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keldoll532 | 14:54 Thu 02nd Feb 2006 | History
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British who supported the colonist against King were called?
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I take it you refer to king George III and the American War of Independence? If so, I believe they were referred to as 'loyalists' (by the British, that is) although I'm sure the 'colonists' would have given them another title.


This is an old classic, isn't it? I imagine that correctly speaking the colonists were rebelling against the crown and therefore insurgents.


But, of course, history is written by the winners and therefore they are Patriots!!

no... the loyalists supported the British, didn't they?
Traitors!!!!!!
the question seems to be ambiguous (as was the war) - since the rebellious colonists were supposedly British anyway, I suppose we are talking about those in the UK who sympathized with them - Pitt the Elder for one, not to mention Tom Paine (i said don't mention tom paine! - I think he was in exile by then anyway) Colonists who remained loyal to the Crown were known as Tories, but I can't think of a term for those at home who supported the colonists/rebels/whatever...
those would probably be Whigs, the party that supported curbs on royal power. The ones in the USA (as it then wasn't) who were 'patriots' - revolutionaries - were often called Whigs too.

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