Mehr lesen
Zusatztext Michael Finch's book bridges a major gap in our understanding of the making of a colonial school of warfare in the French Army Informationen zum Autor Michael P.M. Finch is a lecturer in the Defence Studies Department, Kings College London at the Joint Services Command and Staff College. He was formerly the Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the History of War at the University of Oxford, and a research associate with the Oxford Programme on the Changing Character of War. He completed his doctoral studies at Pembroke College, University of Oxford, and has taught at the Universities of Birmingham, Newcastle, and Oxford. Klappentext A volume which offers new insights into the nature of military conflict and consolidation within European empires in the late nineteenth century. Zusammenfassung On the eve of the twentieth century, Joseph Gallieni and Hubert Lyautey claimed to have devised a new approach to the consolidation of colonial acquisitions. Their method emphasized the primacy of political action over military action, called for the replacement of military columns with a 'creeping occupation', stressed the importance of economic-organisational development in ensuring the lasting stability of newly-acquired imperial possessions, and called for the unification of civil and military powers in the hands of the soldier, who would act as the first administrator of the colony.This method was the culmination of colonial experiences in Tonkin and Madagascar in the final decades of the nineteenth century. Following Gallieni's career path across these colonies, A Progressive Occupation? The Gallieni-Lyautey Method and Colonial Pacification in Tonkin and Madagascar, 1885-1900 focuses first on the painful process of pacification in Tonkin, locating the emergence of the method and Gallieni's own achievements in their proper context. The volume's focus then moves across the Indian Ocean to Madagascar, where Gallieni, combining the roles of Commander-in-Chief and Governor-General, was able to play out his nascent colonial method on a grand scale. Meanwhile, his subordinates - with Lyautey at the forefront - were able to interpret his method in the execution of their missions.Drawing heavily on French archival sources, Michael Finch sheds new light on colonial conflict and consolidation during the age of European imperial expansion, illustrates the differences, gaps and transgressions that exist between the theory and the practice of pacification, and raises broader questions about the French army, empire and civil-military relations. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of Figures and Tables Note on place names Introduction 1: Colonial Consolidation, Pacification, and Military Practice, 1870-1914 2: A Method in History and in Theory 3: Tonkin 1885 - 1891: pacification without method 4: Tonkin 1891 - 1896: the arrival of method 5: Madagascar, 1896-1899: the method on a large scale Conclusion Tables and Figures Bibliography ...