Book Number: 21 767
This study explains how narrowly Siam survived the French menace to her independence during the period of the European scramble for colonies.
For half a century after arriving in Cochinchina in 1858, the French encroached on Siamese territory and interests in a variety of ways. By the 1890s, French colonialists, so influential in promoting French annexations in Africa and the Pacific, wanted to acquire the whole of Siam in order to create a 'Greater Indochina' in imitation of British India. The integrity, the stability, and the very existence of the Siamese state were at stake.
This study, based on a wide range of newly available French records, examines the changing aims and methods of French expansion. The author explains how French ambitions came to be frustrated by British diplomatic action. But he argues that the Siamese played an indispensable role in shaping the conditions which made British intervention effective.
(Bangkok 1995)
ISBN 974-8496-28-7
468 pp., 20 pp. illus., 150 x 210 mm, pbk.
37.50 US-Dollar
|
|
|
|
|
Please send mail to WHITE LOTUS PRESS !
|
Ask for the printed catalogues of WHITE LOTUS PRESS !
|
|
Back to Thailand online (English section): |
Back to Thailand online (Thai section): |
Back to Thailand online (German section): |
This page was created on Decembre 22, 1996 and last updated on January 15, 1997.
copyright 1996-1997 © WHITE LOTUS CO., LTD. (Bangkok/Thailand)