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Channel Islands
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The Channel Islands[note 1] are an archipelago in the English Channel, off the French coast of Normandy. They are divided into two Crown Dependencies: the Bailiwick of Jersey, which is the largest of the islands; and the Bailiwick of Guernsey, consisting of Guernsey, Alderney, Sark, Herm and some smaller islands. Historically, they are the remnants of the Duchy of Normandy.
Key Information
Although they are not part of the United Kingdom,[3] the UK is responsible for the defence and international relations of the islands as it is for the other Crown Dependency, the Isle of Man, and the British Overseas Territories.[4] The Crown Dependencies are neither members of the Commonwealth of Nations, nor part of the European Union. They have a total population of about 171,916, and the bailiwicks' capitals, Saint Helier and Saint Peter Port, have populations of 33,500 and 18,207 respectively.
"Channel Islands" is a geographical term, not a political unit. The two bailiwicks have been administered separately since the late 13th century. Each has its own independent laws, elections, and representative bodies (although in modern times, politicians from the islands' legislatures are in regular contact). Any institution common to both is the exception rather than the rule.
The Bailiwick of Guernsey is divided into three jurisdictions – Guernsey, Alderney and Sark – each with its own legislature. Although there are a few pan-island institutions (such as the Channel Islands Brussels Office, the Director of Civil Aviation and the Channel Islands Financial Ombudsman,[5] which are actually joint ventures between the bailiwicks), these tend to be established structurally as equal projects between Guernsey and Jersey. Otherwise, entities whose names imply membership of both Guernsey and Jersey might in fact be from one bailiwick only. For instance, The International Stock Exchange is in Saint Peter Port and therefore is in Guernsey.
The term "Channel Islands" began to be used around 1830, possibly first by the Royal Navy as a collective name for the islands.[6]: 158 The term refers only to the archipelago to the west of the Cotentin Peninsula. Other populated islands located in the English Channel, and close to the coast of Britain, such as the Isle of Wight, Hayling Island and Portsea Island, are not regarded as "Channel Islands".
Geography
[edit]
The two major islands are Jersey and Guernsey. They make up 99% of the population and 92% of the area.
List of islands
[edit]

| Bailiwick of Jersey | Bailiwick of Guernsey |
|---|---|
| Permanently inhabited islands, with population and area | |
|
|
| Uninhabited islets | |
|
These lie off Alderney: These lie off Guernsey:
|
Names
[edit]The names of the larger islands in the archipelago in general have the -ey suffix, whilst those of the smaller ones have the -hou suffix. These are believed to be from the Old Norse ey (island) and holmr (islet).
The Chausey Islands
[edit]The Chausey Islands south of Jersey are not generally included in the geographical definition of the Channel Islands but are occasionally described in English as 'French Channel Islands' in view of their French jurisdiction. They were historically linked to the Duchy of Normandy, but they are part of the French territory along with continental Normandy, and not part of the British Isles or of the Channel Islands in a political sense. They are an incorporated part of the commune of Granville (Manche). While they are popular with visitors from France, Channel Islanders can only visit them by private or charter boats as there are no direct transport links from the other islands.
In official Jersey Standard French, the Channel Islands are called 'Îles de la Manche', while in France, the term 'Îles Anglo-normandes' (Anglo-Norman Isles) is used to refer to the British 'Channel Islands' in contrast to other islands in the Channel. Chausey is referred to as an 'Île normande' (as opposed to Anglo-normande). 'Îles Normandes' and 'Archipel Normand' have also, historically, been used in Channel Island French to refer to the islands as a whole.
Waters
[edit]The very large tidal variation provides an environmentally rich inter-tidal zone around the islands, and some islands such as Burhou, the Écréhous, and the Minquiers have been designated Ramsar sites.
The waters around the islands include the following:
- The Swinge (between Alderney and Burhou)
- The Little Swinge (between Burhou and Les Nannels)
- La Déroute (between Jersey and Sark, and Jersey and the Cotentin)
- Le Raz Blanchard, or Race of Alderney (between Alderney and the Cotentin)
- The Great Russel (between Sark, Jéthou and Herm)
- The Little Russel (between Guernsey, Herm and Jéthou)
- Souachehouais (between Le Rigdon and L'Étacq, Jersey)
- Le Gouliot (between Sark and Brecqhou)
- La Percée (between Herm and Jéthou)
Highest point
[edit]The highest point in the islands is Les Platons in Jersey at 143 metres (469 ft) above sea level. The lowest point is the English Channel (sea level).
Climate
[edit]
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History
[edit]Prehistory
[edit]
The earliest evidence of human occupation of the Channel Islands has been dated to 250,000 years ago when they were attached to the landmass of continental Europe.[8] The islands became detached by rising sea levels in the Mesolithic period. The numerous dolmens and other archaeological sites extant and recorded in history demonstrate the existence of a population large enough and organised enough to undertake constructions of considerable size and sophistication, such as the burial mound at La Hougue Bie[9] in Jersey or the statue menhirs of Guernsey.
From the Iron Age
[edit]

Hoards of Armorican coins have been excavated, providing evidence of trade and contact in the Iron Age period. Evidence for Roman settlement is sparse, although evidently the islands were visited by Roman officials and traders. The Roman name for the Channel Islands was I. Lenuri (Lenur Islands) and is included in the Peutinger Table.[10]: 4 The traditional Latin names used for the islands (Caesarea for Jersey, Sarnia for Guernsey, Riduna for Alderney) derive (possibly mistakenly) from the Antonine Itinerary. Gallo-Roman culture was adopted to an unknown extent in the islands.[11]
In the sixth century, Christian missionaries visited the islands. Samson of Dol, Helier, Marculf and Magloire are among saints associated with the islands. In the sixth century, they were already included in the diocese of Coutances where they remained until the Reformation.
There were probably some Celtic Britons who settled on the Islands in the 5th and 6th centuries AD (the indigenous Celts of Great Britain, and the ancestors of the modern Welsh, Cornish, and Bretons) who had emigrated from Great Britain in the face of invading Anglo-Saxons. But there were not enough of them to leave any trace, and the islands continued to be ruled by the king of the Franks and its church remained part of the diocese of Coutances.
From the beginning of the ninth century, Norse raiders appeared on the coasts. Norse settlement eventually succeeded initial attacks, and it is from this period that many place names of Norse origin appear, including the modern names of the islands.
From the Duchy of Normandy
[edit]In 933, the islands were granted to William I Longsword by Raoul, the King of Western Francia,[12] and annexed to the Duchy of Normandy. In 1066, William II of Normandy invaded and conquered England, becoming William I of England, also known as William the Conqueror. In the period 1204–1214, King John lost the Angevin lands in northern France, including mainland Normandy, to King Philip II of France, but managed to retain control of the Channel Islands. In 1259, his successor, Henry III of England, by the Treaty of Paris, officially surrendered his claim and title to the Duchy of Normandy, while retaining the Channel Islands, as peer of France and feudal vassal of the King of France. Since around 1290, Otto de Grandson split the Channel Islands into two separate bailiwicks which were never absorbed into the Kingdom of England nor its successor kingdoms of Great Britain or the United Kingdom. During the Hundred Years' War, the Channel Islands were part of the French territory recognizing the claims of the English kings to the French throne.[citation needed]
The islands were invaded by the French in 1338, who held some territory until 1345. Edward III of England granted a Charter in July 1341 to Jersey, Guernsey, Sark and Alderney, confirming their customs and laws to secure allegiance to the English Crown.[13]: 2–4 Owain Lawgoch, a mercenary leader of a Free Company in the service of the French Crown, attacked Jersey and Guernsey in 1372, and in 1373 Bertrand du Guesclin besieged Mont Orgueil.[14] The young King Richard II of England reconfirmed in 1378 the Charter rights granted by his grandfather, followed in 1394 with a second Charter granting, because of great loyalty shown to the Crown, exemption forever, from English tolls, customs and duties.[13]: 5–10 Jersey was occupied by the French in 1461 as part of an exchange for helping the Lancastrians fight against the Yorkists during The War of the Roses. It was retaken by the Yorkists in 1468. In 1483 a Papal bull decreed that the islands would be neutral during time of war. This privilege of neutrality enabled islanders to trade with both France and England and was respected until 1689 when it was abolished by Order in Council following the Glorious Revolution in Great Britain.[citation needed]
Various attempts to transfer the islands from the diocese of Coutances (to Nantes (1400), Salisbury (1496), and Winchester (1499)) had little effect until an Order in Council of 1569 brought the islands formally into the diocese of Winchester. Control by the bishop of Winchester was ineffectual as the islands had turned overwhelmingly Calvinist and the episcopacy was not restored until 1620 in Jersey and 1663 in Guernsey.[15]
After the loss of Calais in 1558, the Channel Islands were the last remaining English holdings in France and the only French territory that was controlled by the English kings as Kings of France. This situation lasted until the English kings dropped their title and claims to the French throne in 1801, confirming the Channel Islands in a situation of a crown dependency under the sovereignty of neither Great Britain nor France but of the British crown directly.
Sark in the 16th century was uninhabited until colonised from Jersey in the 1560s. The grant of seigneurship from Elizabeth I of England in 1565 forms the basis of Sark's constitution today.
From the 17th century
[edit]During the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, Jersey held out strongly for the Royalist cause, providing refuge for Charles, Prince of Wales in 1646 and 1649–1650, while the more strongly Presbyterian Guernsey more generally favoured the parliamentary cause (although Castle Cornet was held by Royalists and did not surrender until October 1651).[16][17][18]
The islands acquired commercial and political interests in the North American colonies. Islanders became involved with the Newfoundland fisheries in the 17th century. In recognition for all the help given to him during his exile in Jersey in the 1640s, Charles II gave George Carteret, Bailiff and governor, a large grant of land in the American colonies, which he promptly named New Jersey, now part of the United States of America.[19][20] Sir Edmund Andros, bailiff of Guernsey, was an early colonial governor in North America, and head of the short-lived Dominion of New England.[21]
In the late 18th century, the islands were dubbed "the French Isles". Wealthy French émigrés fleeing the French Revolution sought residency in the islands. Many of the town domiciles[clarification needed] existing today were built in that time. In Saint Peter Port, a large part of the harbour had been built by 1865.
20th century
[edit]World War II
[edit]
The islands were occupied by the German Army during World War II.
The British Government demilitarised the islands in June 1940, and the lieutenant-governors were withdrawn on 21 June, leaving the insular administrations to continue government as best they could under impending military occupation.[22]
Before German troops landed, between 30 June and 4 July 1940, evacuation took place. Many young men had already left to join the Allied armed forces, as volunteers. 6,600 out of 50,000 left Jersey while 17,000 out of 42,000 left Guernsey.[23] Thousands of children were evacuated with their schools to England and Scotland.

The population of Sark largely remained where they were;[22] but in Alderney, all but six people left. In Alderney, the occupying Germans built four prison camps which housed approximately 6,000 people, of whom over 700 died. Due to the destruction of documents, it is impossible to state how many forced workers died in the other islands.[22] Some have claimed that Alderney had the only Nazi concentration camps on British soil.[24][25] Others have pointed out that, technically, Alderney was not British soil.
The Royal Navy blockaded the islands from time to time, particularly following the Invasion of Normandy in June 1944. There was considerable hunger and privation during the five years of German occupation, particularly in the final months when the population was close to starvation. Intense negotiations resulted in some humanitarian aid being sent via the Red Cross, leading to the arrival of Red Cross parcels in the supply ship SS Vega in December 1944.
The German occupation of 1940–45 was harsh: over 2,000 islanders were deported by the Germans,[22] and some Jews were sent to concentration camps; partisan resistance and retribution, accusations of collaboration, and slave labour also occurred. Many Spaniards, initially refugees from the Spanish Civil War, were brought to the islands to build fortifications.[26][27] Later, Russians and Central Europeans[who?] continued the work.[27] Many land mines were laid, with 65,718 land mines laid in Jersey alone.[28]
There was no resistance movement in the Channel Islands on the scale of that in mainland France. This has been ascribed to a range of factors including the physical separation of the islands, the density of troops (up to one German for every two Islanders), the small size of the islands precluding any hiding places for resistance groups, and the absence of the Gestapo from the occupying forces. Moreover, much of the population of military age had already joined the British Army.
The end of the occupation came after VE-Day on 8 May 1945, with Jersey and Guernsey being liberated on 9 May. The German garrison in Alderney was left until 16 May, and it was one of the last of the Nazi German remnants to surrender.[29] The first evacuees returned on the first sailing from Great Britain on 23 June,[22] but the people of Alderney were unable to start returning until December 1945. Many of the evacuees who returned home had difficulty reconnecting with their families after five years of separation.[23]
After 1945
[edit]Following the liberation of 1945, reconstruction led to a transformation of the economies of the islands, attracting immigration and developing tourism. The legislatures were reformed and non-party governments embarked on social programmes, aided by the incomes from offshore finance, which grew rapidly from the 1960s.[30] The islands decided not to join the European Economic Community when the UK joined.[31] Since the 1990s, declining profitability of agriculture and tourism has challenged the governments of the islands.[32]
Flag gallery
[edit]Governance
[edit]The Channel Islands fall into two separate self-governing bailiwicks, the Bailiwick of Guernsey and the Bailiwick of Jersey. Each of these is a British Crown Dependency, and neither is a part of the United Kingdom. They have been parts of the Duchy of Normandy since the 10th century, and Queen Elizabeth II was often referred to by her traditional and conventional title of Duke of Normandy. However, pursuant to the Treaty of Paris (1259), she governed in her right as The Queen (the "Crown in right of Jersey",[33] and the "Crown in right of the république of the Bailiwick of Guernsey"),[34] and not as the Duke. This notwithstanding, it is a matter of local pride for monarchists to treat the situation otherwise: the Loyal toast at formal dinners was to 'The Queen, our Duke', rather than to 'Her Majesty, The Queen' as in the UK.[35] The Queen died in 2022 and her son Charles III became the King.
A bailiwick is a territory administered by a bailiff. Although the words derive from a common root ('bail' = 'to give charge of') there is a vast difference between the meanings of the word 'bailiff' in Great Britain and in the Channel Islands; a bailiff in Britain is a court-appointed private debt-collector authorised to collect judgment debts, in the Channel Islands, the Bailiff in each bailiwick is the civil head, presiding officer of the States, and also head of the judiciary, and thus the most important citizen in the bailiwick.
In the early 21st century, the existence of governmental offices such as the bailiffs' with multiple roles straddling the different branches of government came under increased scrutiny for their apparent contravention of the doctrine of separation of powers—most notably in the Guernsey case of McGonnell -v- United Kingdom (2000) 30 EHRR 289. That case, following final judgement at the European Court of Human Rights, became part of the impetus for much recent constitutional change, particularly the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 (2005 c.4) in the UK, including the separation of the roles of the Lord Chancellor, the abolition of the House of Lords' judicial role, and its replacement by the UK Supreme Court. The islands' bailiffs, however, still retain their historic roles.
The systems of government in the islands date from Norman times, which accounts for the names of the legislatures, the States, derived from the Norman 'États' or 'estates' (i.e. the Crown, the Church, and the people). The States have evolved over the centuries into democratic parliaments.

The UK Parliament has power to legislate for the islands, but Acts of Parliament do not extend to the islands automatically. Usually, an Act gives power to extend its application to the islands by an Order in Council, after consultation. For the most part the islands legislate for themselves.[36] Each island has its own primary legislature, known as the States of Guernsey and the States of Jersey, with Chief Pleas in Sark and the States of Alderney. The Channel Islands are not represented in the UK Parliament. Laws passed by the States are given royal assent by the King-in-Council, to whom the islands' governments are responsible.[37]
The islands have never been part of the European Union, and thus were not a party to the 2016 referendum on the EU membership, but were part of the Customs Territory of the European Community by virtue of Protocol Three to the Treaty on European Union. In September 2010, a Channel Islands Brussels Office was set up jointly by the two Bailiwicks to develop the Channel Islands' influence with the EU, to advise the Channel Islands' governments on European matters, and to promote economic links with the EU.[38]
Both bailiwicks are members of the British–Irish Council, and Jèrriais and Guernésiais are recognised regional languages of the islands.
The legal courts are separate; separate courts of appeal have been in place since 1961. Among the legal heritage from Norman law is the Clameur de haro. The basis of the legal systems of both Bailiwicks is Norman customary law (Coutume) rather than the English Common Law, although elements of the latter have become established over time.
Islanders are full British citizens, but were not classed as European citizens unless by descent from a UK national. Any British citizen who applies for a passport in Jersey or Guernsey receives a passport bearing the words "British Islands, Bailiwick of Jersey" or "British Islands, Bailiwick of Guernsey". Under the provisions of Protocol Three, Channel Islanders who do not have a close connection with the UK (no parent or grandparent from the UK, and have never been resident in the UK for a five-year period) did not automatically benefit from the EU provisions on free movement within the EU, and their passports received an endorsement to that effect. This affected only a minority of islanders.
Under the UK Interpretation Act 1978, the Channel Islands are deemed to be part of the British Islands,[39] not to be confused with the British Isles. For the purposes of the British Nationality Act 1981, the "British Islands" include the United Kingdom (Great Britain and Northern Ireland), the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man, taken together, unless the context otherwise requires.[40]
Economy
[edit]Tourism is still important. However, Jersey and Guernsey have, since the 1960s, become major offshore financial centres.[41] Historically Guernsey's horticultural and greenhouse activities have been more significant than in Jersey, and Guernsey has maintained light industry as a higher proportion of its economy than Jersey. In Jersey, potatoes are an important export crop, shipped mostly to the UK.[42]
Jersey is heavily reliant on financial services, with 39.4% of Gross Value Added (GVA) in 2018 contributed by the sector. Rental income comes second at 15.1% with other business activities at 11.2%. Tourism 4.5% with agriculture contributing just 1.2% and manufacturing even lower at 1.1%. GVA has fluctuated between £4.5 and £5 billion for 20 years.[43]
Despite having only 250,000 residents, the Channel islands combined with the Isle of Man are the second-biggest source of foreign direct investment in the United Kingdom.[44]
Jersey has had a steadily rising population, increasing from below 90,000 in 2000 to over 105,000 in 2018 which combined with a flat GVA has resulted in GVA per head of population falling from £57,000 to £44,000 per person.[43]
In 2018, Guernsey had a GDP of £3.2 billion[45][46] and with a stable population of around 66,000 has had a steadily rising GDP, and a GVA per head of population which in 2018 surpassed £52,000.[43]
Both bailiwicks issue their own banknotes and coins, which circulate freely in all the islands alongside UK coinage and Bank of England and Scottish banknotes.[47]
Transport and communications
[edit]Post
[edit]Since 1969, Jersey and Guernsey have operated postal administrations independently of the UK's Royal Mail, with their own postage stamps, which can be used for postage only in their respective bailiwicks. UK stamps are no longer valid, but mail to the islands, and to the Isle of Man, is charged at UK inland rates. It was not until the early 1990s that the islands joined the UK's postcode system, Jersey postcodes using the initials JE and Guernsey GY.
Transport
[edit]Road
[edit]Each of the three largest islands has a distinct vehicle registration scheme:
- Guernsey (GBG): a number of up to five digits;
- Jersey (GBJ): J followed by up to six digits (JSY vanity plates are also issued);
- Alderney (GBA): AY followed by up to five digits (four digits are the most that have been used, as redundant numbers are re-issued).
In Sark, where most motor traffic is prohibited, the few vehicles – nearly all tractors – do not display plates. Bicycles display tax discs.
Sea
[edit]In the 1960s, names used for the cross-Channel ferries plying the mail route between the islands and Weymouth, Dorset, were taken from the popular Latin names for the islands: Caesarea (Jersey), Sarnia (Guernsey) and Riduna (Alderney). Fifty years later, the ferry route between the Channel Islands and the UK is operated by Condor Ferries from both St Helier, Jersey and St Peter Port, Guernsey, using high-speed catamaran fast craft to Poole in the UK. A regular passenger ferry service on the Commodore Clipper goes from both Channel Island ports to Portsmouth daily, and carries both passengers and freight.
Ferry services to Normandy are operated by Manche Îles Express, and services between Jersey and Saint-Malo are operated by Compagnie Corsaire and Condor Ferries. The Isle of Sark Shipping Company operates small ferries to Sark.[48] Normandy Trader operates an ex military tank landing craft for transporting freight between the islands and France.[49]
On 20 August 2013, Huelin-Renouf, which had operated a "lift-on lift-off" container service for 80 years between the Port of Southampton and the Port of Jersey, ceased trading.[50] Senator Alan Maclean, a Jersey politician, had previously tried to save the 90-odd jobs furnished by the company to no avail.[51] On 20 September, it was announced that Channel Island Lines would continue this service, and would purchase the MV Huelin Dispatch from Associated British Ports who in turn had purchased them from the receiver in the bankruptcy.[52] The new operator was to be funded by Rockayne Limited, a closely held association of Jersey businesspeople.[52]
Air
[edit]
There are three airports in the Channel Islands: Alderney Airport, Guernsey Airport and Jersey Airport. They are directly connected to each other by services operated by Blue Islands and Aurigny.
Rail
[edit]Historically, there have been railway networks on Jersey, Guernsey, and Alderney, but all of the lines on Jersey and Guernsey have been closed and dismantled. Today there are three working railways in the Channel Islands, of which the Alderney Railway is the only one providing a regular timetabled passenger service. The other two are a 7+1⁄4 in (184 mm) gauge miniature railway, also on Alderney, and the heritage steam railway operated on Jersey as part of the Pallot Heritage Steam Museum.
Media
[edit]The Channel Islands are served by a number of local radio services – BBC Radio Jersey and BBC Radio Guernsey, Channel 103 and Island FM – as well as regional television news opt-outs from BBC Channel Islands and ITV Channel Television.
On 1 August 2021, DAB+ digital radio became available for the first time, introducing new stations like the local Bailiwick Radio and Soleil Radio, and UK-wide services like Capital, Heart, and Times Radio.[53]
There are two broadcast transmitters serving Jersey – at Frémont Point and Les Platons – as well as one at Les Touillets in Guernsey and a relay in Alderney.
There are several local newspapers including the Guernsey Press and the Jersey Evening Post and magazines.
Telephone
[edit]Jersey always operated its own telephone services independently of Britain's national system, Guernsey established its own telephone service in 1968. Both islands still form part of the British telephone numbering plan, but Ofcom on the mainlines does not have responsibility for telecommunications regulatory and licensing issues on the islands. It is responsible for wireless telegraphy licensing throughout the islands, and by agreement, for broadcasting regulation in the two large islands only. Submarine cables connect the various islands and provide connectivity with England and France.
Internet
[edit]Modern broadband speeds are available on all of the islands, including full-fibre (FTTH) in Jersey (offering speeds of up to 1 Gbit/s on all broadband connections) and VDSL and some business and homes with fibre connectivity in Guernsey. Providers include Sure and JT.
The two Bailiwicks each have their own internet domain, .GG (Guernsey, Alderney, Sark) and .JE (Jersey), which are managed by channelisles.net.[54]
Culture
[edit]
The Norman language predominated in the islands until the nineteenth century, when increasing influence from English-speaking settlers and easier transport links led to Anglicisation.[55] There are four main dialects/languages of Norman in the islands, Auregnais (Alderney, extinct in late twentieth century), Dgèrnésiais (Guernsey), Jèrriais (Jersey) and Sercquiais (Sark, an offshoot of Jèrriais).[56]
Victor Hugo spent many years in exile, first in Jersey and then in Guernsey, where he finished Les Misérables. Guernsey is the setting of Hugo's later novel Les Travailleurs de la Mer (Toilers of the Sea).[57] A "Guernsey-man" also makes an appearance in chapter 91 of Herman Melville's Moby-Dick.[58]
The annual "Muratti", the inter-island football match, is considered the sporting event of the year, although, due to broadcast coverage, it no longer attracts the crowds of spectators, travelling between the islands, that it did during the twentieth century.[59]
Cricket is popular in the Channel Islands. The Jersey cricket team and the Guernsey cricket team are both associate members of the International Cricket Council. The teams have played each other in the inter-insular match since 1957. In 2001 and 2002, the Channel Islands entered a team into the MCCA Knockout Trophy, the one-day tournament of the minor counties of English and Welsh cricket.[60]
Channel Island sportsmen and women compete in the Commonwealth Games for their respective islands and the islands have also been enthusiastic supporters of the Island Games. Shooting is a popular sport, in which islanders have won Commonwealth medals.[61]
Guernsey's traditional colour for sporting and other purposes is green and Jersey's is red.[62]

The main islanders have traditional animal nicknames:[63][64]
- Guernsey: les ânes ("donkeys" in French and Norman): the steepness of St Peter Port streets required beasts of burden, but Guernsey people also claim it is a symbol of their strength of character – which Jersey people traditionally interpret as stubbornness.
- Jersey: les crapauds ("toads" in French and Jèrriais): Jersey has toads and snakes, which Guernsey lacks.
- Sark: les corbins ("crows" in Sercquiais, Dgèrnésiais and Jèrriais, les corbeaux in French): crows could be seen from the sea on the island's coast.
- Alderney: les lapins ("rabbits" in French and Auregnais): the island is noted for its warrens.
Religion
[edit]Christianity was brought to the islands around the sixth century; according to tradition, Jersey was evangelised by St Helier, Guernsey by St Samson of Dol, and the smaller islands were occupied at various times by monastic communities representing strands of Celtic Christianity. At the Reformation, the previously Catholic islands converted to Calvinism under the influence of an influx of French-language pamphlets published in Geneva. Anglicanism was imposed in the seventeenth century, but the Nonconformist local tendency returned with a strong adoption of Methodism. In the late twentieth century, a strong Catholic presence re-emerged with the arrival of numerous Portuguese workers (both from mainland Portugal and the island of Madeira). Their numbers have been reinforced by recent migrants from Poland and elsewhere in Eastern Europe. Today, Evangelical churches have been established. Services are held in a number of languages.
According to 2015 statistics, 39% of the population was non-religious.[65][66]
Other islands in the English Channel
[edit]A number of islands in the English Channel are part of France. Among these are Bréhat, Île de Batz, Chausey, Tatihou and the Îles Saint-Marcouf.
The Isle of Wight, which is part of England, lies just off the coast of Great Britain, between the Channel and the Solent.
Hayling and Portsea islands, both being near or part of Portsmouth, are also part of England (and thus part of the United Kingdom).
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "World Population Prospects 2022". United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
- ^ "World Population Prospects 2022: Demographic indicators by region, subregion and country, annually for 1950–2100" (XSLX) ("Total Population, as of 1 July (thousands)"). United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. Retrieved 17 July 2022.
- ^ "Royal.gov.uk". Royal.gov.uk. Archived from the original on 21 September 2012. Retrieved 4 October 2012.
- ^ "Fact sheet on the UK's relationship with the Crown Dependencies" (PDF). Gov.uk. Ministry of Justice. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 December 2014. Retrieved 14 February 2016.
HM Government is responsible for the defence and international relations of the Islands.
- ^ "Channel Islands Financial Ombudsman".
- ^ Graham, Richard (2015). At their Majesties' Service. Gateway Publishing. ISBN 9781902471129.
- ^ "NASA Earth Observations Data Set Index". NASA. Archived from the original on 28 November 2017. Retrieved 30 January 2016.
- ^ "Thisisjersey.com". Thisisjersey.com. Archived from the original on 18 September 2012. Retrieved 4 October 2012.
- ^ "Thisisjersey.com". Thisisjersey.com. Archived from the original on 19 September 2011. Retrieved 4 October 2012.
- ^ Rule, Margaret (1993). A Gallo-Roman Trading Vessel from Guernsey. Guernsey Museums & Galleries. ISBN 978-1871560039.
- ^ Balleine's History of Jersey, Marguerite Syvret and Joan Stevens (1998) ISBN 1-86077-065-7
- ^ Stapleton, Thomas (1840). Magni rotuli scaccarii Normanniæ sub regibus Angliæ. p. lii.
- ^ a b Thornton, Tim (2004). The Charters of Guernsey. Woodfield Publishing. ISBN 978-1903953655.
- ^ Bertrand du Guesclin: The Black Dog of Brittany Thisisjersey.com, copyright 2010, accessed 31 October 2010.
- ^ The Channel Islands, pp. 5–6, Google Books
- ^ Lemprière 1970, p. [page needed].
- ^ Moore 2005, p. 226.
- ^ Ellis 1937.
- ^ Jamieson, Alan G. (1986). A People of the sea: the maritime history of the Channel Islands. Methuen. p. 270. ISBN 9780416405408. Archived from the original on 21 August 2020. Retrieved 31 May 2020.
- ^ Jamieson, Alan G. (1986). A People of the sea: the maritime history of the Channel Islands. Methuen. p. 167. ISBN 9780416405408. Archived from the original on 21 August 2020. Retrieved 31 May 2020.
- ^ "Sir Edmund Andros". Encyclopedia Britannica. Archived from the original on 22 January 2018. Retrieved 11 February 2019.
- ^ a b c d e The German Occupation of the Channel Islands, Cruikshank, Oxford 1975 ISBN 0-19-285087-3
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the Islands" means the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man; [...] the United Kingdom" means Great Britain, Northern Ireland and the Islands, taken together.
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[edit]- Encyclopædia Britannica Vol. 5 (1951), Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., Chicago – London – Toronto
- Ellis, F H (1937), "The Great Rebellion – Parliamentary invasion", Annual Bulletin de la Société Jersiaise – Republished "This is the eighth part of a 54-page article". The Great Rebellion – Parliamentary invasion. 15 September 2014.
- Hamlin, John F. "No 'Safe Haven': Military Aviation in the Channel Islands 1939–1945" Air Enthusiast, No. 83, September/October 1999, pp. 6–15 ISSN 0143-5450
- Lemprière, Raoul (1970), Portrait of the Channel Islands, London: Hale, ISBN 0-7091-1541-5
- Moore, David W. (2005), The Other British Isles: A History of Shetland, Orkney, the Hebrides, Isle of Man, Anglesey, Scilly, Isle of Wight and the Channel Islands, McFarland, p. 226, ISBN 9780786489244
External links
[edit]- . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). 1911.
- States of Alderney
- States of Guernsey
- States of Jersey
- Government of Sark Archived 7 July 2016 at the Wayback Machine
Channel Islands
View on GrokipediaThe Channel Islands are an archipelago of islands located in the English Channel, off the northwestern coast of France near Normandy and Brittany, consisting of the two main bailiwicks of Jersey and Guernsey—the latter encompassing Alderney, Sark, Herm, and several smaller islets—with a combined land area of 198 square kilometers.[1][2]
As self-governing British Crown Dependencies, they possess direct allegiance to the Crown—where the monarch holds the ancient title of Duke of Normandy—and maintain autonomous legislative, executive, judicial, and fiscal systems, including the authority to enact their own laws and taxes without representation in the UK Parliament or financial support from the United Kingdom, which retains responsibility for defense and international relations.[3][2]
The islands support a population of approximately 170,000, concentrated in capitals such as Saint Helier in Jersey and Saint Peter Port in Guernsey, with economies centered on financial services that contribute the majority of GDP—totaling around £10 billion across the bailiwicks—supplemented by tourism, horticulture, dairy production, and emerging digital industries, facilitated by low-tax policies and participation in the Common Travel Area with the UK, Ireland, and Isle of Man.[1][2]
Geography
Principal Islands and Bailiwicks
The Channel Islands comprise two distinct bailiwicks: the Bailiwick of Jersey and the Bailiwick of Guernsey, each functioning as a self-governing Crown Dependency with its own legislative assembly and administration.[4] These bailiwicks together form the core of the archipelago, excluding smaller islets and reefs that are largely uninhabited or administratively attached. Jersey represents the southern bailiwick, while Guernsey encompasses the northern group, including semi-autonomous jurisdictions.[5] The Bailiwick of Jersey primarily consists of Jersey island and associated islets such as Les Minquiers and Les Écréhou, which are tidal reefs with no permanent population but historical significance for fishing rights. Jersey island spans 118 square kilometres and recorded a resident population of 103,267 in the 2021 census, concentrated mainly in the capital, St. Helier, which serves as the island's administrative, commercial, and cultural hub.[6] [7] The Bailiwick of Guernsey includes Guernsey island, which forms its administrative center, along with Herm, Jethou, and Lihou under direct Guernsey governance, plus the distinct jurisdictions of Alderney and Sark with their own representative bodies for local affairs. Guernsey island covers 65 square kilometres and had a population of 64,781 as of December 2023.[8] Alderney, the northernmost principal island, measures 8 square kilometres with approximately 2,000 inhabitants, primarily in St. Anne.[9] Sark, known for its feudal governance structure, occupies 5.45 square kilometres and counted 562 residents in its 2022 census.[10] Herm, a compact 2-square-kilometre island focused on tourism, supports around 65 permanent residents.[11]| Island/Bailiwick Component | Area (km²) | Population (most recent) | Jurisdiction Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jersey | 118 | 103,267 (2021) | Primary island of Bailiwick of Jersey; includes uninhabited islets.[6] [7] |
| Guernsey | 65 | 64,781 (2023) | Core of Bailiwick of Guernsey; oversees Herm, Jethou, Lihou.[8] |
| Alderney | 8 | ~2,000 (recent est.) | Separate jurisdiction within Guernsey bailiwick.[9] |
| Sark | 5.45 | 562 (2022) | Separate jurisdiction within Guernsey bailiwick.[10] |
| Herm | 2 | ~65 (recent est.) | Administered by Guernsey.[11] |
Physical Geography and Waters
The Channel Islands form an archipelago in the English Channel, located about 12 miles (19 km) west of the Cotentin Peninsula in Normandy, France, and roughly 80 miles (130 km) south of the English coast.[12] The total land area of the main islands is approximately 194 square kilometers (75 square miles), encompassing the Bailiwicks of Jersey and Guernsey.[12] Jersey, the largest island, covers 116 square kilometers with its highest point at Les Platons, reaching 136 meters above sea level. Guernsey spans 65 square kilometers, while smaller islands include Alderney (7.8 square kilometers, highest elevation 90 meters), Sark (5.4 square kilometers, highest point Le Moulin at 114 meters), and islets such as Herm and Jethou.[13] Geologically, the islands represent the emerged northern extension of the Armorican Massif from northwestern France, featuring ancient Precambrian rocks in the Guernsey group, including granites, quartz dioritic orthogneisses, migmatites, and schists. Jersey's terrain includes Brioverian Series rocks—volcanic and sedimentary deposits from the late Precambrian—overlain by younger Paleozoic formations, with igneous intrusions and metamorphic features shaped by Variscan orogeny.[14] The landscape is predominantly undulating plateaus and valleys, with steep coastal cliffs, rocky headlands, and limited flatlands; soils derive from weathered granite and schist, supporting agriculture on the gentler slopes.[14] The surrounding waters belong to the English Channel, a shallow shelf sea with average depths of 40 to 120 meters, deepening to over 170 meters in the Hurd Deep.[12] Positioned near the Gulf of Saint-Malo, the region experiences some of the world's highest tidal ranges, exceeding 12 meters (39 feet) on Jersey's coasts during spring tides, driven by the funneling effect of the Channel's geography.[15] Strong tidal currents, often surpassing 5 knots in passages like the Little Russel and Grand Russel between Guernsey and the smaller islands, create hazardous overfalls and races around headlands and reefs.[12] These dynamics, combined with Atlantic swells propagating through the Channel, influence coastal erosion and sediment transport, while the prevailing westerly winds and Gulf Stream proximity maintain relatively warm surface waters year-round.[16]Climate and Environmental Features
The Channel Islands possess a temperate oceanic climate moderated by the Gulf Stream, resulting in mild winters and cool summers with relatively low seasonal temperature extremes compared to the UK mainland. In Jersey, the long-term average annual air temperature (1991-2020) stands at 12.39°C, with July means reaching 18.3°C and January at 7.0°C; Guernsey exhibits similar patterns, with annual temperatures typically ranging from 6°C to 20°C. Annual rainfall averages 918 mm in Jersey, concentrated in wetter winters (e.g., 95 mm in January) versus drier summers (45 mm in July), while sunshine totals approximately 2,092 hours per year. These conditions foster a longer growing season than much of Britain, supporting agriculture, though prevailing westerly winds contribute to higher humidity and occasional gales, particularly from October to March.[17][18] Geologically, the islands form part of the Armorican Massif extension from northwest France, dominated by Precambrian rocks from the Cadomian orogeny around 600 million years ago, including metamorphosed sediments, volcanics, and granitic intrusions. Jersey features diverse formations such as the Jersey Shale Formation's silts, sandstones, and conglomerates, alongside later igneous activity; Guernsey shares similar Precambrian complexes with additional deformation phases. This ancient basement underlies varied topography: steep granite cliffs rising to 140 m on Jersey's north coast, sandy bays, and sheltered valleys with fertile, loess-derived soils enabling intensive farming. Erosion from wave action shapes dynamic coastal landforms, including sea arches and stacks, while limited freshwater rivers reflect the compact island hydrology.[19][20] Ecologically, the mild climate and transitional position between Atlantic and Mediterranean influences yield high habitat diversity, encompassing coastal dunes, saltmarshes, hedgerows, and woodlands covering about 10% of land area. Terrestrial flora includes subtropical elements like palms in sheltered spots, alongside native species such as the Jersey lily (Vallota purpurea) and diverse orchids; fauna features resident seabirds (e.g., puffins on cliffs), bats, and introduced deer, though small mammal diversity is low due to isolation. Marine environments host rich biodiversity, with kelp forests, seagrass beds, and reefs supporting over 300 fish species and migratory cetaceans, influenced by large tidal ranges up to 12 m and convergence of boreal and Lusitanian currents. Wetlands like Jersey's Ramsar-designated southeast coast provide critical foraging for waders, while groundwater systems sustain unique invertebrates; however, pressures from habitat fragmentation and non-native species threaten endemic taxa.[21]History
Prehistory and Early Settlement
The Channel Islands became distinct landmasses from the nearby Normandy coast around 6500 BC following post-glacial sea level rise, enabling independent human occupation patterns thereafter.[22] Mesolithic evidence remains sparse, consisting primarily of scattered microliths and projectile points found in later contexts, suggesting limited, possibly seasonal, hunter-gatherer activity rather than permanent settlement.[23] Neolithic farming communities arrived circa 5000–4000 BC, introducing agriculture, pottery, and megalithic construction as evidenced by passage graves and dolmens across the islands. Key sites include La Hougue Bie in Jersey, a complex passage tomb dated to the 4th–3rd millennia BC, and Guernsey's La Varde dolmen, built around 4000–2500 BC and used for burials into the Bronze Age. Recent excavations on Herm's northern coast have revealed postholes from rectangular houses potentially dating to 4500 BC, alongside curvilinear enclosures interpreted as prehistoric tombs, indicating structured settlements predating many continental analogs.[24][25][26] Bronze Age activity, from circa 2500–800 BC, featured burial mounds and cists similar to those in Brittany and Normandy, with evidence of metalworking but possible population decline in the mid-period (2000–1500 BC).[27] Iron Age Celtic tribes, linked to Armorican groups, established promontory forts like Le Câtel de Rozel in Jersey (with ramparts up to 6 meters high) and settlements evidenced by pottery, iron artifacts, and the world's largest Celtic coin hoard—over 70,000 billon staters—unearthed in Jersey in 2012, likely buried amid late 1st-century BC conflicts or trade disruptions.[28] Roman contact from the 1st century BC involved trade networks rather than conquest, as no legionary bases or villas have been identified; finds of coins, amphorae, and Gallo-Roman pottery attest to economic ties without administrative control.[28] Post-Roman early settlement is sparsely documented, with potential Celtic Briton migrations in the 5th–6th centuries AD and monastic foundations on Herm by the 6th century, bridging to medieval continuity.[26]Norman Conquest and Medieval Integration
The Channel Islands were incorporated into the Duchy of Normandy in 933 under William Longsword, son of the Viking leader Rollo, marking the onset of Norman rule over the archipelago.[29] This annexation integrated the islands into a feudal system dominated by Norman seigneurs, with Guernsey divided into two large fiefs by 1028.[30] Norman architectural influences appeared in Romanesque churches constructed from the late 10th to early 11th centuries, reflecting the cultural and linguistic shift toward Norman French, which evolved into local dialects like Guernesiais.[30][29] The Norman Conquest of England in 1066, led by William, Duke of Normandy—subsequently William I of England—extended the islands' allegiance to the English crown through personal union, as they were already under ducal control without requiring separate military action.[30][31] This linkage preserved the islands' Norman customs, including feudal land tenure and ecclesiastical establishments such as Benedictine priories in Guernsey's Vale and on Lihou Island, alongside the formation of ten parishes.[30] Governance emphasized loyalty to the duke-king, with trade networks spanning England, Gascony, and Normandy, fostering economic integration while maintaining distinct insular administration. The pivotal event of medieval history occurred in 1204, when King John lost continental Normandy to Philip II of France following defeats at Château Gaillard and the broader Anglo-French conflicts.[31][32] The islanders, facing pressure from French forces, pledged direct fealty to John, ensuring the Channel Islands remained Crown possessions separate from France and the lost duchy.[31] This separation entrenched their unique status, allowing self-legislated laws and judiciaries independent of English parliamentary oversight, as later affirmed by charters and the 1259 Treaty of Paris under Henry III.[31] Fortifications like Castle Cornet in Guernsey began under John to counter French raids, which persisted into the 13th and 14th centuries, including a 1294 attack killing a quarter of St. Peter Port's population and a 1338 occupation repelled by 1345.[30] Feudal structures endured, with the islands functioning as direct fiefs of the crown, blending Norman legal traditions with growing orientation toward English protection amid ongoing continental threats.[30]Early Modern Developments
The Channel Islands experienced profound religious transformation during the 16th-century Reformation, aligning with England's shift from Catholicism. In Jersey, Edward VI's orders in 1547 prompted the destruction of church fonts, statues, and crosses by 1548, fostering Calvinist influences among the French-speaking populace; ecclesiastical properties were confiscated and sold by royal commissioners in 1550, while the islands transferred to the Diocese of Winchester in 1565.[33] Guernsey similarly embraced Protestantism amid Henry VIII's break with Rome, attracting Huguenot refugees from France and enduring persecutions as sympathies oscillated between faiths, with Calvinist reformers from Normandy shaping mid-century doctrine.[34] Mary I's brief Catholic restoration (1553–1558) was reversed under Elizabeth I, solidifying Protestantism despite resistance from figures like Jersey's Dean Jean Maison, executed for heresy. The English Civil War (1642–1651) exposed divisions, with Jersey ultimately favoring Royalists under Sir George Carteret, who defended Elizabeth Castle against Robert Blake's Parliamentary siege from 22 October to 15 December 1651, involving 340 defenders against 5,000 assailants; Charles II had visited and sought refuge there in 1646.[35] [36] Guernsey, by contrast, declared for Parliament in 1642, though Castle Cornet held out as a Royalist stronghold under Governor Sir Peter Osborne until its surrender on 19 December 1651 after a nine-year blockade that included failed assaults like one on 29 February 1643.[34] [37] Post-Restoration in 1660, loyalist figures like Carteret were rewarded with offices, such as Treasurer of the Navy, reinforcing the islands' ties to the Crown amid ongoing French threats. Maritime economy diversified, transitioning from local fishing to transatlantic ventures. Channel Islanders pioneered early Newfoundland cod fisheries following John Cabot's 1497 voyage, with Jersey deploying 20 vessels by mid-17th century and later expanding under entrepreneurs like Charles Robin, who operated up to 70 ships and employed 2,000 Jerseymen by the 1770s along the Gaspé coast.[38] [36] By 1700, smuggling and privateering supplanted cod as more lucrative amid Anglo-French wars; Guernsey alone fielded over 115 privateers in the War of the Spanish Succession (1702–1713), securing prizes exceeding £100,000, and commissioned 35 vessels with 1,716 crewmen in 1800 during the Napoleonic conflicts, yielding over £1,000,000 in captures.[39] These activities, including contraband wine and textiles evading British duties, thrived due to the islands' strategic position, though French raids—such as the 1781 Battle of Jersey repelled by Major Francis Peirson—necessitated fortifications like Elizabeth Castle's expansions.[36]Industrial and Modern Transformations
During the 18th and 19th centuries, the Channel Islands experienced economic expansion driven primarily by maritime activities, particularly the cod trade with Newfoundland and the Gulf of St. Lawrence, which employed thousands and stimulated ancillary industries. By the 1770s, Jersey alone operated up to 70 vessels and engaged 2,000 seamen in this fishery, with catches processed and traded onward to markets in Europe and the Americas, generating capital for re-exports of commodities like coffee and sugar.[40] This prosperity fueled shipbuilding, which emerged as a significant sector in Jersey from the late 18th century; the launch of the 280-ton Elisha Tupper in 1789 at Bel Royal marked an early milestone, followed by the establishment of yards like George Deslandes' at First Tower in 1831.[41] By the 1860s, Jersey's yards produced vessels comprising about 6% of Britain's wooden fishing fleet tonnage, with over 800 ships built in St Aubin's Bay, supporting trade routes to Europe, the Atlantic, and Australia, though the industry declined in the 1870s with the rise of iron-hulled ships.[41] Agricultural modernization transformed subsistence farming into export-oriented production, particularly in Jersey, where potato cultivation expanded rapidly from 1807 onward, leveraging the islands' mild climate and soil to supply early-season crops to London markets; exports reached 600 tonnes in the first recorded shipments.[42] The Jersey Royal variety, discovered as a mutation and first commercially grown by Hugh de la Haye in 1878, became emblematic of this shift, with Breton laborers immigrating seasonally to support the labor-intensive harvest.[43] In Guernsey, commercial horticulture for British export replaced traditional farming patterns, complemented by the dairy industry centered on Guernsey cattle breeds.[44] These changes drove population growth—Jersey's inhabitants doubled from 28,600 in 1821 to 57,020 by 1851—fueled by immigration of English, Irish, and Breton workers, alongside infrastructure investments like roads and the Esplanade.[40] Quarrying emerged as Guernsey's dominant 19th-century industry, exploiting local granite deposits for export to Britain, where 4,147,975 tons were shipped for road-making and construction; at its peak, over 250 quarries operated, including early sites like St Germain from 1639 and renewed leases in 1840 by firms such as John Mowlem's.[45][46] This extractive activity, alongside niche manufacturing like tax-free shoe exports to British colonies, diversified the economy beyond agriculture and maritime pursuits. Tourism began to develop in the early 19th century, attracting affluent English visitors via steamships, who sought the islands' coastal scenery and mild climate, laying groundwork for later expansion with guidebooks and hotels by the 1880s.[47] These transformations marked a transition from feudal agrarianism to commercial specialization, though constrained by the islands' small scale and reliance on external markets.[40]German Occupation in World War II
The German occupation of the Channel Islands began following the fall of France in June 1940, when the British government decided against defending the islands, offering voluntary evacuation to civilians. Approximately 25,000 residents departed, including 17,000 from Guernsey, 6,000 from Jersey, and nearly all 1,500 from Alderney, leaving populations of about 40,000 in Jersey and 16,000 in Guernsey. On 28 June 1940, Luftwaffe aircraft bombed harbors in Guernsey and Jersey, killing 44 civilians despite the islands being undefended. German troops landed on Guernsey on 30 June and Jersey on 1 July 1940, establishing military administration under orders to treat the islands as "the southern bastion of the Atlantic Wall."[48][49][50] The occupiers imposed curfews, rationing, and censorship, while local governments under bailiffs like Victor Carey in Guernsey and Alexander Coutanche in Jersey cooperated to mitigate hardships, though some policies facilitated deportations of suspected resisters. In 1941-1942, about 2,200 "undesirables," including Jews and British citizens, were deported to German internment camps. Fortifications expanded dramatically from 1941, with the Organisation Todt deploying over 15,000 forced laborers across the islands to construct bunkers, tunnels, and batteries as part of Hitler's Atlantic Wall defenses, resulting in harsh conditions and deaths from starvation, disease, and executions. Alderney, fully militarized after evacuation, hosted four labor camps run by the Organisation Todt, two of which evolved into SS concentration camps (Lager Sylt and Norderney) holding Soviet, French, and other prisoners; a 2024 independent review estimated at least 641 deaths there, with figures potentially exceeding 1,000 due to forced labor on fortifications amid brutal treatment.[51][52][53] Resistance was limited but included wireless listening, sabotage of construction, and aid to slave workers, with islanders risking punishment to provide food or shelter. By late 1944, post-Normandy invasion shortages intensified, leading to near-starvation for many civilians despite Red Cross deliveries from 1944 onward, which supplied 50,000 parcels monthly. The occupation ended with Germany's surrender; Jersey and Guernsey were liberated on 9 May 1945 by British forces aboard HMS Beagle and Bulldog, respectively, with crowds greeting arrivals amid celebrations, while Alderney's garrison capitulated on 16 May after mine-clearing. Sark followed on 10 May.[52][50][51]Post-War Recovery and Decolonization
The Channel Islands were liberated from German occupation on May 9, 1945, following the announcement of victory in Europe by Winston Churchill on May 8. In Guernsey, HMS Bulldog accepted the German surrender, while in Jersey, British forces arrived via HMS Beagle, marking the end of nearly five years of occupation without armed conflict on the islands themselves. Restoration of British civil administration was proclaimed on May 10, with main liberation forces arriving by May 12 to oversee the transition. Alderney, evacuated since 1942, remained under German control until later, with residents returning in December 1945 to find extensive destruction from forced labor camps and fortifications.[54][49][55] Immediate post-liberation challenges included widespread malnutrition, damaged infrastructure, and hazardous remnants of occupation such as over 500 concrete bunkers and extensive minefields that required months of demining operations, claiming lives among Allied personnel. The islands received critical relief from the Red Cross ship SS Vega, which had begun deliveries in December 1944 and continued post-war, providing food and medical supplies to combat starvation diets reliant on substitutes like turnips and nettles. Deportees, numbering over 2,000 primarily English-born residents sent to German camps in 1942, returned needing rehabilitation, while evacuees faced housing shortages amid repurposed defenses and failed utilities.[55][49][55] Reconstruction efforts focused on infrastructure repair, with unemployed labor used for road building and economic stabilization through UK aid and local initiatives; Jersey, for instance, transformed occupation-era anti-tank walls into breakwaters and tourist attractions. Agriculture revived as fields were cleared of mines, and the economy shifted from wartime self-sufficiency and black markets toward pre-war patterns, though full recovery involved addressing unemployment and a collapsed currency system backed by £6 million in bank bonds. By the late 1940s, the islands had begun leveraging their strategic position for tourism growth, setting the stage for later diversification into finance.[49][55] In the broader context of post-World War II decolonization affecting many British territories, the Channel Islands maintained their pre-war status as self-governing Crown Dependencies, with no formal independence movements or pushes for sovereignty changes. Unlike overseas colonies listed by the United Nations for self-determination, the islands—rooted in feudal ties to the British Crown since the Norman Conquest—chose to retain autonomy in internal affairs while relying on the UK for defense and international representation, prioritizing stability over separation. This continuity reflected their distinct constitutional position, avoiding the upheavals seen in imperial decolonization elsewhere.[54]Contemporary Developments and Brexit Era
In the decades following World War II, the Channel Islands experienced significant economic diversification, transitioning from agriculture and tourism toward becoming prominent international financial centers. Jersey and Guernsey established robust offshore banking and fund management sectors, attracting global capital through low-tax regimes and regulatory frameworks that emphasized stability and confidentiality; by the 2010s, financial services accounted for over 40% of Jersey's GDP and a similar proportion in Guernsey.[56] This growth was supported by political stability and legal autonomy, with both bailiwicks implementing reforms to enhance corporate governance, including the introduction of economic substance rules in 2019 to comply with OECD standards addressing base erosion and profit shifting.[56] Brexit profoundly affected the islands' trade dynamics, as they were not EU members but benefited from Protocol 3 of the UK's 1972 Accession Treaty, which granted tariff-free access to the EU single market for goods originating in the islands. This protocol lapsed on December 31, 2020, at the end of the EU-UK transition period, necessitating new arrangements; the UK negotiated the inclusion of Jersey and Guernsey in the UK-EU Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA), preserving zero tariffs and quotas for qualifying industrial and fishery products subject to rules of origin verification.[57] [58] However, the shift introduced non-tariff barriers, such as customs declarations and sanitary/phytosanitary checks, impacting exports like Jersey Royal potatoes and Guernsey dairy, which previously enjoyed frictionless EU entry; fishing fleets faced quota uncertainties resolved through bilateral UK-EU talks, with the islands retaining exclusive rights in surrounding waters but aligning with TCA provisions for sustainable management.[59] [60] Politically, the islands pursued paradiplomacy to safeguard autonomy post-Brexit, with Jersey engaging directly in international forums to negotiate bilateral agreements and mitigate supply chain disruptions; Guernsey similarly focused on digital economy expansion, fostering tech hubs and fintech amid global regulatory pressures.[61] [62] Internal governance evolved through modernization efforts, including Guernsey's 2020 States reform reducing assembly size from 47 to 38 members for efficiency, and ongoing Jersey debates on electoral proportionality implemented in 2021 elections.[63] Economic resilience persisted, with 2023 data showing GDP growth driven by funds and trusts despite inflationary pressures, though challenges like housing market constraints and empty commercial vacancies prompted policy reviews in 2025.[64] [65] These developments underscore the islands' strategic navigation of sovereignty, leveraging Crown Dependency status to balance UK ties with independent economic pursuits.Governance
Constitutional Framework and Crown Dependencies
The Channel Islands comprise two Crown Dependencies: the Bailiwick of Jersey and the Bailiwick of Guernsey, the latter encompassing Alderney, Sark, and smaller islands such as Herm and Jethou.[66] These territories are self-governing possessions of the British Crown, distinct from the United Kingdom and not integrated into its political or legal framework.[67] Their constitutional relationship with the UK is sustained exclusively through the Crown, lacking any codified document, and derives from historical allegiance dating to 1204 when the islands remained loyal to King John after the loss of continental Normandy.[68] [4] The British monarch functions as head of state in the Channel Islands, retaining the ancient title of Duke of Normandy specific to these dependencies, a distinction not applied elsewhere in the realm.[4] This role is exercised through the Lieutenant-Governor, appointed by the Crown on the advice of the UK Secretary of State for Justice, who serves as the monarch's personal representative for ceremonial duties, honors distribution, and liaison between island authorities and the UK government.[69] [70] The Lieutenant-Governor does not intervene in routine governance, which remains autonomous, reflecting the islands' unwritten constitutions rooted in customary laws, royal charters from the 14th century onward, and privileges confirmed by successive monarchs.[71] Each bailiwick maintains full legislative and fiscal autonomy for internal affairs, with elected assemblies—the States of Jersey and States of Guernsey—enacting laws independent of UK parliamentary approval, except where reserved powers like defense and international representation apply.[4] The UK assumes responsibility for military defense and foreign affairs, though the islands may negotiate their own international agreements in non-reserved areas, such as trade protocols post-Brexit in 2020.[67] Within Guernsey, Alderney and Sark operate as distinct jurisdictions with their own legislative bodies—the States of Alderney and Chief Pleas—while deferring to the Bailiwick on broader matters, underscoring the decentralized structure preserved since medieval times.[68] Channel Islanders hold British citizenship but lack automatic representation in the UK Parliament, reinforcing their separate constitutional status.[4]Internal Administration and Bailiwicks
The Channel Islands are administratively divided into two bailiwicks—the Bailiwick of Jersey and the Bailiwick of Guernsey—each exercising autonomous internal governance as Crown Dependencies, with no direct representation in the UK Parliament and responsibility for their own legislation, taxation, and public services.[4] The Bailiwick of Jersey encompasses the island of Jersey and adjacent islets such as Les Minquiers and Écréhous, functioning as a unitary jurisdiction with centralized administration. Its legislature, the States Assembly, comprises 49 elected members—12 parish constables and 37 deputies—serving four-year terms, alongside non-voting roles including the Dean of Jersey and the Attorney General.[72] Executive authority resides with the Council of Ministers, led by a Chief Minister selected by the Assembly from its members, overseeing nine government departments managed by chief officers.[73] In contrast, the Bailiwick of Guernsey includes Guernsey (with Herm and Jethou), Alderney, Sark (with Brecqhou), and Lihou, structured as a federation of jurisdictions with Guernsey holding primary authority but granting significant self-rule to Alderney and Sark under the 1948 and 1949 agreements, respectively.[74] Guernsey's States of Deliberation, reformed in 2020 to a committee-based system, consists of 38 People's Deputies elected island-wide every four years, plus two non-voting Alderney representatives, two law officers, and a presiding officer; executive functions are delegated to a senior Policy & Resources Committee and seven principal committees covering areas like health, economic development, and environment.[75] Alderney maintains its States of Alderney, a 10-member body plus a president elected every four years, handling local bylaws, taxation, and services while deferring to Guernsey on bailiwick-wide civil laws unless opting out via committee review.[76] Sark's administration centers on the Chief Pleas, a unicameral assembly of 17 elected conseillers serving four-year terms, advised by 10 unelected officers including the Seigneur (a hereditary role with limited veto powers post-2008 reforms) and handling legislation, budgeting, and enforcement through committees like the Douzaine for executive duties.[77] Inter-jurisdictional coordination in Guernsey occurs via bodies such as the Bailiwick Council, established in 2015 to facilitate policy alignment on shared issues like financial services regulation, though each entity retains fiscal independence—Alderney, for instance, levies its own income tax up to 20% since 2013.[74] This decentralized model reflects historical Norman feudal traditions, enabling tailored responses to local needs while preserving bailiwick unity under the Lieutenant-Governor as the Crown's representative.[3]Legal System and Autonomy from the United Kingdom
The legal systems of the Channel Islands, comprising the Bailiwicks of Jersey and Guernsey, derive primarily from Norman customary law established following the Norman Conquest of England in 1066, supplemented by elements of English common law and French civil law influences. This customary framework, known as the Coutume de Normandie, forms the basis for property, inheritance, and contract law, distinct from the English common law predominant in the United Kingdom. Jersey's Royal Court and Guernsey's Royal Court of Guernsey serve as superior courts, handling civil and criminal matters, with magisterial courts addressing lesser offenses; appeals in Jersey proceed to the Jersey Court of Appeal or, exceptionally, the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, while Guernsey maintains a similar appellate structure. Legislation is enacted by the islands' assemblies—the States of Jersey and States of Guernsey—yielding statutes that integrate with customary principles, though modern reforms have adopted statute-heavy approaches akin to English practice.[78][79] Autonomy from the United Kingdom stems from the islands' status as Crown Dependencies, self-governing possessions of the Crown rather than integral parts of the UK realm, with no representation in the UK Parliament and no automatic subjection to Acts of Parliament. UK legislation extends to the islands only through explicit Orders in Council, requiring prior consultation and, by convention, the islands' consent; for instance, primary UK laws are not binding unless registered locally after approval, preserving legislative independence in domestic affairs such as taxation and criminal justice. The UK retains responsibility for defense and certain international obligations, exercised on behalf of the Crown via the Lieutenant-Governors appointed to each bailiwick, but internal governance remains insulated, as affirmed in constitutional understandings dating to historical separations post-1204 when King John lost Normandy to France. This arrangement has held without unilateral UK imposition since at least the 18th century, though theoretical sovereign power resides with the Crown-in-Council, a prerogative rarely invoked and constrained by political reality.[80][57][67] Fiscal and regulatory autonomy further underscores separation, with the islands maintaining independent tax systems—zero corporate tax rates in some sectors and no VAT until recent EU-influenced alignments—unfettered by UK fiscal policy, enabling specialized financial services legislation. Judicial independence is reinforced by local jurats (lay judges in Jersey) and jurats in Guernsey, blending customary roles with professional advocates, though English procedural influences have been adopted voluntarily. Reforms, such as Jersey's 2022 updates to trust law, demonstrate proactive divergence from UK norms to attract international business, while maintaining alignment on human rights via optional extensions of the European Convention.[81]Defense, Foreign Affairs, and International Obligations
The United Kingdom Government retains ultimate responsibility for the defense of the Channel Islands as Crown Dependencies, with the islands maintaining no standing military forces of their own.[68][57] This arrangement stems from their constitutional status, where the Crown, via the UK, ensures external security, including naval and air protection through Royal Navy and Royal Air Force assets.[1] Internal security is handled by local honorary police forces in Jersey and Guernsey, which are unarmed and focused on civil law enforcement rather than military defense. Alderney and Sark similarly rely on volunteer constabularies without paramilitary capabilities. Historical field forces, such as Jersey's militia, were disbanded after World War II, reflecting a post-occupation demilitarization aligned with UK oversight.[54] In foreign affairs, the UK exclusively manages diplomatic representation and negotiations on behalf of the Channel Islands, preventing the islands from conducting independent foreign policy.[68][57] However, the islands may participate in limited international engagements with UK authorization, such as maintaining representative offices in Brussels for economic interests or attending OECD and FATF meetings on financial transparency.[82] Jersey and Guernsey governments are consulted on UK foreign policy matters affecting them, and post-Brexit, they engage indirectly through the UK-EU Trade and Cooperation Agreement for customs and trade protocols.[57] Regarding international obligations, multilateral treaties are extended to the Channel Islands only with their explicit consent, typically via UK ratification encompassing the dependencies.[83] For instance, Jersey has been entrusted to conclude bilateral double taxation agreements with over 20 countries, including the US in 2018 and India in 2019, under UK delegation for fiscal matters.[84] Guernsey similarly maintains agreements on tax information exchange, such as with the EU's Code of Conduct Group, while adhering to global standards like those from the Global Forum on Transparency.[82] Non-extension occurs for treaties deemed irrelevant, such as certain human rights conventions, though the islands voluntarily align with equivalents like the European Convention on Human Rights through domestic legislation.[68] This selective participation underscores their autonomy in internal implementation while subordinating broader commitments to UK prerogative.[84]Economy
Financial Services and Low-Tax Regime
The financial services sector forms the cornerstone of the Channel Islands' economy, particularly in Jersey and Guernsey, where it has driven growth since the mid-20th century through offshore banking, fund management, trusts, and insurance. This development accelerated in the 1960s amid capital inflows seeking stability outside the UK's exchange controls and higher taxes, with Jersey establishing offshore banking operations in 1961 and Guernsey welcoming its first merchant bank in 1963.[85][86] By attracting international clients with political neutrality, English common law traditions, and proximity to Europe, the sector expanded rapidly, peaking with dozens of banks by the 1980s before consolidating under stricter global standards.[87] The low-tax regime underpins this appeal, featuring a standard corporate income tax rate of 0% for most resident companies in both Jersey and Guernsey, with financial services firms taxed at 10% on Guernsey-source income.[88][89] No capital gains, inheritance, or wealth taxes apply, while personal income tax caps at 20% after allowances, and goods tax stands at 5%.[90] These policies, rooted in the islands' fiscal autonomy as Crown Dependencies outside the UK's tax net, incentivize non-resident business without double-taxation treaties fully mirroring the UK's, though recent OECD Pillar Two adoption in Jersey imposes a 15% minimum effective rate on multinational enterprises with over €750 million in global turnover starting in 2025.[91] Guernsey maintains its 0%/10% structure to remain competitive, arguing that higher rates could prompt relocation of financial entities.[92] Financial services contribute disproportionately to output, accounting for over 40% of Jersey's gross value added (GVA) in 2023 and more than half of private sector activity, fueling a 7.3% GDP rise that year.[93] In Guernsey, the sector similarly dominates, supporting high GDP per capita among small island economies through funds allocating trillions in global capital.[56][94] Regulation emphasizes compliance with international norms via independent bodies like the Jersey Financial Services Commission, which oversees licensing under the Financial Services (Jersey) Law 1998 and enforces anti-money laundering measures aligned with FATF standards.[95][96] This framework, while enabling low taxes, has faced scrutiny amid global transparency pushes, prompting enhanced reporting without eroding core attractions like economic substance rules.[97][98]Diversification into Tourism, Agriculture, and Technology
The Channel Islands have pursued economic diversification beyond financial services by bolstering tourism, which contributes significantly to employment and GDP through visitor spending on accommodations, attractions, and events. In Jersey, tourism generated an estimated economic impact via visitor surveys tracking volumes, bed nights, and expenditures, with efforts focused on mitigating seasonality through varied offerings like cultural festivals and outdoor activities. Guernsey recorded 21,928 staying visitors in Q1 2025, a 6% increase from Q1 2024, driven partly by a 16% rise in business travel, while French day-trippers surged 74% to over 12,000 in Q2 2025, reflecting targeted marketing to nearby markets. Despite fluctuations, such as a 16% visitor drop in Jersey from January to June 2025 compared to 2024, the sector supports retail and hospitality jobs, with 64% of Guernsey's Q2 2025 staying visitors opting for hotels.[99][100][101] Agriculture remains a cornerstone of rural economies in the islands, emphasizing high-value dairy production and niche crops to sustain local food security and exports. Jersey's sector is dominated by dairy farming with the Jersey breed of cow, producing premium milk alongside Jersey Royal potatoes, which underpin the island's agricultural identity and contribute to horticultural output. In 2015, Jersey's dairy industry yielded approximately 8.8 million gallons of milk, supporting herds where larger operations averaged 209 cows among those exceeding 100-head farms. Guernsey's dairy focuses on golden milk from local breeds, with farmers managing land, breeding, and production for products like butter, though historical sectors like tomatoes—peaking at 567 acres in 1979—have contracted sharply due to market shifts, transitioning toward sustainable practices amid global food insecurity concerns. These activities link to tourism via agrotourism potential, promoting island-scale climate-adapted models.[102][103] Technology diversification centers on fintech and digital innovation, leveraging the islands' regulatory environment to attract startups and professionals. Jersey hosts over 3,000 digital and technology specialists, positioning itself as a fintech hub through initiatives like the Jersey for Fintech collaboration, which promotes inward investment in blockchain, robo-advice, and payment solutions. Guernsey and Jersey finance firms largely view tech breakthroughs as opportunities, with 88% of surveyed global peers in 2017 anticipating revenue pressures from innovators, prompting partnerships. The ecosystem includes 41 financial services startups, such as Ocorian and RBS International, fostering growth in areas like alternative liquidity funds amid broader digital strategies via Digital Jersey's sandbox and training programs. This sector enhances economic resilience by integrating with finance while building skills infrastructure.[104][105][106]Fiscal Policies, Reforms, and Global Pressures
The Channel Islands maintain distinct yet broadly similar fiscal policies emphasizing low, stable taxation to attract international business, particularly in financial services. Jersey imposes a maximum personal income tax rate of 20% with no capital gains, inheritance, or wealth taxes, alongside a standard corporate tax rate of 0% for most activities but 10% for regulated financial institutions with a permanent establishment.[90][107] Guernsey applies a flat 20% income tax rate on individuals after a personal allowance of £13,025 as of 2023, with corporate tax generally at 0% except for 10% on certain banking and large retail activities.[108][109] Both jurisdictions rely heavily on goods and services taxes—5% GST in Jersey and similar long-term care contributions in Guernsey—while avoiding broad-based value-added taxes to preserve competitiveness.[110] These policies, rooted in fiscal autonomy as Crown Dependencies, prioritize revenue stability over progressive redistribution, generating surpluses through efficient collection rather than high rates.[111] Reforms since the 2010s have focused on enhancing transparency and substance amid domestic fiscal needs. In response to post-financial crisis scrutiny, both islands introduced economic substance requirements in 2019, mandating that entities conducting "relevant activities" like fund management or holding company operations demonstrate core income-generating activities locally, with adequate qualified employees, premises, and expenditure.[112][113] These rules, extended to partnerships by 2021-2023, aim to ensure genuine economic presence rather than mere letterbox entities, with annual reporting to tax authorities.[114][115] Recent budgets reflect adaptation to rising public spending pressures: Jersey's 2025-2028 plan raised the single-person tax allowance to £20,700 to offset inflation, while Guernsey deferred immediate income tax hikes in favor of phased reforms including streamlined filing deadlines reverting to November 30 annually from 2025.[116][117] Discussions on aligning personal rates closer to 22%, as in the Isle of Man, highlight debates over funding infrastructure without eroding the low-tax appeal.[118][119] Global pressures, primarily from OECD-led initiatives, have compelled ongoing compliance to avert reputational damage and sanctions. The islands adopted Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) measures by 2015-2016, including country-by-country reporting, and committed to the Common Reporting Standard (CRS) for automatic exchange of financial information since 2016, alongside FATCA intergovernmental agreements with the US.[120][121] Under OECD Pillar Two, effective for accounting periods from January 1, 2025, in-scope multinational enterprises face a 15% effective minimum tax via domestic top-up mechanisms, potentially generating additional revenue estimated at £90 million annually for larger entities with turnover exceeding €750 million.[122][123] These reforms counter criticisms of facilitating profit shifting—though empirical data shows Channel Islands entities now hold substantial assets under management (£400+ billion combined)—by prioritizing verifiable substance over nominal residency, avoiding EU blacklists through proactive alignment despite lacking formal EU membership.[124][125] Such adaptations reflect causal pressures from international tax competition and evasion concerns, where non-compliance risks capital flight, balanced against retaining zero-rating for passive income to sustain financial sector dominance.[126]Economic Performance Metrics and Brexit Impacts
Jersey, the largest economy in the Channel Islands, recorded a gross domestic product (GDP) of £6,575 million in 2023, reflecting a 7.3% increase in real terms from the previous year, driven primarily by expansion in financial and insurance services.[127] This growth contributed to a GDP per capita of £63,500 in real terms, surpassing the 10-year average.[128] In 2024, however, Jersey's GDP contracted by 0.7% to £6,859 million, with GDP per capita declining 1.3% in real terms to £65,800 amid broader economic pressures including subdued global financial activity.[129] Aggregate GDP growth for the Channel Islands stood at 3.72% in 2023, down from 5.34% in 2022, indicating a cooling trend post-pandemic recovery.[130] Guernsey's economy, estimated at approximately £1.5 billion when including legal and accounting sectors, has shown resilience in investment funds and tourism, with visitor numbers rising 9% in Q2 2024 compared to the prior year.[131] [132] Unemployment remains structurally low, at 0.8% in Guernsey for 2024, reflecting a tight labor market, while Jersey's rate hovered around 3.5-4% based on recent surveys and modeled estimates for the islands at 6.3%.[133] [134] [135]| Metric | Jersey 2023 | Jersey 2024 | Channel Islands Aggregate 2023 |
|---|---|---|---|
| GDP Growth (real) | +7.3% | -0.7% | +3.72% |
| GDP (£ million) | 6,575 | 6,859 | N/A |
| GDP per capita (£, real) | 63,500 | 65,800 (down 1.3%) | N/A |
| Unemployment Rate | ~3.5% (2021 base) | Slight rise | 6.3% (modeled) |
Demographics and Society
Population Composition and Migration Patterns
The Channel Islands' resident population totaled approximately 171,000 in 2023, distributed primarily across the two main bailiwicks. Jersey held 103,650 inhabitants at year-end, representing the largest share. The Bailiwick of Guernsey, encompassing the main island, Herm, and Jethou but excluding Alderney and Sark, counted 64,781 residents as of December 31. Alderney's population stood at about 2,167 in early 2023, while Sark's was roughly 500. These figures reflect modest net growth, supported by positive migration balances amid low natural increase due to aging demographics and below-replacement fertility rates.[139][8] Ethnic composition remains predominantly white European, rooted in Norman, English, and Channel-specific ancestries, with immigrant minorities concentrated in labor sectors like finance, construction, hospitality, and agriculture. In Jersey's 2021 census, 44.4% of residents identified as White Jersey, 30.5% as British, 9.4% as Portuguese or Madeiran, 3.0% as Polish, and 12.7% as other ethnic groups, including other Europeans and non-Europeans. Place of birth data from the same census showed 50% born in Jersey, 29% elsewhere in the British Isles, 8% in Portugal or Madeira, and 3% in Poland, underscoring reliance on intra-British Isles mobility and targeted EU labor inflows prior to stricter post-Brexit controls. Guernsey's ethnic profile, based on 2019 estimates, features 52.9% identifying as Guernsey-specific, 23.9% from the UK and Ireland, 2.2% Portuguese, 1.5% Latvian, 2.9% other European, 4.6% non-European, and 12% unspecified, with overall 95.8% white.[140][141]| Ethnic Group (Jersey, 2021) | Percentage |
|---|---|
| White Jersey | 44.4% |
| British | 30.5% |
| Portuguese/Madeiran | 9.4% |
| Polish | 3.0% |
| Other | 12.7% |