The World in 2026 in English America (1800–2026)
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概要
What would the modern world look like if the Americas had entered history under the English flag from the very beginning?
In this episode, we follow the long consequences of an English Columbus from 1800 to 2026. By the nineteenth century, English America is no longer a colonial experiment, but a mature Atlantic civilization—stretching across the North, the Caribbean, and parts of the central American world, shaped by English law, maritime trade, imperial institutions, and deep cultural ties to Britain.
From there, everything changes. The struggles over slavery, abolition, industrialization, and self-government unfold inside a much larger Anglophone world. A powerful northern federation rises through trade, industry, and migration, while plantation regions and island societies wrestle with the legacies of empire and racial hierarchy. South America develops more as a diverse counterweight than as one continuous Latin sphere.
The twentieth century brings world wars, a stronger Anglophone Atlantic bloc, and a Cold War led not by Britain and America as separate powers, but by a broader English-speaking civilization. By 2026, English has become even more dominant globally, Britain retains greater symbolic importance, and the Western Hemisphere is defined less by an Anglophone North and Iberian South than by one vast English-American legacy.
But this world is not simply more unified. It is also more burdened—by slavery, colonial memory, and the enduring question of who paid the price for Atlantic power.
This episode explores how one different royal decision could have reshaped the modern age itself—creating not a Spanish beginning followed by a British rise and an American climax, but one long and unbroken Anglophone Atlantic world.