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Explanation:

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The proprietary colonies were established under charters from the Crown, and the companies appointed the governors. In the Crown colonies the governors were appointed by the King or Queen and were responsible to the monarch for governing the colonists. Whereas royal colonies belonged to the Crown, proprietary and charter colonies were granted by the Crown to private interests. Control over a charter or corporate colony was granted to a joint-stock company, such as the Virginia Company.

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Answer and Explanation:

Do I assume we are talking American rebellion here , because the British Empire was very, very much larger then a few settlements on the shores of an unexplored and unknown continent. There were an almost infinite number of places throughout the World were there could have been tension between British colonists and whatever local power there was.

Even in America, the actual native peoples , colloquially known as ‘Red Indians’ seem to have been happy with the British Government; at least they signed, and both sides kept, treaties. Very noticeably the Yankees did not honour treaties with the red man. It seems to have been the incomers, the settlers, who were happy not to be British citizens, perhaps because in part they were renegades from home rule in Britain. A similar phenomenon can be observed today in some of the people in Ireland. At least both the British and the Native Americans appear to have respected each other, our battle cry as eleven year olds running onto the football pitch was ‘Geronimo’ which I can only think was Hollywood influence. Did you know that U.K. is perhaps the only country in the World, maybe India as well, where the Saturday juvenile audience cheers on the red men in Western movies? No ‘hat colour’ coding (white for heroes, black for villains) , for us in Yorkshire. I was once watching that fabulous piece of hokum “Crimson pirate” at the village flea pit when Maureen O’Hara, heroine, implored Burt Lancaster, villain, to “Come and join us” and the whole audience broke out in the Sally Army hymn.

It is possible that in USA the entire audience sits well mannerdly in silence during Hollywood Western movies, but I, as a Yorkshireman, find that hard to swallow.

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