It didn't. The loss of the colonies after World War 2 was the start of the decline of Britain.
Stay Strong airs in th UKon Tuesday 13th March from 9pm and again on Tuesday 20th Mar from 8pm on MTV.
If you are born in the UK and have a British Passport with status as British Citizen (British Subject is different), you can stay out of the UK for as long as you like without losing your nationality, unless of course, you have applied for nationality of another country. Even then, you may still be entitled to dual nationality.
No - that doesn't give you automatic right to stay in the UK !
in the UK they usually stay in the Hilton hotels
In terms of number of Colonies, UK. In terms of area, France. In terms of population, UK. In terms of land that wasn't barren deserts, UK.
If you have dual nationality, you can stay for as long as you want to and can afford.
40
The same reason the UK is not the only English-speaking country: colonies, colonies, COLONIES!!!
depends on where she was a citizen.
Indefinitely
YES
It varied between colonies. Some colonies (such as Southern Rhodesia) were self-governing. Some colonies (such as Swaziland) were directly controlled by the UK. Parts of India were controlled directly by the UK, while others were internally self-governing. It depended on colony.