For the complete documentation index, see llms.txt.
Skip to main content
New
17% · 1/6
Lesson 12 min 20 XP

Colonial Systems: How Empires Ruled

The structures of colonial domination — from resource extraction to racial hierarchies — and how they shaped the modern world.

The Architecture of Empire

European colonialism was not monolithic. The British practiced 'indirect rule,' governing through existing local hierarchies (as in Nigeria and India), while the French pursued 'assimilation,' imposing French language, law, and culture (as in Algeria and Indochina). Belgian rule in the Congo was characterized by extreme exploitation and violence. Portuguese colonialism lasted longest and was among the most economically extractive.

Despite these differences, all colonial systems shared core features: extraction of natural resources and labor for the benefit of the metropole; racial hierarchies that placed Europeans at the top; disruption or destruction of indigenous political, economic, and social systems; and the creation of artificial borders that divided ethnic groups or lumped rival communities together — borders that independent states inherited and that continue to generate conflict.