Colonization of the New World (St. George's Night)

The Colonization of Columbia and Meridonia (primarily occurring from the date of the discovery of the Americas in the mid-1400s to the 1700s) was the settlement of the New World by European and Middle Eastern nations, and the related displacement of much of the two continents' indigenous population. The main initial colonizers were Castile, Portugal, Aragon, Venice, England and Burgundy; they were later joined by the Ottoman Sultanate, Scandinavian states, and Scotland. Colonization triggered massive biological, ethnic and political changes both in Europe and the Americas; today, most of the Americas, excepting states like Tsêhéstáno and Haida in Columbia and Amazunya and Araucania in Meridonia, is made up of colonial successor states.