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Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Back to Where the British Never Invaded- Humanosphere

"There'll always be an England, and England shall be free"-- very stirring words, but the actuality has been more like "Rule, Britannia"

I showed this map of mine to my old friend Bill V. and he just said, "Hey, you don't get an empire without invading countries" and wondered about maps of where the U.S. has been in one way or another.

One of the best features of this article are the reader's comments which come right after it. I can't get them to reproduce, so I will give you the link to the article here and again at the end ( a rather lively argument takes place over details such as the "invasion" of Finland, etc.)

http://www.humanosphere.org/basics/2013/08/map-of-the-day-where-the-brits-never-invaded/

Map of the Day: Where the Brits never invaded

The British Empire used to be pretty darned big. It was said that the sun never set on England (and it still might not).
A new map is making the rounds that shows the places where the British have invaded. Of the nearly 200 countries out there, the Brits have invaded all but 22. That is just about 90% of all countries!
Mongolia, the Ivory Coast, Bolivia and Sweden are among the selective group of making it to 2013 without a British invasion.  Here is the map showing where (pink) the British have invaded.
map-where-brits-never-invaded
The data comes from the new book All the Countries We’ve Ever Invaded: And the Few We Never Got Round To. Author Stuart Laycock went through the history of every country in the world to see where the Brits invaded.
The author spoke with The Telegraph about his two years of research and the results. He said France may be in second place with most countries invaded and says he hopes people will challenge his findings to determine whether or not he is right or some countries on the no list were actually invaded.
“I was absolutely staggered when I reached the total. I like to think I have a relatively good general knowledge. But there are places where it hadn’t occurred to me that these things had ever happened. It shocked me,” said Laycock to the Telegraph.
“Other countries could write similar books – but they would be much shorter. I don’t think anyone could match this, although the Americans had a later start and have been working hard on it in the twentieth century.”
The Telegraph lists some of the more surprising entries;
Iceland, invaded in 1940 by the British after the neutral nation refused to enter the war on the Allies side. The invasion force, of 745 marines, met with strong protest from the Iceland government, but no resistance.
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ABOUT AUTHOR

Tom Murphy
Tom Murphy is a Maine-based reporter for Humanosphere. Before joining Humanosphere, Tom founded and edited the aid blog A View From the Cave. His work has appeared in Foreign Policy, the Huffington Post, the Guardian, GlobalPost and Christian Science Monitor. He tweets at @viewfromthecave. Contact him at tmurphy[at]humanosphere.org.

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