Conquest and Colonisation timeline
The British, settling in Jamaica, soon turn the island into the major slave market of the West Indies
After a six-month siege, the Dutch capture Colombo from the Portuguese in Sri Lanka
The Dutch in South Africa purchase slaves to do domestic and agricultural work
Parliamentary reprisals against the rebellious Irish result in two thirds of Ireland's land being owned by the English or the Scots
The Dutch expel the Portuguese from the last of their trading posts in Sri Lanka
Louis XIV grants New France the status of a royal province and greatly increases the flow of colonists to north America
The British establish Fort James on an island in the Gambia river
Peter Stuyvesant accepts the reality of the military situation and yields New Amsterdam to the British without a shot being fired
New Amsterdam is renamed New York by the recently established English regime
In the treaty of Breda, England keeps New Amsterdam and New Netherland, and Holland keeps the English-held territory of Surinam
The Jesuits establish a mission at Sault Sainte Marie which becomes the starting point for French exploration south of the Great Lakes
England's East India Company is granted a lease on Bombay by Charles II, who has received it from his Portuguese bride
Robert de La Salle makes his first exploration of the Ohio valley, providing the basis for France's later claim to the area
Samuel Sewall begins a diary of daily life in Boston, Massachusetts, that will span a period of more than fifty years
A sudden uprising by the Wampanoag Indians against the new England settlements begins the conflict known as King Philip's War
Charles II grants William Penn the charter for the region that becomes Pennsylvania, in settlement of a debt to Penn's father
Robert de la Salle travels down the Mississippi to its mouth and claims the entire region for France, naming it Louisiana
William Penn approves the Great Law, allowing complete freedom of religious belief in Pennsylvania
William Penn achieves peace for Pennsylvania by negotiating a treaty with the local Lenape (or Delaware) tribes
Mennonites and other from Germany (later known as the Pennsylvania Dutch) begin to settle in Penn's liberal colony
France by now has six fortified trading settlements around the coast of India, of which Pondicherry is the most important
John Strong, landing on some remote Atlantic islands, names them after Viscount Falkland, treasurer of the British navy
Peter the Great makes an unexpected raid down the river Don and captures Azov from the Crimean Tatars
Fort St William is built by the East India Company in the Ganges delta, and subsequently develops into Calcutta
In the Treaty of Rijswijk, Spain cedes the western half of Hispaniola to France, which names its new colony Saint-Domingue