic downturn' because of liberalism.
Technically they were never administered as a colony but then again neither were Israel, Egypt.
I DO applaud the effort and the idea of creating this quiz
And I Do get the confusion since it was never a 'true' colony but if one of the high school students I teach would miss Ireland as an area formerly governed by the British empire is would very much cost them points. Or in your case a nomination.