penal colony
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For more information on penal colony, visit Britannica.com.
A penal colony is a colony used to detain prisoners and generally use them for penal labor in an economically underdeveloped part of the state's (usually colonial) territories, and on a far larger scale than a prison farm. The most well known was Devil's Island in French Guiana. The British Empire used its colonies in North America for almost 150 years and then parts of Australia for a further 75 years.
The prison regime was often harsh, sometimes including severe physical punishment, so even if prisoners were not sentenced for the rest of their natural lives, many died from hunger, disease, medical neglect and excessive efforts, or during an escape attempt.
In the penal colony system, prisoners were sent far away to prevent escape and to discourage returning after their sentence expired. Penal Colonies were often located in frontier lands, especially the more inhospitable parts, where their unpaid labour could benefit the metropoles before immigration labor became available, or even afterwards where they are much cheaper; in fact sometimes people (especially the poor, following a similar social logic as could see them domestically 'employed' in a poorhouse) were sentenced for trivial or dubious offenses to generate cheap labor.
The British used North America as a penal colony both in the usual sense and through the system of indentured servitude. Most notably, the Province of Georgia was originally designed as a penal colony. Convicts would be transported by private sector merchants and auctioned off to plantation owners upon arrival in the colonies. It is estimated that some 60,000 British convicts were sent to colonial America, representing perhaps one-quarter of all British emigrants during the eighteenth century.[citation needed]
When that avenue closed in the 1780s after the American Revolution, Britain began using parts of modern day Australia as penal colonies.
Some of these early colonies were Norfolk Island, Van
Diemen's Land and New South Wales. Advocates of Irish Home Rule or of
In colonial India, the British had made various penal colonies. Two of the most infamous ones are on the Andaman islands and Hijli.
The concept of remote and inhospitable prison planets has been employed by science fiction writers. Famous examples include:
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