Toubacterie: Difference between revisions
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== Decline == | == Decline == | ||
[[File:Léon_M%27ba_1964.jpg|200px|thumb|right|[[Samhuri Ngonidzashe]] was a pivotal figure in the downfall of Toubacterie.]] | |||
By the end of the [[Great War (Kylaris)|Great War]] in 1935, the desire to maintain a global colonial empire and significantly diminished, especially in a now fractured and destroyed [[Gaullica]]. Most of the former empire's possessions were either transferred to Grand Alliance colonial powers - [[Estmere]], [[Werania]] and [[Etruria]], or gained their independence in the ensuing peace treaty. With colonialism in Estmere especially going out of the fashion, combined with the new government's desire to decolonise their colonial empire, save a few key settlements, the established colonies in Bahia began their preparations for independence. Most Bahian colonial holdings declared or gained their independence throughout the 1930s and 1940s, beginning with [[Djedet]] in 1933 and white rule effectively ending with the [[Treaty of Ashford]] in April 1950, which saw [[Tabora]] secure its independence, which until then was the final Euclean holding in Bahia. | |||
As such, for most of Bahia, Toubacterie had ended in 1950, however in [[Garambura]] the end of Toubacterie is placed at 1969, as the rule of [[Rwizikuru]] is often seen as an oppressive one comparable to Toubacterie. | |||
== Legacy == | == Legacy == |
Revision as of 12:24, 26 December 2019
Toubacterie (lit. "rule by the white man" - of Ndjarendie origin), also referred to as Murungocracy or Murungerie in Estmerish colonies, is the name given to the period of time where white Eucleans ruled over Bahia. During Toubacterie the Euclean colonial powers rooted out or siginificantly altered the semi-feudalistic system of Hourege that had dominated Bahian civilisation for centuries prior, and was influential for the migration of people groups into Bahia such as the Yebase in Garambura and Murungu in Rwizikuru.
While the start of Toubacterie and its initial relationship with Hourege is debated, many agree that the settling of trading cities such as Sainte-Germaine in the late 17th-century kicked off the rise of Toubacterie, which was influenced further by the Floren Empire's conquests of Tsabara during the Pereramonic Wars. Toubacterie also did not become the antithesis of Hourege, nor actively sought to remove it from Bahian society, until the scramble for Bahia began in the 19th century, and vast swathes of land were claimed or conquered for the Euclean powers.
Before Toubacterie
Houregic Toubacterie
Scramble for Bahia
Decline
By the end of the Great War in 1935, the desire to maintain a global colonial empire and significantly diminished, especially in a now fractured and destroyed Gaullica. Most of the former empire's possessions were either transferred to Grand Alliance colonial powers - Estmere, Werania and Etruria, or gained their independence in the ensuing peace treaty. With colonialism in Estmere especially going out of the fashion, combined with the new government's desire to decolonise their colonial empire, save a few key settlements, the established colonies in Bahia began their preparations for independence. Most Bahian colonial holdings declared or gained their independence throughout the 1930s and 1940s, beginning with Djedet in 1933 and white rule effectively ending with the Treaty of Ashford in April 1950, which saw Tabora secure its independence, which until then was the final Euclean holding in Bahia.
As such, for most of Bahia, Toubacterie had ended in 1950, however in Garambura the end of Toubacterie is placed at 1969, as the rule of Rwizikuru is often seen as an oppressive one comparable to Toubacterie.