In a military context, the term pacification refers to a process by which the cooperation or surrender of a population is secured by military force or other means of coercion. [1] The term originated in the Roman Empire where it saw popular usage in the context of the Roman ideal of pax (peace) and Roman imperial expansion. [2] [3] According to historian Myles Lavan, the Latin term pacare (to pacify) evoked to the Romans a grand project of peace-making while, in English, "pacified" has since crystallised as a euphemism for the suppression of resistance to state power. [4]
From 1880 onward the term saw popular usage by colonial empires as a pretext for war under the guise of protecting populations, alongside the colonial concept of protectorates. [5] The term pacification is therefore often presented in quotation marks by contemporary historians. [6]