The end of the British Empire
From 1945 until today
After the two World Wars, the British Empire was slowly but clearly ending. The wars had harmed Britain’s economy severely. India set the tone for change when the country declared independence in 1947.
In the 1950s, the British government gave independence to Sudan, the Gold Coast and Malaysia. They didn’t want to risk a colonial war like the one that France had ended up in with Algeria. Many British colonies had already become self-governing as a result of decolonisation.
Canada became Britain’s first self-governing state in 1867, followed by Australia in 1901 and New Zealand in 1907. These previous colonies were in principle still connected to the British Crown, but were given a level of freedom. Over the next 20 years most of the Caribbean also gained its independence. Barbados became independent in 1966, and the rest of the Eastern Caribbean islands followed in the 1970s and 1980s.
To this day, the Union Jack is still a central part of the Australian flag.
The end of the Empire was in 1997, when Hong Kong became an administrative region under China.