protektorat (unter schutzherrschaft stehendes gebiet)

listen to the pronunciation of protektorat (unter schutzherrschaft stehendes gebiet)
Немецкий Язык - Английский Язык
protectorate
An autonomous territory that is protected diplomatically or militarily against third parties by a stronger state or entity
{n} a government by a protector
a state or territory partly controlled by (but not a possession of) a stronger state but autonomous in internal affairs; protectorates are established by treaty
Government by a protector; -- applied especially to the government of England by Oliver Cromwell
The authority assumed by a superior power over an inferior or a dependent one, whereby the former protects the latter from invasion and shares in the management of its affairs
In international law, a common term to describe the relation between two states, one of which exercises control, great or small, direct or indirect, over the other
a weak nation under the protection and partial control of a stronger nation
A protectorate is a country that is controlled and protected by a more powerful country. In 1914 the country became a British protectorate. a country that is protected and controlled by a more powerful country. Relationship in which one country exercises some decisive control over another country or region. The degree of control may vary from one in which the protecting state guarantees the safety of the other to one that is a disguised form of annexation. Though the relationship is an ancient one, the use of the term dates only from the 19th century. In modern times most protectorates have been established by treaties requiring the weaker state to surrender management of its international relations, thus losing part of its sovereignty
Government by a protector; applied especially to the government of England by Oliver Cromwell
When Cromwell laid down Parliament in 1653, he made himself "Lord Protector" and effectively ended the Commonwealth experiment Some of his advisers, and other royalist-minded supporters, urged that he set himself up as King, but with encouragement from former Levellers and others, including the Quaker George Fox, he resisted the idea
{i} weak state that is protected and controlled by a stronger state