Pax Britannica

English

Etymology

Learned borrowing from New Latin Pax Britannica, from pāx (peace) + Britannica (British) after the model of the imperial Roman Pāx Rōmāna. Earliest recorded use 1871 in work by British jurist and historian Sir Henry James Sumner Maine.

Proper noun

Pax Britannica

  1. (history) The period of British hegemony over the seas and most oversea colonies between the 1805 Battle of Trafalgar and the onset of World War I in 1914.

Translations