Dominion of British West Florida

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Dominion of British West Florida
Micronation
Flag of British West Florida Coat of Arms of British West Florida
Flag Coat of Arms
Motto: Dieu et mon Droit
God, and my Right
Anthem: God Save The Queen
Status Current
Official languages English
Organizational structure Monarchy
 •  Acting Governor-General Ryan Montgomery
Establishment
 •  Declared November 29, 2005[1] 

The Dominion of British West Florida is a separatist micronation founded in 2005 "on an eccentric interpretation of actual historic events"[1] and based in the Gulf coast region of the United States. It claims the territory of the 18th-century colony of West Florida, which has since been subsumed into the US states of Alabama, Louisiana, and Mississippi.[2]

The Dominion claims to be "striving for Dominion Status as a Commonwealth Realm, on a par with Canada, New Zealand, Australia, Antigua and Barbuda, Saint Kitts and Nevis, and The Bahamas."[3] The organization is neither acknowledged by any government nor exercises any authority over its claimed territory, and its activities are largely limited to the internet.

History

The micronation was founded in November 2005 in order to "reassert Britain's rights" over the region, by an individual identified on the micronation's website only as "Robert VII, Duke of Florida."[4] The website asserts that Duke Robert "inherited the Peerage of the Dominion" in 1969, and "accepted the position of Governor General" in 1994. The micronation has issued cinderella stamps and has minted several base metal coins, produced by Jorge Vidal and issued in denominations based on pre-decimal pounds.[1][3]

The founders of the micronation assert that the US annexation was illegal, because control of the region had actually defaulted to the United Kingdom in 1808, upon the removal from office of King Charles IV of Spain, thus invalidating the Treaty of Paris and the US annexation to which it gave rise.[4] This interpretation of historic events is not supported by any mainstream historian.[5]

See also

References

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  5. Mathson, S and Lorenzen, M.G. (2008). We Won't Be Fooled Again: Teaching Critical Thinking via Evaluation of Hoax and Historical Revisionist Websites in a Library Credit Course. College and Undergraduate Libraries, 15 (1/2): 211-230.

External links