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Encyclopedia of world history (facts on file library of world history) 7 volume set ( PDFDrive ) 1863

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142 French Indochina was signed between Nguyen Anh, the pretender to the Vietnamese throne, and France It allowed for Pigneau de Behaine, the French bishop of Adran, to support Nguyen Anh, who was trying to take over Vietnam, in return for Nguyen Anh’s promising to give the French a privileged trading status should he come to power He also granted commercial and missionary rights to the French, as well as control over the central Vietnamese city of Danang and the island of Poulo Condore off the southern coast of Vietnam With the French Revolution taking place in 1789, the French were unable to fulfill their commitments However, in 1802 the forces of Nguyen Anh won control of Vietnam and centralized power around the imperial city of Hue in central Vietnam Five years after Nguyen Anh’s victory, the Vietnamese expanded their lands by establishing a protectorate over Cambodia However, the king of Cambodia, Ang Duong, was keen on Cambodia becoming independent of its two more powerful neighbors, Thailand to the west and Vietnam to the east, and sought help from the British in Singapore When that failed, he enlisted the help of the French In 1863 the French established a protectorate over Cambodia The French had also been active in southern Vietnam and, after the Battle of Ky Hoa near Saigon (modern-day Ho Chi Minh City), the Treaty of Saigon in 1862 resulted in the Vietnamese ceding three provinces in southern Vietnam to France The remaining provinces of southern Vietnam were conquered by the French in 1867 By the end of the French Second Empire in 1870, the French were in control of southern Vietnam and all of Cambodia The Philaster Treaty of 1874 confirmed French sovereignty over the whole of Cochin China The French then decided to expand their control over the rest of Vietnam In 1882 a French army captain Henri Rivière decided to attack Hanoi He managed to storm the citadel of Hanoi but was killed the following year However, this did not stop French advances, and the Harmand Treaty of 1883 established a French protectorate over both northern Vietnam, known as Tonkin, and central Vietnam, known as Annam This was confirmed in the Patenôtre Treaty of 1884 Three years later, in 1887, the Indochinese Union was established over Vietnam and Cambodia, with Laos joining in 1893 From November 16, 1887, when the Indochinese Union was established, the French ruled through a governor-general based in Saigon, capital of Cochin China There were residents in Laos and Cambodia, a resident-superior in Annam, and a resident-superior in Tonkin, who ruled with the support of the regent, and took instructions from the resident-superior in Annam The Vietnamese imperial family continued to live in the imperial palace at Hue, but they were quickly deprived of any power In July 1885 the French demanded that Emperor Ton That Thuyet resign or be deposed and when the Emperor refused to countenance this, the French, in a show of force, surrounded the imperial palace with over 1,000 soldiers, and the French commander, General Roussel de Courcy, demanded an audience with the emperor Ton That Thuyet overestimated his own strength and sent out soldiers to attack the French These were easily repulsed, and the French invaded the imperial palace, which they sacked As well as looting it, the French also destroyed the imperial library, where scrolls and documents dating back to medieval times were burned SAVE THE EMPEROR In July 1885 the new emperor, Ham Nghi, issued an appeal called Can Vuong (“Save the Emperor”) urging the wealthy to give their money, the strong their might, and the poor their bodies to defend Vietnam from the French Three days later the emperor fled from Hue with Ton That Thuyet and some close advisers From their jungle stronghold in what is now Laos, Ham Nghi’s supporters formed the Can Vuong movement The French responded in September 1885 by deposing the emperor and replacing him with his brother Dong Khanh Ham Nghi was eventually captured in November 1888 after being betrayed by Hmong mountaineers, and Ton That Thuyet escaped to China The French executed all members of the Can Vuong movement whom they captured, except Ham Nghi, who was sent into exile in French Algeria, where he remained until his death in Algiers on January 4, 1943 In Cambodia, King Norodom I, who had accepted the French but then became nervous about having given them too much power, died in 1904 and was replaced by his brother King Sisowath, who was more pro-French In Laos, there was a token French presence, with the French residents-superior working alongside King Sakkarin and, after his death in 1904, King Sisavang Vong French rule barely affected many of the peasants in the countryside throughout Indochina, whose main interactions with the French were taxation However, gradually, many peasants were encouraged to work in plantations, which the French established throughout Vietnam and in eastern Cambodia These centered on the rubber industry and other cash crops Plantation life

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