Examples of Second Anglo-Mysore War in the following topics:
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The American Revolution
- The American theater became only one front in Britain's war.
- In October 1781, the British surrendered their second invading army of the war, under a siege by the combined French and Continental armies under Washington.
- The capture of the French-controlled port of Mahé on India's west coast motivated Mysore's ruler, Hyder Ali to start the Second Anglo-Mysore War in 1780.
- The French support was weak, however, and the status quo ante bellum ("the state existing before the war") 1784 Treaty of Mangalore ended the war.
- France's trading posts in India were returned after the war.
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The Anglo-Saxons
- The Anglo-Saxons were a people who inhabited Great Britain from the 5th century.
- The history of the Anglo-Saxons is the history of a cultural identity.
- In the second half of the 6th century, four structures contributed to the development of Anglo-Saxon society: the position and freedoms of the ceorl (peasants), the smaller tribal areas coalescing into larger kingdoms, the elite developing from warriors to kings, and Irish monasticism developing under Finnian.
- The second element of Alfred's society is fighting men.
- The subject of war and the Anglo-Saxons is a curiously neglected one; however, it is an important element of their society.
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The Diplomatic Revolution
- The War of the Austrian Succession had seen the belligerents aligned on a time-honored basis.
- Even so, France concluded a defensive alliance with Prussia in 1747 and the maintenance of the Anglo-Austrian alignment after 1748 was deemed essential by some British politicians.
- This change in European alliances was a prelude to the Seven Years' War.
- One year after the signing of the First Treaty of Versailles, France and Austria signed a new offensive alliance, the Second Treaty of Versailles (1757).
- In 1758, the Anglo-Prussian Convention between Great Britain and the Kingdom of Prussia formalized the alliance between the two powers.
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Events of the War
- The Anglo-Prussian alliance was joined by smaller German states (especially Hanover, which remained in a personal union with Britain).
- This turn of events has become known as "the Second Miracle of the House of Brandenburg."
- Britain declared war against Spain and Portugal followed by joining the war on Britain's side.
- Eventually the Anglo-Portuguese army chased the greatly reduced Franco-Spanish army back to Spain, recovering almost all the lost towns.
- The Seven Years' War is sometimes considered the first true world war.
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The Hundred Years' War
- Historians commonly divide the war into three phases separated by truces: 1) the Edwardian Era War (1337–1360); 2) the Caroline War (1369–1389); and 3) the Lancastrian War (1415–1453), which saw the slow decline of English fortunes after the appearance of Joan of Arc in 1429.
- The Edwardian War was the first series of hostilities of the Hundred Years' War.
- This peace lasted nine years, until a second phase of hostilities known as the Caroline War began.
- The Caroline War was named after Charles V of France, who resumed the war after the Treaty of Brétigny.
- The Lancastrian War was the third phase of the Anglo-French Hundred Years' War.
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William of Orange and the Grand Alliance
- The French conveniently ignored the Second Partition Treaty and claimed the entire Spanish inheritance.
- The news that Louis XIV had accepted Charles II's will and that the Second Partition Treaty was dead was a personal blow to William III.
- Yet to William III France's growing strength made war inevitable.
- In 1701, it went into a second phase.
- The Dutch, Austrians, and German states fought on to strengthen their own negotiating position, but defeated by Marshal Villars they were soon compelled to accept Anglo-French mediation.
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The Question of Spanish Succession
- In an attempt to avoid war, Louis signed the Treaty of the Hague with William III of England in 1698.
- On his deathbed in 1700, Charles II unexpectedly offered the entire empire to the Dauphin's second son Philip, Duke of Anjou, provided it remained undivided.
- The Dutch, Austrians, and German states fought on to strengthen their own negotiating position, but defeated by Marshal Villars they were soon compelled to accept Anglo-French mediation.
- Europe before the outbreak of the War of the Spanish Succession, (c. 1700), source: Wikipedia.
- Europe after the War of the Spanish Succession (1714), source: Wikipedia.
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The English Protectorate
- The Commonwealth was the period when England, later along with Ireland and Scotland, was ruled as a republic following the end of the Second English Civil War and the trial and execution of Charles I (1649).
- The first was "healing and settling" the nation after the chaos of the civil wars and the regicide.
- His second objective was spiritual and moral reform.
- The First Anglo-Dutch War, which had broken out in 1652, against the Dutch Republic, was eventually won in 1654.
- By May 1652, Cromwell's Parliamentarian army had defeated the Confederate and Royalist coalition in Ireland and occupied the country—bringing to an end the Irish Confederate Wars (or Eleven Years' War).
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The Triumphs of Tsarina Elizabeth I
- Her first task after this was to address the war with Sweden.
- He represented the anti-Franco-Prussian portion of Elizabeth's council and his object was to bring about an Anglo-Austro-Russian alliance.
- The critical event of Elizabeth's later years was the Seven Years' War (1756-1763).
- However, in 1762, a year before the war formally ended, Elizabeth died.
- This turn of events has become known as "the Second Miracle of the House of Brandenburg."
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Philip II and the Spanish Armada
- Philip's second wife was his first cousin once removed, Queen Mary I of England.
- Philip's commitment to restore Catholicism in the Protestant regions of Europe resulted also in the Anglo-Spanish War (1585–1604).
- The war was punctuated by widely separated battles.
- He directly intervened in the final phases of the wars (1589–1598).
- The war was only drawn to an official close with the Peace of Vervins in May 1598.