Vietnam
Under French Rule
By 1857
Louis-Napoleon had been persuaded that invasion was the
best course of action, and French warships were
instructed to take Tourane without any further efforts
to negotiate with the Vietnamese. Tourane was captured
in late 1858 and Gia Dinh (Saigon and later Ho Chi Minh
City) in early 1859. In both cases Vietnamese Christian
support for the French, predicted by the missionaries,
failed to materialize. Vietnamese resistance and
outbreaks of cholera and typhoid forced the French to
abandon Tourane in early 1860. Meanwhile, fear was
growing in Paris that if France withdrew the British
would move in. Also current in Paris at that time was
the rationalization that France had a civilizing
mission--a duty to bring the benefits of its superior
culture to the less fortunate lands of Asia and Africa.
(This was a common justification for the colonial
policies of most of the Western countries.) Meanwhile,
French business and military interests increased their
pressure on the government for decisive action. Thus in
early 1861, a French fleet of 70 ships and 3,500 men
reinforced Gia Dinh and, in a series of bloody battles,
gained control of the surrounding provinces. In June
1862, Emperor Tu Duc, signed the Treaty of Saigon
agreeing to French demands for the cession of three
provinces around Gia Dinh (which the French had renamed
Saigon) and Poulo Condore, as well as for the opening of
three ports to trade, free passage of French warships up
the Mekong to Cambodia, freedom of action for the
missionaries, and payment of a large indemnity to France
for its losses in attacking Vietnam.
Even the French were
surprised by the ease with which the Vietnamese agreed
to the humiliating treaty. Why, after successfully
resisting invasions by the Chinese for the previous 900
years, did the monarchy give in so readily to French
demands? Aside from the seriousness of the loss of
Saigon and the possible overestimation of French
strength, it appears that the isolation of the monarchy
from the people created by decades of repression
prevented Tu Duc and his court from attempting to rally
the necessary popular support to drive out the French.
In fact, by placating the French in the south, Tu Duc
hoped to free his forces to put down a widespread
Christian-supported rebellion in Bac Bo, which he indeed
crushed by 1865. French missionaries, who had urged
their government to support this rebellion, were
disillusioned when it did not, especially after
thousands of Christians were slaughtered by Tu Duc's
forces following the rebellion. The missionaries,
however, had served only as an initial excuse for French
intervention in Vietnam; military and economic interests
soon became the primary reasons for remaining there.
The French navy was
in the forefront of the conquest of Indochina. In 1863
Admiral de la Grandiere, the governor of Cochinchina (as
the French renamed Nam Bo), forced the Cambodian king to
accept a French protectorate over that country, claiming
that the Treaty of Saigon had made France heir to
Vietnamese claims in Cambodia. In June 1867, the admiral
completed the annexation of Cochinchina by seizing the
remaining three western provinces. The following month,
the Siamese government agreed to recognize a French
protectorate over Cambodia in return for the cession of
two Cambodian provinces, Angkor and Battambang, to Siam.
With Cochinchina secured, French naval and mercantile
interests turned to Tonkin (as the French referred to
Bac Bo). The 1873 storming of the citadel of Hanoi, led
by French naval officer Francis Garnier, had the desired
effect of forcing Tu Duc to sign a treaty with France in
March 1874 that recognized France's "full and
entire sovereignty" over Cochinchina, and opened
the Red River to commerce. In an attempt to secure
Tonkin, Garnier was killed and his forces defeated in a
battle with Vietnamese regulars and Black Flag forces.
The latter were Chinese soldiers, who had fled south
following the Taiping Rebellion in that country and had
been hired by the Hue court to keep order in Tonkin.
In April 1882, a
French force again stormed the citadel of Hanoi, under
the leadership of naval officer Henri Riviere. Riviere
and part of his forces were wiped out in a battle with a
Vietnamese-Black Flag army, a reminder of Garnier's fate
a decade earlier. While Garnier's defeat had led to a
partial French withdrawal from Tonkin, Riviere's loss
strengthened the resolve of the French government to
establish a protectorate by military force. Accordingly,
additional funds were appropriated by the French
Parliament to support further military operations, and
Hue fell to the French in August 1883, following the
death of Tu Duc the previous month. A Treaty of
Protectorate, signed at the August 1883 Harmand
Convention, established a French protectorate over North
and Central Vietnam and formally ended Vietnam's
independence. In June 1884, Vietnamese scholar-officials
were forced to sign the Treaty of Hue, which confirmed
the Harmand Convention agreement. By the end of 1884,
there were 16,500 French troops in Vietnam. Resistance
to French control, however, continued. A rebellion known
as the Can Vuong (Loyalty to the King) movement formed
in 1885 around the deposed Emperor Ham Nghi and
attracted support from both scholars and peasants. The
rebellion was essentially subdued with the capture and
exile of Ham Nghi in 1888. Scholar and patriot Phan Dinh
Phung continued to lead the resistance until his death
in 1895. Although unsuccessful in driving out the
French, the Can Vuong movement, with its heroes and
patriots, laid important groundwork for future
Vietnamese independence movements.
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