(Redirected from Unilateral Declaration of Independence):''This article is about 'declarations of independence' in general. Specific declarations of independence are listed below in alphabetical order.''
A 'declaration of independence' is an assertion of the
independence of an aspiring
state or states. Such states are usually formed from part or all of the
territory of another nation or failed nation, or are breakaway territories from within the larger state.
Declarations of independence are typically made without the consent of the parent state, and hence are sometimes called 'unilateral declarations of independence' (UDI), particularly by those who question the declarations' validity.
List of declarations of independence
A
★ '
Declaration of Arbroath' (
Scotland, 1320): The first known formal declaration of independence, in which Scottish leaders declared Scotland's independence from
England on behalf of the Scottish people.
★ '
Argentine Declaration of Independence' (1816): Adopted on
July 9,
1816 by the United Provinces of South America at the
Congress of Tucumán.
B
★ '
Declaration of Independence of Bangladesh' (1971):
Bangladesh (East Pakistan) declared independence from the
Pakistan in 1971. Pakistan sent its military and brutally killed liberation fighters (Mukti Bahini). India supported the Mukti Bahini who fought against West Pakistan's military for nine months and this eventually led to the 1971 Indo-Pak War, a result of which
Bangladesh gained independence and was recognised as a country by the world within a year.
★ '
Belgian Declaration of Independence' (1830): The
Provisional Government of Belgium proclaimed that ''the provinces of Belgium, violently seceded from Holland, constitute an independent State''. The proclamation was signed by
Louis de Potter,
Charles Rogier,
Sylvain Van de Weyer and
Félix de Mérode.
★ '
Brazilian Declaration of Independence' (1822):
Brazil was declared independent from
Portugal on
September 7 by then regent Pedro de Bragança e Bourbon, who was then crowned
Emperor Pedro I of Brazil.
C
★ '
Central American Declaration of Independence' (1821): Signed on
September 15,
1821 by the representatives of all
Central American states, which conform the modern-day countries of
Guatemala,
El Salvador,
Honduras,
Nicaragua and
Costa Rica.Dia de Independencia del El Salvador, 15 deSeptembre-- 17:11, 9 September 2007 (UTC)
D
★ '
Dominican Declaration of Independence' (1844): The Dominican Republic declared independence from Haiti, its neighbor on the island of Hispaniola. The date traditionally named the Dominican Republic's independence day is
February 27,
1844.
E
★ '
East Timorese Declaration of Independence' (1975):
East Timor, formerly
Portuguese Timor, declared independence from Portugal on
November 28. The declaration was recognized by several Communist (
Marxist-Leninist) and
Third World nations, including the
People's Republic of China, but not by neighboring
Australia,
Portugal or
Indonesia. Indonesia invaded on
December 7,
1975, and annexed East Timor as its 'twenty-seventh province' on
July 17,
1976.
★ '
Estonian Declaration of Independence' (1918):
Estonia declared its independence on
February 24,
1918 between the retreating
Russian and advancing
German troops of
World War I. Germany occupied the country the next day.
F
★ '
Finland's declaration of independence' (1917):
Finland declared its independence from
Russia shortly after the
October Revolution, on
6 December.
G
★ '
Declaration of Independence of Guinea-Bissau' (1973):
Guinea-Bissau, formerly Portuguese Guinea, declared independence from
Portugal in 1973. The declaration was recognized by many countries. Portugal formally granted independence in 1974.
H
★ '
Haitian Act of Independence' (1804): On
January 1,
1804,
Jean Jacques Dessalines declared
Haïti a free republic and joined the United States as the second independent nation in the Western Hemisphere.
★ '
Hungarian Declaration of Independence' (1849):
Hungary declared independence from the
Austrian Empire and deposed the
Habsburg dynasty on
April 14,
1849. The Hungarian Revolution was later suppressed with Russian help and the country gained full independence only after World War I on
November 16 1918.
I
★ '
Icelandic Declaration of Independence' (1944):
Iceland declared its independence from
Denmark, following a
plebiscite of the local population, on
June 17,
1944. The Danish
King Christian X, whose country was under
Nazi occupation at the time, had urged Iceland to wait until the end of the war before making any such move but otherwise did nothing to prevent it (and was unable to do so in any case as Iceland was under U.S.
military occupation).
★ '
Indian Declaration of Independence' (1947):
India declared independence from the
United Kingdom on
August 15 1947.
★ '
Indonesian Declaration of Independence' (1945):
Indonesia declared independence from the
Netherlands on
August 17,
1945. Its independence was soon recognized by the
United States and
Australia, but not by the Netherlands until 1949.
★ '
Proclamation of the Irish Republic' (
1916): During the
Easter Rising in
Dublin Irish rebels proclaimed an independent Irish republic. Unlike the later Declaration of Independence of 1919, the Proclamation of the Republic was not followed by the establishment of any ''de facto'' political institutions.
★ '
Irish Declaration of Independence' (1919): The
Irish Republic, encompassing the whole island of
Ireland, was declared by
Dáil Éireann (a revolutionary parliament setup by the vast majority of elected representatives of Ireland) in 1919. By the declaration the Dáil ratified the earlier Easter Proclamation. The new Irish Republic was recognized by no country except the
Russian SFSR and was rivaled by the administration of the
Lord Lieutenant of Ireland during the
Anglo-Irish War. It was superseded by the
Irish Free State in 1922.
★ '
Israel's Declaration of Independence': The declaration was made on
May 14,
1948 (the day in which the British Mandate over Palestine expired) by the
Jewish People's Council.
K
★ '
Katangan Declaration of Independence' (1960):
Katanga, a former a province of the
Belgian Congo, attempted to secede by means of a Declaration of Independence in 1960, when Congo was granted its independence. The attempted secession was ended by the implementation of the
United Nations supervised
National Conciliation Plan in January 1963.
★ '
Korean Declaration of Independence' (1919):
Korea declared independence from
Japan on
March 1,
1919. Japanese government brutally cracked down the
independence movement. Leaders of the movement fled to Shanghai of China and founded
Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea.
L
★ '
Council of Lithuania' (1918): On
February 16,
1918 the council signed the
Act of Independence of Lithuania and declared
Lithuania reestablishing an independent state based on
democratic principles. The council also managed to establish the proclaimed independence even though
German troops were present in the country till the fall of 1918. The council continued its work until the
Constituent Assembly of Lithuania () first met on
May 15,
1920.
★ '
Act of the Re-Establishment of the State of Lithuania' (1990):
Lithuania became the first
Soviet republic to declare its independence from the
Soviet Union on
March 11,
1990. The Act relied on the
Act of Independence of Lithuania, adopted in 1918, as its legal basis. Lithuania was internationally recognized in 1991.
★ '
Oath of Abjuration' (
Low Countries, 1581): The ''Plakkaat van Verlatinghe'' was the formal declaration of independence on
July 26,
1581 of the northern
Low Countries from
Philip II of
Spain.
M
★
The Republic of Minerva, (1971, in the Pacific Ocean, at 23°23′S, 178°58′W). In 1972, the
Kingdom of Tonga invaded with military forces and made claim over the Minerva Reefs.
N
★ '
Declaration of the Independence of New Zealand' (1835): This was a declaration of the independence of the
Māori tribes.
★ Alleged ''
Mecklenburg Declaration of Independence'' (
May 20,
1775 in North Carolina) is not regarded as authentic.
★ '
Norwegian Declaration of Independence' (June 7, 1905): ''Selvstendighetserklæringen''—dissolves union with
Sweden.
P
★ '
Palestinian Declaration of Independence' (1988): The
Palestine Liberation Organization proclaimed the
State of Palestine in 1988. The PLO had no control of any territory at the time though the
Palestinian Authority is arguably a ''de facto'' state today.
★ '
Philippine Declaration of Independence' (1898): The
Philippines was declared independent from
Spain by
Emilio Aguinaldo on
June 12,
1898 when the
Spanish-American War was still under way. However, neither Spain nor the United States recognized the declaration. Official Philippine independence was finally granted by the American Congress on
July 4,
1946 after 48 years of United States colonial rule.
R
★ '
Rhodesian Declaration of Independence' (1965):
Ian Smith's white minority government declared independence from the
United Kingdom on
November 11 1965. Few states accepted this declaration's legitimacy. The UDI Rhodesian state was ultimately replaced under the
Lancaster House Agreement by a restored British regime under a governor:
Lord Soames. Within a short time, a new, much more widely recognized independent state,
Zimbabwe, came into existence.
S
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Somaliland Declaration of Independence' (1991): With Somalia sliding down into total anarchy, the former colony of
British Somaliland, which became a
constituent state of the newly independent Somalia in 1960, reasserted its independence. Despite the non-recognition of
Somaliland by the international community, Somaliland has enjoyed stability and economic growth.
★ '
South Africa': On adopting the 1996 constitution
[1] [2], the government of South Africa declared that the people of South Africa did not have to ask the
Westminster Parliament to pass legislation to make the new constitution legal
[3] [4]. (''See also''
Constitutional Court of South Africa and
Statute of Westminster 1931.)
★ '
Declaration of the Immediate Causes Which Induce and Justify the Secession of South Carolina from the Federal Union' (1860): The State of South Carolina reclaimed its sovereignty as a fully independent state by withdrawing from the United States. Its secession ordinance is an analogue, and cites, the Declaration of Independence of 1776 to which it was a signatory. Georgia, Mississippi, Texas and the southern part of Arizona issued similar documents in 1861.
★ '
Declaration of Independence for the Southern Cameroons' (1999): broadcast over regional radio in the early hours of
31 December 1999.
T
★ '
Texan Declaration of Independence' (1836):
Texas declared its independence from
Mexico as the
Republic of Texas.
★ '
Declaration of Independence of the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus' (1983): The
Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus was proclaimed in northern
Cyprus in 1983. The area had been occupied by Turkish forces since a Turkish invasion in 1974. The state has only received international recognition from
Turkey and the
Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic of
Azerbaijan.
U
★ '
United States Declaration of Independence' (
July 4,
1776): Made by the United Colonies of North America, which would later create the
United States of America. Written by Thomas Jefferson.
V
★ '
Declaration of Independence of the Democratic Republic of Việt Nam' (1945): proclaimed by
Hồ Chí Minh in
Hà Nội on
September 2, 1945
Self-declared states since 1990 include: '
Chechnya', '
Puntland', '
Nagorno-Karabakh', '
South Ossetia', '
Abkhazia', and '
Transnistria'.
Independence without a declaration
In many cases, independence is achieved without a declaration of independence but instead occurs by bilateral agreement. An example of this is the independence of many components of the
British Empire, most parts of which achieved independence through negotiation with the United Kingdom government.
Australia and
Canada, for example, achieved full independence through a series of acts of the respective national
parliaments of the United Kingdom, Australia and Canada.
One notable example of a formal declaration that Taiwan is independent of China would be one of the conditions under which it would use force against Taiwan.
The
political status of Taiwan remains controversial; the position of many advocates of
Taiwan independence has been that since Taiwan has never been a part of the PRC, and the governing institutions of the ROC function as an independent and sovereign state and there is no need to formally declare Taiwan to be independent. However, opponents of Taiwan independence and supporters of
Chinese reunification on Taiwan, also see no point in a declaration of independence in that they argue that Taiwan is and should be part of a greater cultural entity known as
China, and a new proposed "
Republic of Taiwan" would only bring about a change in name at the cost of an invasion of Taiwan, which it could not afford.
See also
★
Independence Day
★
Separatism