The Bukhara Khanate fights Russian invaders during …
Years: 1864 - 1875
Russia chooses not to annex the rest of Bukhara, fearing repercussions in the Muslim world and from Britain because Bukhara is a bastion of Islam and a place of strategic significance to British India.
Instead, the tsar's government makes a treaty with Bukhara, recognizing its existence but in effect subordinating it to Russia.
Locations
Groups
- Tajik people
- Islam
- Uzbeks
- Kokand (Quqon), Khanate of
- Russian Empire
- Bukhara, Emirate of
- Britain (United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland)
- Afghanistan, (Barakzai) Emirate of
- British Raj; India (Indian Empire)
Topics
Commodoties
Subjects
Regions
Subregions
Related Events
Filter results
Showing 10 events out of 14241 total
North Polynesia (1864 – 1875): Restoration, Reorientation, and the Shadow of Empire
Geographic and Historical Setting
North Polynesia—the Hawaiian Islands chain (except Hawai‘i Island’s southernmost reaches) together with Midway Atoll—lay at a global crossroads of empire and commerce in the mid-nineteenth century.
Anchors included O‘ahu, the administrative and diplomatic hub at Honolulu; Maui, long a royal seat at Lāhainā; Kaua‘i and Ni‘ihau, still maintaining older chiefly lineages; Moloka‘i, Lāna‘i, and Ni‘ihau, retaining rural self-sufficiency; and remote Midway, soon to be charted for coaling and telegraphic purposes.
By 1864, the Hawaiian Kingdom, under Kamehameha V, stood as one of the few recognized independent states in the Pacific. Its sovereignty was acknowledged by Britain, France, and the United States, yet increasingly constrained by their commercial and strategic ambitions. Across the broader North Polynesian arc, the tension between indigenous governance and external penetration defined the era.
Political and Social Developments
The reign of Kamehameha V (1863–1872) marked a conservative turn after the liberal experiments of his predecessors.
-
The 1864 Constitution centralized royal authority, restricted suffrage, and aimed to restore chiefly dignity amid rising settler influence.
-
Honolulu became a locus of bureaucratic modernization—surveying lands, codifying laws, and fostering education—while plantations expanded under foreign capital.
-
Disease and demographic collapse, still severe though slowing, left Native Hawaiians less than one-fifth of the mid-century population by the 1870s.
-
Mission-educated elites debated the kingdom’s future: monarchy and identity on one hand, economic necessity and global dependency on the other.
In 1872, the king’s death without an heir triggered a succession crisis, resolved by the election of Lunalilo (1873–1874) and, after his brief rule, Kalākaua (1874–1891)—whose reign would soon usher in the Reciprocity Treaty with the United States (1875), drawing the islands ever closer to American orbit.
Economy and Environmental Change
This decade consolidated the plantation transformation of North Polynesia.
-
Sugar, driven by American investors and Chinese labor recruitment, became the dominant export.
-
Rice and taro cultivation persisted in windward valleys, sustaining local markets.
-
Whaling, once paramount, declined rapidly as petroleum replaced whale oil; ports like Lāhainā and Hilo quieted while Honolulu shifted to a provisioning and trans-Pacific shipping hub.
-
Environmental pressures mounted: deforestation for cane and grazing accelerated erosion; stream diversions altered taro systems; introduced livestock and plants remade island ecologies.
The Hawaiian Agricultural Society and early forest advocates began to note the ecological costs of commercial agriculture—an early consciousness of environmental stewardship within a colonial framework of “improvement.”
Cultural Life and Religion
Despite depopulation and conversion, Native Hawaiian culture experienced a revival of adaptation and resilience.
-
Hula, long suppressed under missionary regimes, re-emerged in court festivals under Kalākaua’s patronage.
-
Printing presses in Hawaiian and English spread literacy and debate; newspapers such as Ka Nupepa Kuokoacarried indigenous perspectives on modernization and foreign intrusion.
-
Christian churches remained central, yet Hawaiian clergy increasingly led congregations.
-
Oral traditions were recorded systematically by Hawaiian scholars, preserving genealogies, chants, and histories that might otherwise have vanished.
This synthesis of literacy, tradition, and political engagement gave the North Polynesian world its characteristic dual identity: cosmopolitan yet deeply local.
Global Currents and Geopolitical Shifts
Beyond Hawai‘i, North Polynesia lay at the frontier of expanding imperial networks.
-
The United States extended Pacific telegraph cables and surveyed Midway (claimed 1867) for naval purposes.
-
Britain eyed coaling stations across the Central Pacific, while French influence pressed outward from Tahiti.
-
The trans-Pacific steamship routes, linking San Francisco, Honolulu, and Asia, made the islands essential nodes in global communication.
Thus, even as the Hawaiian Kingdom sought to reaffirm sovereignty through diplomacy, the geography of the North Pacific was being rewritten around it.
Environmental Adaptation and Resilience
-
Indigenous land stewardship persisted within ahupua‘a (ridge-to-reef) frameworks despite privatization under the Great Māhele (1848).
-
Native irrigation systems coexisted with plantation aqueducts; fishermen and farmers adapted to changing coastal and hydrological regimes.
-
Bird and forest decline spurred early conservation discourse, foreshadowing twentieth-century ecological restoration.
The capacity to reintegrate old knowledge within new political economies became the defining adaptive strength of the era.
Transition Toward the Late Nineteenth Century
By 1875, the signing of the Reciprocity Treaty with the United States symbolized both promise and peril: Hawaiian sugar gained privileged access to American markets, but at the cost of deepening economic dependence and future strategic vulnerability.
North Polynesia thus entered the modern age as a paradox—a sovereign island nation and cultural hearth standing at the crossroads of Pacific empire.
Its landscapes bore the marks of both continuity and upheaval: lo‘i terraces beside cane fields, basalt temples shadowed by missionary spires, and the voices of the oceanic past echoing through the new machinery of a globalizing world.
Summary Insight:
Between 1864 and 1875, North Polynesia was neither isolated nor colonized in the simple sense; it was a kingdom negotiating modernity, balancing indigenous revival and external constraint.
In The Twelve Worlds, this decade represents the climactic hinge between autonomy and annexation—the last full moment when Hawai‘i and its northern oceanic neighbors still moved to their own political and cultural rhythms, even as the wider Pacific tide began to turn irrevocably.
New Caledonia becomes a penal colony in 1864, and from the 1860s until the end of the transportations in 1897, France will send about twenty-two thousand criminals and political prisoners to New Caledonia.
Wellington is chosen for its central location, with Parliament officially sitting there for the first time in 1865.
Although the Thai attempt to thwart the expansion of French influence, their own influence over the monarch steadily dwindles.
In 1867 the French conclude a treaty with the Thai that give the latter control of Batdambang Province and of Siemreab Province in exchange for their renunciation of all claims of suzerainty over other parts of Cambodia.
Loss of the northwestern provinces deeply upsets Norodom, but he is beholden to the French for sending military aid to suppress a rebellion by a royal pretender.
According to historian of the Philippines Austin Coates, "1869 and 1870 stand distinct and apart from the whole of the rest of the period as a time when for a brief moment a real breath of the nineteenth century penetrated the Islands, which till then had been living largely in the seventeenth century."
De la Torre abolishes censorship of newspapers and legalizes the holding of public demonstrations, free speech, and assembly—rights guaranteed in the 1869 Spanish constitution.
Students at the University of Santo Tomas form an association, the Liberal Young Students (Juventud Escolar Liber-al), and in October 1869 hold demonstrations protesting the abuses of the university's Dominican friar administrators and teachers.
British and United States merchants dominate Philippine commerce, the former in an especially favored position because of their bases in Singapore, Hong Kong, and the island of Borneo.
There were thirteen foreign trading firms in Manila by 1856, of which seven were British and two American; between 1855 and 1873 the Spanish open new ports to foreign trade, including Iloilo on Panay, Zamboanga in the western portion of Mindanao, Cebu on Cebu, and Legaspi in the Bicol area of southern Luzon.
The growing prominence of steam over sail navigation and the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 contribute to spectacular increases in the volume of trade.
In 1851 exports and imports totaled some US$8.2 million; ten years later, they had risen to US$18.9 million and by 1870 are US$53.3 million.
Exports alone have grown by US$20 million between 1861 and 1870.
A national consciousness had been growing among the Filipino emigres who had settled in Europe between 1872 and 1892.
In the freer atmosphere of Europe, these emigres—liberals exiled in 1872 and students attending European universities—had formed the Propaganda Movement.
Organized for literary and cultural purposes more than for political ends, the Propagandists, who include upper-class Filipinos from all the lowland Christian areas, strive to "awaken the sleeping intellect of the Spaniard to the needs of our country" and to create a closer, more equal association of the islands and the motherland.
Among their specific goals are representation of the Philippines in the Cortes, or Spanish parliament; secularization of the clergy; legalization of Spanish and Filipino equality; creation of a public school system independent of the friars; abolition of the polo (labor service) and vandala (forced sale of local products to the government); guarantee of basic freedoms of speech and association; and equal opportunity for Filipinos and Spanish to enter government service.
Years: 1864 - 1875
Locations
Groups
- Tajik people
- Islam
- Uzbeks
- Kokand (Quqon), Khanate of
- Russian Empire
- Bukhara, Emirate of
- Britain (United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland)
- Afghanistan, (Barakzai) Emirate of
- British Raj; India (Indian Empire)
