King Charles III was proclaimed as the King of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland on Saturday. Â
Charles succeeds his late mother Queen Elizabeth II who died on Thursday. She was 96 and reigned for over the 70 years, the longest for any British monarch.
While the UK and several other parts of the world mourn the Queen's death and hail the proclamation of the new King, many parts of the world are still dealing with the shadow of colonialism that fuelled the rise of Britain as a world power.Â
The British Empire at its height ruled over a quarter of the world's population. Besides economic exploitation, the colonisation involved human rights abuses and massacres that would be unacceptable today, such as the Jallianwala Bagh massacre.Â
Here we explain the British colonisation exercise, the Western ideas behind it, and list the countries that were once part of the British Empire that gradually attained independence. Â
The British Empire
The Europeans began carving empires by establishing colonies outside their territories in the 16th century.Â
While other European powers, such as the French and the Dutch, also had their empires, the British Empire was the most widespread.Â
The first British colonies were established in North America, which were later expanded to Caribbean islands, Africa, Asia, and the Pacific. The National Geographic Society notes that a quarter of the world's population, approximately 458 million people, lived under it in 1922 at the height of the empire.
The British colonised in two broad ways. One, the settler colonialism in which the British settled and eventually overtook the native people, such as in the Americas. Two, economic colonialism in which they did not overtake the natives but used their resources and labour to enrich their homeland, such as in India and Africa where they exploited the native natural resources and labour.Â
The motivations for colonisation were varied, ranging from the belief in "white man's burden" which refers to the European belief that they were the civilised people and had to civilise the rest of the world they considered uncivilised. There were also economic and religious motivations, as Christian missionaries often set base in colonised lands. Together, these motivations have often been desribed as "3Gs" 바카라” Gold, God, Glory.
Not just the rulers, but the general British public also usually believed in these ideas at the time.Â
"When the empire was being built, British people largely believed they were doing the right thing. In their eyes, they were improving and developing lands and bringing order to non-white countries which 바카라”due to racist attitudes바카라” they thought were 바카라˜uncivilised바카라™ and 바카라˜backward바카라™. The British also believed they were doing the work of God by spreading Christianity 바카라“ which they considered to be the 바카라˜right바카라™ religion," notes The National Geographic Society.Â
The long shadow of the British Empire
The colonial influence did not end in a snap as colonies gained independence. Instead, decolonisation is a long and ongoing process even in countries like the United States of America which gained independence much before the other colonies.
Many of the social ills in large parts of the world today can be traced to colonialism, such as from economic inequality between different parts of the world, racism, persecution of native people, erosion of native culture, and gender discrimination.
In Americas, native communities were reduced to a minority. Native people still continue to fight for equality and rights over their resources in the USA and Canada.Â
In Africa and Asia, the shadow of economic exploitation and seeds of division sown by the British continues to this day.Â
One estimate says that the British transferred $45 trillion of wealth from India to UK by 1938. The Council of Foreign Relations notes, "The East India Company [and later British government] set regulations on what crops could be grown, where they could be exported, and at what prices they could be sold. It then charged Indians high taxes on the land they worked. Unlike most taxes, which are invested back into society, money made from the East India Company바카라™s taxes flowed back to Britain."
The British reduced India to a source of raw material and eroded its textile output. The British also used money and men from India to further expand the Empire as soldiers were recruited to fight overseas.Â
Much of the racism today and racial tensions tearing the West is also rooted in colonial practices, most notably of slavery and the European notion of White people's superiority over others.
The Europeans are estimated to have bought and sold 12 million slaves from Africa. Of them, the British share is estimated to be 3 million. Slave labour fuelled the overseas British plantations and also fuelled the Industrial Revolution.
"Slavery made Britain incredibly wealthy. It provided slave owners with unpaid labour to farm expensive items like sugar, tobacco and cotton, which they could sell for huge profits 바카라“ at the expense of the enslaved people and their homelands. It also largely funded Britain바카라™s Industrial Revolution, which only went on to make Britain richer," notes The National Geographic Society.
Even after slavery was formally banned, the notion of White Supremacy stuck and people of colour continued to face discrimination in the West. The racial equality movement is an ongoing one and while rights exist on paper, people continue to strive for equal treatment. Further, the USA remains highly divided and polarised today along racial lines. The US government now believes that White Supremacy is the top national domestic threat.Â
The criminalisation of homosexuality by the British continues to exist in several countries today which discriminates against certain sexual orientations.
After centuries of the colonisation's beginning and several decades of its end, the process of decolonisation continues in several countries. Just this week in India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced the renaming of a major road in the national capital Delhi, saying its previous name was associated with colonialism.Â
"Kingsway or Rajpath, the symbol of slavery, has become a matter of history from today, has been erased forever. Today a new history has been created in the form of Kartavya Path," said Modi while announcing the renaming of the road.Â
The countries once ruled by the BritishÂ
As stated earlier, a quarter of the world's population was under the British rule at its height.Â
The British Empire permanently changed national borders in several parts of the world, such as in the Americas and Asia. While American colonies came together to form the United States of America, three countries were carved out of British India 바카라” India, Pakistan, and later Bangladesh.Â
The following is the list of countries once ruled by the British along with the years they attained Independence, according to World Atlas.
1   Aden Protectorate        1967
2   Anglo-Egyptian Sudan      1956
3   Auckland Islands        1931
4   Bahamas              1973
5   Bahrain                1971
6   Bangladesh            1971 (From Pakistan)
7   Barbados              1966
8Â Â Â Basutoland (Lesotho)Â Â Â Â Â Â 1966
9Â Â Â Bechuanaland (Botswana)1966
10   Bermuda             1995
11Â Â Â British Borneo (Brunei)Â Â Â 1984
12   British Cameroon       1961
13Â Â Â British East Africa
     (Kenya)              1963
14Â Â Â British East Africa
     (Uganda)             1962
15   British Egypt           1922
16   British Guiana          1966
17Â Â Â British Honduras (Belize)Â Â 1981
18   British India            1947
19Â Â Â British Malaya (Malaysia)Â 1957
20   British Solomon Islands   1978
21Â Â Â British Somaliland
     (Somalia)             1960
22   British Togoland        1957
23Â Â Â British Western PacificÂ
    Territories             1976
24Â Â Â Burma (Myanmar)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â 1948
25Â Â Â Ceylon (Sri Lanka)Â Â Â Â Â Â 1948
26   Colonial Fiji            1970
27   Colonial Nigeria        1960
28   Colony of Newfoundland  1949 (Became a province of Canada)
29   Cyprus               1960
30Â Â Â Emirate of Transjordan
     (Jordan)              1946
31Â Â Â Gambia Colony
     and Protectorate       1965
32Â Â Â Gilbert and Ellice IslandsÂ
    (Kiribati and Tuvalu)      1978
33Â Â Â Gold Coast (Ghana)Â Â Â Â Â Â 1957
34   Helgoland            1890 (Now part of Germany)
35   Hong Kong            1997 (part of China)
36   Ionian Islands          1830
37   Ireland                1921
38Â Â Â Island of St. JohnÂ
    (Antigua and Barbuda)     1981
39   Jamaica               1962
40Â Â Â Kingdom of RarotongaÂ
    (Cook Islands)          1965 (self governing island state in free association with New Zealand)
41   Kingdom of Sarawak     1963 (now a state of Malaysia)
42   Leeward Islands         1983
43   Malta                  1964
44   Mandatory Iraq          1932
45Â Â Â Mandatory PalestineÂ
    (Israel, Jordanian annexationÂ
    of the West Bank,Â
    Palestine Protectorate)     1948
46Â Â Â Menorca (Spanish Island)Â Â Â 1802 (now part of Spain)
47   Mosquito Coast          1860 (now part of Nicaragua and Honduras)
48   Muscat and Oman        1951
49   Nauru                  1968
50Â Â Â New Hebrides (Vanuatu)Â Â Â Â Â 1906
51   New South Wales         1901 (state in Australia)
52   Nigeria                  1960
53   Niue                    1974 (from New Zealand)
54Â Â Â Northern Rhodesia (Zambia)Â 1964
55Â Â Â Nyasaland (Malawi)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â 1964
56   Oregon Country           1846 (became a US territory, then a state)
57   Pakistan                 1947
58   Phoenix Islands           1979 (now part of Kiribati)
59   Province of East Florida     1783 (became a Spanish colony, later a US territory
60   Province of Nova Scotia     1867 (one of the founding provinces of Canada)
61   Province of Quebec         1867  (one of the founding provinces of Canada)
62   Province of West Florida     1783 (became a Spanish colony, later a US territory
63   Qatar                    1868
64Â Â Â Queensland (state in Australia)1901
65   Rupert's Land              1869 (became part of the Canadian confederation)
66   Sheikhdom of Kuwait         1961
67   Sierra Leone               1961
68   Singapore                 1963 (became a state of Malaysia, then separated in 1965)
69   Solomon Islands             1978
70   South Africa                1931
71   South Arabia                1932
72   South Australia              1901 (state in Australia)
73   South-West Africa            1931 (South Africa territory until 1990)
74Â Â Â Southern Rhodesia (Zimbabwe)Â Â 1980
75Â Â Â Straits SettlementsÂ
    (Singapore, Malaysia, Borneo)   1946 (Separated and passed to other nations)
76   Sultanate of Zanzibar          1963
77   Swan River Colony            1901 (Western Australia, state in Australia)
78   Swaziland                   1968
79Â Â Â Tanganyika Territory (Tanzania)Â Â 1961
80   Territory of New Guinea        1975
81Â Â Â Thirteen Colonies (USA)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â 1776
82   Tokelau                    1949 (Became a territory of New Zealand)
83   Tonga                      1970
84Â Â Â Trucial States (Oman)Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â 1951
85   Uganda Protectorate          1962
86   Unfederated Malay States      1957
87   Van Diemen's Land           1856
88Â Â Â Victoria (State in Australia)Â Â Â Â Â Â 1901
89   Western Samoa              1970
90   Windward Islands             1979
While these countries have attained independence from the British rule, there are 14 self-governing countries that still have the British monarch as the head of the states. These 14 states, besides the UK, comprise of the Commonwealth realms, such as Australia and Canada.
There is another separate group of countries called the Commonwealth of Nations, or just the Commonwealth. Most of the members are former British colonies which come together for the promotion of human rights, democracy, and developmental goals among other objectives. This group is separate from the Commonwealth realms and member states of these groups do not necessarily have the British monarch as the head of state, such as India which is a republic.