The Mad Monarchist looks at the perennial enemy of the British Empire, the French Empire.
From The Mad Monarchist (15 November 2012)
Even most monarchists today prefer not to defend the colonial empires of
old, though more monarchists are likely to than the mainstream which
tends to totally condemn any and all colonialism even while they turn a
blind eye to even worse but more subtle or indirect forms of colonialism
today, usually carried out by republics. Yet, even more than that, even
when it comes to monarchists, most will not respond favorably to any
coupling of the words “French” and “empire”. I will not, today, be
addressing the Napoleonic French Empire specifically (though each played
a role and the second empire particularly had a lasting impact) but
rather the wider, historical French colonial empire. It was the second
largest colonial empire in the world, surpassed only by the British and
although many monarchists dismiss it as a ‘republican empire’ the truth
is that the roots of that massive colonial empire go back to the old
Kingdom of France even if it reached its peak under the republics. As
with all colonial empires, the French made their mistakes and there were
examples of cruelty and injustice one could list. However, as with
colonialism in general, these examples are often overblown or used to
cast all colonialism in a negative light. In truth, the French “mission
of civilization” was often just that and in the best sense of the term.
Many parts of the world owe a great deal to La Belle France.
French colonialism could be traced back to the very beginnings of France
or even before France was a united country. For the purposes of this
article, we will not, but it should be remembered that it was French
knights who made up much of the forces that fought in the Crusades and
it was the Normans (originally Norsemen who settled in France) who
fought and conquered from England to Ireland to Sicily and almost
everywhere in between. There were, in the Middle Ages, Frankish kings
(of the House of Anjou or the Angevins) on the thrones of England,
Hungary and Croatia and Jerusalem. Earlier, of course, the Frankish
Empire of Charlemagne covered most of central and western Europe.
However, the colonial period of French history as most know it, began
for the most part with the reign of King Francis I who, in 1523,
encouraged the Italian explorer (who had already visited the North
American coast on a French ship) Giovanni da Verrazzano to explore the
area between Florida and Newfoundland in the hope of finding a passage
to the Pacific. It was also King Francis I who, in 1534, commissioned
the intrepid Jacques Cartier to undertake a similar mission and it was
he who claimed the land he called “Canada” (which Verrazzano had dubbed
“New France”) for King Francis I. This was the beginning of French
Canada or Quebec as we know it today.
There were French efforts to claim areas of what is now Brazil and
Argentina but problems at home and the already established powers of
Spain and Portugal prevented these being successful. However, in 1608,
Samuel De Champlain founded Quebec and, under the great King Louis XIV,
the explorer La Salle claimed the Mississippi River valley for France,
naming the area Louisiana after his King and Queen and also established a
French fort on the coast of Texas (ensuring that the Fleur-de-lis still
flies over the Lone Star State). The French colonial empire was
obviously most extensive in North America and that is where most of the
focus was along with some island holdings in the Caribbean which proved
extremely lucrative though one in particular, Haiti, would prove
extremely troublesome in the long run. When it comes to the French
colonial presence in North America, one thing to keep in mind, is that
real colonialism was extremely limited. Unlike the British, France did
not send over large numbers of settlers to North America. Some came of
course, but the French presence in North America was mostly identified
with the rough and rugged frontier fur-trappers and the intrepid
Catholic missionaries who worked to convert the natives to Christianity.
Because of this, the French were careful to avoid conflict with the
American Indians if at all possible. They were more likely to befriend
them and early on forged alliances with them. France did not want to
conquer and displace the natives, the fur traders wanted to do business
with them and the priests wanted to convert them and teach them Latin
-both of which requires their goodwill rather than their hostility. Nor
did they tend to hold themselves apart from the natives as, by
comparison, the British did and there was much more intermarriage
between the French and the Native Americans which ultimately produced
the mixed-race ethnic group called the Métis in modern Canada. Today,
most are as “White” as any other European-Canadian but they still hold
on to the special status that their original native ancestry gives them.
The fact that, when war broke out between France and Britain in North
America, that so many of the Indians sided with the French shows clearly
that they considered their interests to be better served in the hands
of the King of France than in those of the Hanoverian King of Great
Britain and Ireland. This would surely not have been the case if the
French had been systematically oppressing the natives or being terribly
cruel to them. The French, for the most part, were not viewed as foreign
conquerors but as the people who shared new knowledge with them and
traded valuable goods to them which they had never had before.
The French islands in the Caribbean were, unfortunately, a different
story and life for the slaves on the sugar plantations there was usually
horrible. However, while accepting that, one needs look no farther to
see the value of the French presence even in this area than to compare
the fate of Haiti after independence to those islands still under French
administration today. The Kingdom of France established some outposts
in west Africa but these were limited. More progress was made in India
where, for a time, it was a real possibility that French influence would
surpass that of Great Britain on the subcontinent. It was from their
base in India that France made their first serious effort to gain a
foothold in Southeast Asia by allying with the growing power of the
Nguyen Dynasty. This was during the reign of King Louis XVI and,
unfortunately, the outbreak of the Revolution meant that this original,
greatly preferable relationship, would never have a chance to grow and
subsequent Franco-Viet relations would not be so ideal. Likewise, the
colonial empire of the old Kingdom of France was fairly well decimated
in a series of clashes with Great Britain. British troops and their
allies blocked the French in India during the Carnatic Wars and a
British victory in the French and Indian War saw the end of French
Canada. There were hopes of restoring Canada to French rule by
intervention in the American War for Independence but this was thwarted
when the fledgling United States signed a separate peace with Great
Britain, leaving France with nothing but debts.
The Revolution, needless to say, was a disaster for the old French
colonial empire and on the international front things were not improved
by the creation of the actual “French Empire” under Napoleon who
resigned himself to the loss of Haiti and sold the massive Louisiana
Territory to the United States. He preferred to focus on expansion in
Europe, though, for a brief period, he extended French influence over
Egypt and the area of Palestine and Syria. Many view the sight of French
Napoleonic troops tramping past the pyramids as an odd sight, but of
course King St Louis IX had invaded Egypt with his French knights in the
past and then as now the French language was not unknown in the Middle
East. In the aftermath of the Napoleonic Wars, it was King Charles X who
sent troops into Algeria, firmly bringing that area into the orbit of
France for the first time. French power overseas and the “mission of
civilization” was further expanded during the reign of Emperor Napoleon
III. In fact, most of the French colonial empire as it is remembered
today was built on the foundations established under the second
Napoleonic empire.
Under Napoleon III, the French presence in Algeria was furthered and
strengthened, French influence in the Middle East increased and the
first armed intervention in Indochina was accomplished which would
eventually lead to French control over all of modern Laos, Cambodia and
Vietnam. It was also, famously, Napoleon III who made an effort to
create a new French sphere of influence in the Americas with his
intervention in Mexico as well as plans for French footholds in Central
America and on the Pacific coast of South America. The French Empire is
usually criticized for this, and certainly there is much to criticize,
however, such failings are not the whole story and many great and
beneficial deeds were accomplished. Good government tended to follow in
the footsteps of the French Foreign Legion from Mexico to Algeria to
Djibouti. Many Mexican villages had never known such basic advances as a
regular and reliable postal service and freedom from bandit extortion
until the arrival of the French Imperial Army. Although few would want
to admit it today, when the French Imperial Army first marched into
Mexico City they were met by mobs of cheering citizens.
Mexico, of course, did not work out due to the Union victory in the
American Civil War, however, Napoleon III left a lasting French presence
and influence in Africa and particularly the Far East. This included
not only Indochina but also a sphere of influence in southern China
after the Sino-French War and enclaves on the Chinese coast. There was
also an expedition to Korea though that ended badly and was swiftly
swept under the rug. When it comes to monarchy, while not perfect, the
French Empire had a pretty good record. France sponsored the restoration
of the monarchy in Mexico and, had that worked out, might have done the
same in South America. The native monarchies of Indochina were
maintained, even assisted in consolidating power in the case of Laos.
Vietnam was a more unfortunate case but, even there, the real damage to
the monarchy came after the fall of Napoleon III when the French
Republic was running things. One reason this was possible was because of
the degree to which colonial policy was the domain of the French navy
and the French navy had a very strong Catholic and conservative officer
corps, something seen all the way up to Admiral Georges Thierry
d’Argenlieu after World War II who was one of the most adamant advocates
of the restoration of the last Vietnamese emperor to lead a pro-French,
non-communist Vietnamese state.
Unfortunately, when Napoleon III was tossed aside the French republic
was, not surprisingly, far more anti-monarchy in their colonial policy.
French rule in Africa was greatly expanded, Madagascar was brought into
the empire but this time with the local monarchy being destroyed in the
process. French rule expanded in Indochina but the republic planted the
seeds of its own downfall by humiliating the Vietnamese emperor and by
simply by their education of native peoples. Imagine a young Vietnamese
boy like the future Ho Chi Minh going to a French school and being
taught all about “liberty, equality and fraternity” and how the
revolution against King Louis was a great and glorious thing only to
then be expected to go home and kowtow to the emperor. Given these mixed
signals, it is no wonder that so many of those who would become
revolutionary leaders in the anti-colonial period, leading the fight
against France, were themselves French educated. Future murderous
dictators like Ho Chi Minh and Pol Pot were both members of the French
Communist Party in France before such a thing even existed in Indochina.
Like other colonial powers, World War I saw the French empire in full
flower with participants from Senegal to Saigon serving in France to
contribute to the war effort. Likewise, World War II proved to be the
beginning of the end of the French colonial empire. At first, France
determined to fight to maintain it and in Indochina few people realize
how effective the French forces were. They fought a longer and more
aggressive war than the United States later did and France did it
without ever resorting to conscription at home. The French forces were
actually winning the war for the most part, despite sabotage on the home
front, until all was lost in the desperate gamble at Dien Bien Phu.
Even then, were it not for chaos and war weariness at home, France could
have carried on even after that setback, but it was not to be. Other
colonies fell away later until a serious effort was made to hold on to
Algeria, which was even declared a part of metropolitan France. However,
Algeria was eventually given up and the loss basically took the Fourth
Republic with it.
Much of the memory of French colonialism is colored by the wars in
Vietnam and especially Algeria. This is unfair and overlooks the
benevolent record of the Kingdom of France in North America and the fact
that, under Napoleon III, French colonialism was usually based on
treaties with local rulers. It is also rarely considered how former
colonies fared after independence. French rule in Indochina was not
always pretty, but it was paradise on earth compared to the millions who
were slaughtered later by native communist dictators. Even in Algeria,
as ugly as the war was, things did not improve after independence.
Algeria almost immediately fell into civil war, there have been
conflicts and accusations of human rights abuses made by the Berbers
against the Arabs and most of the last two decades have been spent with
Algeria in a perpetual state of emergency with the repression that goes
with it. It is also worth pointing out that some areas, such as French
Guiana in South America (most famous for being the home of Devil’s
Island) have been offered independence by the French government but
adamantly prefer to remain a part of France. Clearly the French colonial
empire had a considerable beneficial impact on many parts of the world
and certainly more so during the days when monarchs still held sway over
France.
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