A Short History of Australia
Publié le 23/05/2020
Extrait du document
«
A Short History of Australia
The Australian National Flag has three elements on a blue
background: the Union Flag or Union Jack, the Commonwealth
Star and the Southern Cross.
The Union Jack in the upper left
corner r ecognizes the history of British settlement.
Below the
Union Jack is a white Commonwealth or Federation star.
It has
seven points symbolizing the unity of the six states and the
territories of the Commonwealth of Australia.
Early History
The first settler s arrived around 50,000 years ago.
This was at a time when sea levels were lower
and the land was less fertile.
The central dry areas had not attracted settlers until about 25,000
years ago.
The population grew more and more around 10,000 years ago as the climate improved.
First Arrivals
17 th century : The first European sightings of Australia were made by a Dutchman called Willem
Janszoon on the Duyfken (Little Dove).
Jansz oon sailed into Australian waters charting 300 km of
the coast.
Later Louis Vaez de Torres sailed through the Torres Strait, later named after him.
Both
Captains sighted the Cape York Peninsula.
It was in 1644 that Dutch explorer Abel Tasman proclaimed that Australia was made up of four
coasts North, West, East and South.
The Austral ian state of Tasmania was named after this
famous explorer.
18 th – 19 th century: 1776 Captain Cook landed in Botany Bay on the Eastern side of Australia in
the ship named HM Bark Endeavour.
First Settlements
In 1788 the First Fleet arrived at Sydney Cove under Captain Arthur Phillip to establish the first
settlement in Australia, a penal colony.
In time that became Sydney.
The date of his arrival, 26
January , is still today celebrated as Australia Day .
Also in 1788, at the time of British settlement at
Sydney Cove, it is estimated that 300,000 Aboriginal people inhabited Australia.
They spoke
around 200 different languages.
On arrival the Europeans took the land as their own.
The
Aboriginal people were thrown o ut of their homes and many of them were killed.
Various newly
arrived European diseases led to a rapid increase in epidemics.
The introduction of wild and
domestic animals contributed to the destruction of the natural environment.
Fighting killed the
Abori ginal population in Tasmania and greatly reduced their numbers in the rest of Australia.
Civilization and Integration
20 th century: During the early part of the 20th century laws were passed to protect Aboriginals.
This, however, involved restrictions on w here they could live and work.
After World War II, integration became the government’s aim and attempts were made to
'Europeanise' them.
During the 1960s, legislation was changed and the Federal Government
passed laws for all Aboriginals to be given citize n status.
In 1972, the native people were given
back limited rights to their own land.
The situation has steadily improved for Australia's native
people, although more remains to be done.
Recent Australian History
o 1914 -1918 World War I: A ustralia
experiences her first major losses in a war
on the Gallipoli peninsula in Turkey
o 1939 -1945 World War II: Anzac troops in
Greece, Crete, and N -Africa (El Alamein)
and the Pacific.
The Japanese bomb
Darwin in 1942.
o 1950 - 1953 Korean War: Australian troops
became part of the United Nations forces.
o 1964 –1972 Vietnam War: Commonwealth
troops in alliance with US forces.
o In 2000 Australia hosted the Olympic
Games and presented the image to the
world of a prosperous and peaceful
country.
o In 2008 Kevin Rudd, the then Prime
Minister of Australia, officially said what no
government before would or could have
said.
He said sorry to the Stolen
Generation for taking away Aboriginal
children from their parents to bring them up
in a European way..
»
↓↓↓ APERÇU DU DOCUMENT ↓↓↓
Liens utiles
- Citizens assemblies and global warming (short essay)
- W. L. Mackenzie King - Canadian History. I INTRODUCTION W. L. Mackenzie King
- Asia - History.
- George Washington I INTRODUCTION George Washington (1732-1799), first president of the United States (1789-1797) and one of the most important leaders in United States history.
- HISTORY: The cold War