You've never stood alone against a strategic opponent since 1066. And the funny thing is around 1800 you had more in common with Napoleon than with the Russian, Spanish, Italian and German allies with whom you fought him.Originally Posted by streety
European colonial or imperialist ventures in the nineteenth century were hardly profitable at all. They were considered a strategic necessity, not an economic one, and trade did not happily follow the flag anywhere. The Dutch for instance have mostly lost money on their West Indies possessions, though the profits of the slave trade through these possessions more than made up for the loss. The whole history of western imperialism has been rewritten ten times to incorporate the apparent political, strategic and economic inconsistencies that transpired during research. I don't pretend to have a last word on any historic development of such magnitude, but I always thought that between the Foreign Legion in Africa and the Michelin rubber plantations in Indo-China the French colonies attracted a decent number of emigrants.By contrast the French approach was primarily about territorial gain and hardly any were successful in business terms, nor attractive to emigrants.
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