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  • Welcome to the United Kingdom (and a whole lot more) explained by me, C. G. P. Grey

  • The United Kingdom, England, Great Britain? Are these three the same place? Different

  • places? Do British people secretly laugh those who use the terms wrongly? Who knows the answers

  • to these questions? I do and I’m going to tell you right now.

  • For the lost: this is the world, this is the European continent and this is the place we

  • have to untangle. The area shown in purple is the United Kingdom.

  • Part of the confusion is that the United Kingdom is not a single country but instead is a country

  • of countries. It contains inside of it four co-equal and

  • sovereign nations The first of these is Englandshown here

  • in red. England is often confused with the United Kingdom as a whole because it’s the

  • largest and most populous of the nations and contains the de facto capital city, London.

  • To the north is Scotland, shown in blue and to the west is wales, shown in white.

  • And, often forgotten even by those in the United Kingdom, is Northern Ireland shown

  • in orange. Each country has a local term for the population.

  • While you can call them allBritishit’s not recommended as the four countries

  • generally don’t like each other. The Northern Irish, Scottish and Welsh regard

  • the English as slave-driving colonial mastersno matter that all three have their own

  • devolved Parliaments and are allowed to vote on English laws despite the reverse not being

  • trueand the english generally regard the rest as rural yokels who spend too much

  • time with their sheep. However, as the four constituent countries

  • don’t have their own passports, they are all British Citizens, like it or not.

  • British Citizens of the United Kingdomwhose full name is the United Kingdom of Great Britain

  • and Northern Ireland. So where’s Great Britain hiding?

  • Right here: the area covered in black in Great Britain. Unlike England, Scotland, Wales and

  • Northern Ireland, Great Britain is a geographical term rather than a political term.

  • Great Britain is the largest island among the British Isles.

  • Within the United Kingdom, the termGreat Britainis often used to refer to England,

  • Scotland and Wales alone with the intentional exclusion of Northern Ireland.

  • This is mostly, but not completely true, as all three constituent countries have islands

  • that are not part of Great Britain such as The Isle of Wight, Isles of Scilly and Lundy

  • which are part of England, the Welsh Isle of Anglesey and the Scottish

  • ** Hebrides
** Shetland Islands
** Orkney Islands
** Islands of the Clyde

  • The second biggest island in the british isles is Ireland.

  • It is worth noting that Ireland is not a country. Like Great Britain, it is a geographical,

  • not political, term. The Island of Ireland contain on it two countries,

  • Northern Irelandwhich we have already discussedand the Republic of Ireland.

  • When people say they areIrishthey are referring to the Republic of Ireland which

  • is a separate country from the united kingdom. However, both the Republic of Ireland and

  • the United Kingdom are members of the European Union even though England often likes to pretend

  • that it’s an Island in the mid-atlantic rather than 50km off the coast of France. But

  • that’s a story for another time. To review:

  • The two largest islands in the British Isles are Ireland and Great Britain. Ireland has

  • on it two countriesthe republic of ireland and northern ireland, while Great Britain

  • (mostly) contains three: England, Scotland and Wales. These last three, when combined

  • with northern Ireland form the United Kingdom Finishedno

  • There are still many unanswered questions. Such as, why, when you travel to Canada is

  • there British Royalty on the money? To answer this, we need to talk about Empire.

  • You can’t have gone to school in the English-speaking world without having learned that the British

  • Empire once spanned a 1/4th the worlds land and governed nearly a 1/4th its people.

  • While it is easy to remember the part of the empire that broke away violently

  • We often forget how many nations gained independence through diplomacy, not bloodshed.

  • These want-to-be nations struck a deal with the empire where they continued to recognize

  • the monarchy as the head of state in exchange for a local, autonomous parliament.

  • But this raises the question: are these countries then still part of the United Kingdom?

  • Well, not exactly, but to understand how they are connected, we need to talk about the crown.

  • Not the physical crown that sits behind glass in the tower of London and earns millions

  • of tourist pounds for the UK but the crown as a complicated legal entity best thought

  • of a one-man corporation. Who created this corporation?

  • God Did. According to British Tradition all power is

  • vested in God and the monarch is crowned in a Christian ceremony.

  • God howevernot wanted to be bothered with micromanagementconveniently delegates

  • his power to an entity called the crown. While this used to be the physical crown in the

  • tower of londonit evolved over time into a legal corporation sole able to be controlled

  • only by the ruling monarch. All the laws of the United Kingdom derive

  • their right to exist from the crown, which in turn derives its power from God.

  • It’s a useful reminder that the United Kingdom is still technically a theocracy with the

  • reigning monarch acting as both the head of state and the supreme governor of the official

  • state religion: Anglicanism. Such are the oddities that arise when dealing

  • with a 1,000 year-old Monarchy. Back to Canada and the rest, the former colonies

  • that gained their independence through diplomacy and continue to recognize that authority of

  • the crown are known as the Commonwealth Realm. They are, in decreasing order of population:

  • ** Canada
** Australia
** Papua New Guinea
** New Zealand
** Jamaica
** Solomon Islands
**

  • Belize
** The Bahamas
** Barbados
** Saint Lucia
** Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
**

  • Grenada
** Antigua and Barbuda
** Saint Kitts and Nevis
** Tuvalu

  • All are independent nations but still recognize the monarchy as the head of state even though

  • it has little real power within their borders. There are three further entities that belong

  • to the crown and these are the Crown Dependencies. Unlike the Commonwealth Realm, they are not

  • considered independent nations, but are granted local autonomy by the crown and British Citizenship

  • by the United Kingdomthough the UK does reserve the right to over-rule the laws of

  • there local assemblies. The Crown Dependencies are:

  • ** The Isle of Man
** Jersey
** Guernsey Are we all done *now*?

  • Almost, but not quite. There are still a couple of loose threads, such as this place:

  • The tiny city of Gibraltar on the Southern Coast of Spain famous for its rock, its monkeys

  • and for causing diplomatic tension between the United Kingdom and Spain.

  • Or what about the Falkland Islands? Which caused so much tension between the United

  • Kingdom and Argentina that they went to war over them.

  • These places belong in the last group of crown properties know as: British Overseas Territories.

  • But their former namecrown coloniesgives away their origins.

  • They are the last vestiges of the British Empire.

  • Unlike the Commonwealth Realm, they have not become independent nations and continue to

  • rely on the United Kingdom for military and (sometime) economic assistance. Like the Crown

  • Dependencies, everyone born in their borders is a British Citizen.

  • The Crown colonies are, in decreasing order of population:

  • **Bermuda** Cayman Islands
** Turks and Caicos Islands
** Gibraltar
** British

  • Virgin Islands
** Akrotiri and Dhekelia
** Anguilla
** Saint Helena
** Ascension

  • Islands
** Tristan da Cunha
** Montserrat
** British Indian Ocean Territory
** South

  • Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands
** Falkland Islands
** British Antarctic Territory
**

  • Pitcairn Islands. In our final review, the United Kingdom is

  • a country situated on the british isles and is part of The Crown which is controlled by

  • the monarchy. Also part of the crown and the british isles

  • are the crown dependencies. The independent nations of the former empire that still recognize

  • the crown are the commonwealth realm and the non-independent remnants of the former empire

  • are the British overseas territories.

Welcome to the United Kingdom (and a whole lot more) explained by me, C. G. P. Grey

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