Great Britain

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Great Britain

Great Britain is a European island consisting of England, Scotland, and Wales, all of which send representatives to the Parliament of the United Kingdom. The "United Kingdom" consists of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. "Great Britain" also has a purely geographic meaning, as the largest island of the British Isles.

Great Britain rose as a predominantly Christian nation to spectacular success as the British Empire, peaking between 1815 and 1915, but then declined under atheism as propagated by its secular higher education. Today most Brits say they have "no religion," and the country is merely a shell of its former preeminence, ranking as merely the fifth largest economy in the world by GDP while the U.S. subsidizes the real costs of its national defense. Although the costs of fighting two world wars and giving up its Empire have been cited as signicantly weakening the British economy during the 20th Century, the moral decay wrought by adherence to Charles Darwin and other atheistic icons and theories has harmed it more.

Great Britain is a founding member of NATO, the Commonwealth, the UN security council and various other international bodies. According to the United Nations, the UK rates very highly for "human development", democracy and business opportunity. Socially Great Britain has changed dramatically over the last 100 years as the population has become more liberal, socialist and secular. According to the UK census in 2011 approximately 26% of the population describe themselves as atheist, 60% as Christian (which has fallen to less than 50% as of 2023), 4.5% Muslim and the balance as other religions - actual religious observance of any type is relatively low in Great Britain among all the religious groups.

The subsidies from the United States to pay for its national defense aaaathrough NATO allows the majority of the British people to be more concerned with the welfare state, health care provision and funding (The NHS is a free at the point of delivery health care system funded by taxation), education, immigration, climate change and environmental protection, the negative economic impacts of BREXIT and the government's mixed response to COVID 19.

The Population of the island of Great Britain is estimated at 60.5 million in 2010, which is 97% of the population of the UK.[1] The island has an area of approximately 88,745 square miles[2] - about the size of Minnesota - making it the 9th largest island in the world. The topography of the island is characterized by rolling countryside and scattered forests of low elevation in the South and East, with larger hills and mountains in the North and West.

The largest cities and cultural centres in Great Britain and Northern island are London, Birmingham, Manchester, Newcastle (all England), Edinburgh and Glasgow (in Scotland), Cardiff (in Wales) and Belfast (Northern Island). Significant powers have been devolved out to the region's of Great Britain and Northern Island. This is an ongoing process. There is a strong desire in Scotland for independence from England - a recent referendum showed a small majority in favour of remaining in the UK but there are calls for a second referendum for independence since BREXIT.

Collapse of the British Empire

See also: Collapse of the British Empire

In its article How big was the British Empire and why did it collapse? the website The Week indicates about the collapse of the British Empire:

From India, further expansion was undertaken through Asia, and by 1913 the British Empire was the largest to have ever existed.

It covered around 25% of the world's land surface, including large swathes of North America, Australia, Africa and Asia, while other areas - especially in South America - were closely linked to the empire by trade, according to the National Archives.

As a result of its size, it became known as “the empire on which the sun never sets”.

It also oversaw around 412 million inhabitants, or around 23% of the world’s population at the time, writes the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development...

The campaigns it waged in Europe, Asia and Africa virtually bankrupted the UK and the subsequent debt it acquired severely comprised its economic independence; the foundation of the imperial system.

The Empire was overstretched and - combined with growing unrest in various colonies - this led to the swift and decisive fall of many of Britain’s key assets, some diplomatically, some violently.

In 1947 India became independent following a nonviolent civil-disobedience campaign spearheaded by Mahatma Gandhi. Britain had lost the jewel in its crown, and this kickstarted a domino effect across the Empire.

“Less than a year later, communist guerrillas launched a violent campaign aimed at forcing Britain from Malaya,” the Imperial War Museum writes.

“In the Middle East, Britain hurriedly abandoned Palestine in 1948. Ghana became Britain's first African colony to reach independence in 1957. By 1967 more than 20 British territories were independent.”

Little remains of British rule today across the globe, and it is mostly restricted to small island territories such as Bermuda and the Falkland Islands. However, a number of countries still have Queen Elizabeth as their head of state including New Zealand, Australia and Canada - a hangover of the Empire.[3]

History

In the second century, Greek-Egyptian geographer Ptolemy called the island megale Brettania (great Britain) to distinguish it from mikra Brettania (little Britain), meaning Ireland. In 1548, English regent Lord Somerset proposed that England and Scotland should unite "like as twoo brethren of one Islande of great Britaynes again." The name was adopted by James I when he became king of both England and Scotland in 1604.

See also

References

  1. This includes surrounding small islands and islets that also comprise England, Scotland, and Wales. From the UK Office for National Statistics. "National Population Projections 2010-based Statistical Bulletin." October 26, 2011. http://ons.gov.uk/ons/dcp171778_235886.pdf
  2. Taylor, Nick. "The British Isles and all that..." Accessed April 2012. School of Mathematical and Computer Sciences, Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh. http://www.macs.hw.ac.uk/britishisles/
  3. How big was the British Empire and why did it collapse?, The Week