not stictly enforced
English laws controlling trade were not strictly enforced
Before 1763 English laws that were set up to control trade were not strictly enforced. When 1763 rolled around, the British were just coming out of another war and had racked up a lot of debt. This caused them to become more strict with the trade laws and to implement new taxes on the colonists.
You spelt Africans wrong and it begun in 1763
cool people
1763
The British left the colonies mostly on their own before 1763.
Americans viewed English policies after 1763 as a systematic attack on their constitutional liberties.
The English hoped the Proclamation Line of 1763 would enforce mercantilism by limiting westward expansion of the American colonists, thereby preventing conflicts with Native Americans and ensuring that colonial trade remained concentrated within established borders. By controlling westward settlement, the British aimed to retain economic benefits from trade with indigenous peoples and manage resources effectively within the colonies. This regulation would help maintain a steady flow of raw materials to England while ensuring that colonial markets relied on British goods, reinforcing the mercantilist framework.
The French and the Native American's empires fought over the control of America before the English were involved. The French and Indian War took place between 1754 and 1763.
Mississippi
Michael Foster - English judge - died in 1763.
One of the causes was Native American concerns about western expansionThe proclamation of 1763 happened at the end of the French and Indian war. The proclamation of 1763 prohibited settlement west of the Appalachian Mountains and was and was England's way of controlling expansion to save on governing cost.