English Language & Usage Asked on October 4, 2021
Countries that are not independent states are often called dependencies or territories as in “French Polynesia is a devolved parliamentary dependency”.
In the context in which I am using the word, it would be inappropriate to use the word “colonizer” to refer to the country of which the dependency is a territory. I’m thus looking for a word that captures the country that has territorial control over the dependency that is less politically charged. I do, of course, recognize that this is a politically charged subject but where I am using the term it must be as neutral as possible.
Ideally, the term should be one word and it should apply to both current dependencies and to former colonies. In a sense, it should be exactly like the word “colonizer”, but without the historical connotations.
Edit: Ideally, I’m looking for a single word. The way it would be used is to indicate the name of a dataset column, which indicates the name of the former colonizer for territories that have gained independence and the name of the country exercising control over the territory if the territory is not an independent state. An example of the former is the United Kingdom to Australia and an example of the latter is France to New Caledonia. Note, that I do not consider New Caledonia to be a colony of France (largely because a majority rejected independence in a referendum and extensive self-governance), although I do recognize that this is a contested classification.
Perhaps Suzerain is what you're looking for:
When one country controls most of another country's affairs while still allowing it some autonomy, the dominant country is called a suzerain.
In modern world affairs, suzerains are unusual, but history includes a number of them. For example, the Ottoman Empire was the suzerain in its relationships with Moldova, the principality of Serbia, and Wallachia, and for years China was a suzerain to Mongolia.
[Vocabulary.com]
Correct answer by user57854437 on October 4, 2021
"Dominion" works. From Latin "domus" meaning master or lord.
If you are using as a column title, it would be flexible enough to encompass everything you require, unusual enough not to trigger anyone, yet convey the precise meaning you want.
Answered by CWill on October 4, 2021
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