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  1. The first Opium War was fought between China and Great Britain from 1839 to 1842. In the second Opium War, from 1856 to 1860, a weakened China fought both Great Britain and France. China lost both wars. The terms of its defeat were a bitter pill to swallow: China had to cede the territory of Hong Kong to British control, open treaty ports to ...

  2. W. War of the Supremes. Categories: 1840s conflicts. 19th-century conflicts. 1840 in international relations. 1840 in military history. Hidden category: Commons category link is on Wikidata.

  3. 3 de ago. de 2018 · The East India Company Iron Steam Ship Nemesis Destroys Chinese War Junks in Anson’s Bay on January 7, 1841. Public domain image from Wikipedia. The British expedition arrived at the mouth of the Canton River in the month of June, 1840. It consisted of four thou sand troops on board twenty-five transports, with a convoy of fifteen men-of-war.

  4. 16 de ene. de 2017 · Thus in 1840, they set to capture Osogbo, a Yoruba town. The Fulanis, under the command of Ali (the Hausa balogun of Ilorin) laid siege on Osogbo. Realizing the fulanis of Ilorin were too strong for the Osogbo army, Osogbo chiefs summoned the Ibadans for help. Immediately, Ibadan sent an auxilary army to Osogbo under the command of Obele (alias ...

  5. New Zealand's 19th-century wars. War changed the face of New Zealand in the 19th century. Many thousands of Māori died in the intertribal Musket Wars between the 1810s and the 1830s. There were more deaths during the New Zealand Wars of the 1840s to 1870s between some Māori and the Crown, which for many tribes had dire consequences. An ...

  6. Texas Comanche wars 1836 – 1875. The Comanche Wars were a series of armed conflicts fought between Comanche peoples and Spanish, Mexican, and American militaries and civilians in the United States and Mexico from as early as 1706 until at least the mid-1870s. The Comanche were the Native American inhabitants of a large area known as ...

  7. The countryside. Towards the middle of the nineteenth century, Europe was a continent of peasants. Even in areas that were, by the standards of the day, heavily urbanized and industrialized, such as the Düsseldorf District of the Prussian Rhine Province, or the Austrian province of Bohemia, farmers made up 40 and 55 percent of the regions' respective labor forces.