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Queen Anne's
War
Queen
Anne's War (1702-1713), second of the four North American
wars waged by the British and French between 1689
and 1763. The wars were the result of the worldwide
maritime and colonial rivalry between Great Britain
and France and their struggle for predominance on
the European and North American continents; each of
the wars fought in North America corresponded more
or less to a war fought between the same powers in
Europe. Queen Anne's War arose from the issues left
unresolved at the end of King
William's War (1689-1697).
The
struggle corresponded to the European War of the Spanish
Succession (1701-1714) fought between the allied forces
of Great Britain, the Netherlands, and the Holy Roman
Empire on one side and France and Spain on the other.
The
principal events of Queen Anne's War were the capture
and burning in 1702 by English colonists of Saint
Augustine, Florida, then a Spanish possession; the
capture and burning of Deerfield, Massachusetts, and
the massacre of many of the inhabitants of the town
in 1704 by French troops and their Native American
allies; unsuccessful expeditions in 1704 and 1707
by troops from New England against Port Royal, Acadia
(now Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia); the conquest of
Acadia in 1710 by colonists supported by a squadron
of British ships and commanded by the British colonial
administrator Sir Francis Nicholson; and the failure
in 1711 of a large British and colonial joint military
and naval expedition against Québec and Montréal.
The war was ended in 1713 by the Peace of Utrecht,
which also brought to a close the War of the Spanish
Succession. By terms of this treaty the French ceded
Acadia to the British, as well as Newfoundland and
the Hudson Bay territory. The French retained Cape
Breton Island.
See
also French and Indian
War
"Queen
Anne's War," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia
2001 http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2000 Microsoft Corporation. All Rights Reserved.
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