Yes, the French.
All of the subcontinent was not united under any past native ruler or government because the whole Indo-Pak subcontinent has never been a single nation and it was so vast and with slow and different communication ,it was impossible for a single ruler to govern the whole of it
no it was the articles of confederation.
The origins of Virginia began in 1607 with the founding of Jamestown. The Virginia Company, which had been given the charter to found the colony, set up a General Assembly. In 1624, Virginia became a royal colony when the Virginia Company's charter was revoked. However, the General Assembly stayed in place which helped set a model for representative government in this and other colonies.
The thirteen original colonies were Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, South Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Virginia. The 14th state was Vermont.
Either Benjamin Franklin, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, or Alexander Hamilton.
1 January 1901 was the date when the six states, or colonies, of Australia federated to become the Commonwealth of Australia, united under a single Federal Givernment.
so that we as United States would not become a tyrant like the king we where under when we where colonies
To a stronger central government. They didn't work because everyone was an individual and not united under a single working government.
Before 1776, the American colonies were ruled by the British government under the system of colonial rule. This system allowed the British government to make decisions for the colonies and impose taxes on them without their representation in Parliament.
The colonies joined to become one nation with the adoption of the Articles of Confederation, which was ratified in 1781. However, the formal establishment of the United States as a unified nation occurred with the signing of the U.S. Constitution in 1787, which created a stronger federal government. The Constitution was subsequently ratified by the states by 1788, officially uniting the colonies under a single national framework.
Officially, the United States operates under a federal presidential constitutional republic. Meanwhile, the People's Republic of China operates under a single-party socialist state.
to strengthen the colonies against the French
As long as Australia's colonies were still colonies, they were under British rule. When the colonies federated, becoming states, they united as a single nation known as the Commonwealth of Australia, overseen by the federal government.
All of the subcontinent was not united under any past native ruler or government because the whole Indo-Pak subcontinent has never been a single nation and it was so vast and with slow and different communication ,it was impossible for a single ruler to govern the whole of it
The Albany Plan of Union was a plan to place the British North American colonies under a more centralized government. On July 10, 1754, representatives from seven of the British North American colonies adopted the plan. Although never carried out, the Albany Plan was the first important proposal to conceive of the colonies as a collective whole united under one government.
This means that all the original colonies in Australia joined together under a single government, thus forming the Commonwealth of Australia. prior to Federation in 1901, there was no country of Australia, just a continent of Australia with several colonies. Each of these colonies - New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, Western Australia, Tasmania and Queensland - all joined together as a single nation. Federation removed the need for trade tariffs across borders, and ultimately brought about consistency with some laws. Each state still had its own government, but the state governments were now under a single, uniting federal government.
The colonies under the administration of the British government were collectively known as the "British Empire." More specifically, the American colonies were often referred to as the "Thirteen Colonies" prior to gaining independence. These colonies were governed directly by the British crown and were subject to British laws and regulations.