The Seven Years' War lasted from 1756 to 1763 and involved most of the great powers in Europe. At first, the war was made up of two conflicts.[1] The first one was mainly between Britain and France,[1] and the other was between Prussia and its enemies: France, Austria, Russia, and Sweden.[1]
An important cause of the war was the War of the Austrian Succession.[2]
The war was known by different names in different places. In the United States, it is known as the French and Indian War.[3] In French Canada, it is known as the War Of Conquest.[4] In both Sweden and Prussia, it was known as the Pomeranian War because they were fighting over Pomerania.[4] In India, it is known as the Third Carnatic War.[4]
As for the conflict between Prussia and Austria, it is known as the Third Silesian War.[4]
Colonialism was common at the time. During the war, the trade interests of the British Empire were opposed to those of the Bourbons, who controlled France and Spain. The Hohenzollerns, who ruled Prussia, and the Habsburgs, who were Holy Roman Emperors and archdukes in Austria, fought each other, mainly over Silesia.
A "diplomatic revolution" established an Anglo-Prussian camp, which was allied with some smaller German states and later the Portuguese Empire. It fought an Austro-French camp, which was allied with Sweden, Saxony and later Spain.
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