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French Protectorate to Colony From: ryan nelson <sociolgst@yahoo.com> I’m winding the clock back a bit, here, but what opinions are there regarding when French policy in Viet Nam (Cochin China, Annam and Tonquin) shifted from protection of Catholic missionaries (i.e. June 1862 and March 1872 treaties) to out and out colonialist expansionism? Did an appropriate event symbolize or facilitate the change from protectorate to colony? Is there an overlapping period? Perhaps when the French took up arms against the Black Flag Army around 1882? I ask because the available date I’ve encountered does not address the issue clearly.
-------- Ryan, May questions -- some of these could best be answered, because they are quite complex, by looking at a history of the period. But one clarification, because I suspect that all your questions are based on the idea that French policy shifted from that of protectorate to that of colony. In fact, it was exactly the reverse. Cochinchina was annexed (first) as a colony; both Annam and Tonkin were annexed later as protectorates. Shawn McHale --------
Ryan As Shawn points it, the question of catholicism/colonialism is very complex. I agree with him: in the first stages (1859) Cochinchina was a colony (which means: French people have the hand on everything, how small these things are) and, after 1883, Tonkin and Annam were apparently governed by "indirect rule" (which means that native administrations had preserved a part of their previous powers), even if, on the field, French administration supervised everything.
1. Concerning catholicism, French policies have followed different stages, but you have to remember that, even if France is supposed (in France) to be the "eldest daughter of the Church", French governments through the ages (even in the Middle Age or under Louis XIV) have tried to be independant from the Church (to be short, this stream can be summarized under the word of gallicanism). Obviously, the distrust has been stressed in the XVIIIth (Enlightment, Voltaire and so on) and after 1789. 2. For the period where Asia is concerned (mainly the period after 1840), the French had no interest in the Far East and no power: they only opportunity to stay in Asia was to shelter on missionary networks (especially for translations: it is obvious for the Opium Wars, I have written a text in english about this topic for Academia Sinica, Taiwan, which is available on the Web), whatever the governments could think. 3. Between 1859 and 1870 and then between 1870 and 1879, the governments were close to catholic positions, but carefully: the French were not so numerous in Cochinchina and they had to obtain a kind of collaboration from buddhist/confucianist civil servants. On another hand, in the beginnings, the only available translators were catholics. French administration had to maintain a subtle balance between catholics and buddhists (US diplomats had to solve the same equation with Diem in the 1950th). At home, French governments had to be carfull too: when the war between China and France occured in june 1884, the Ferry's government was accused to sacrifice Chinese friendship only for Catholic church pleasure. 4. After 1877 and after 1902 still more, the different governments had no sympathy with catholicism. A lot of French governors of Indochina (as Paul Bert, Jean-Marie de Lanessan or Paul Beau) thought that, because the French had landed in Vietnam to "protect" catholics, they were un-popular in Vietnam. De Lanessan tried to restaure traditional confucean administration pride (against catholicism) in the beginning of the 1890s. To conclude, 1.French colonial administrateurs were not so favourable to catholic church positions, but they had to rely on the help of the catholic hierarchy. 2. As a consequence, on the field, French civil servants could act, against or in favour of Catholics, following their own opinions as far as no trouble resulted from their policy, that could be transmitted to a higher level. Yours sincerely. Gilles de Gantès Aix-en-Provence. France.
Dear Ryan, -------- Dear Ryan, In addition to what has been said so far, may I suggest Jean Michaud --------
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