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  1. French officials in Indochina had, by 1914, been embroiled in a longstanding tug-of war with missionaries over their respective reach in regions of Indochina where the colonial state was attempting to expand.

  2. When war broke out in Europe in August 1914, the French conquest of the Indochina peninsula (péninsule indochinoise) had been considered complete since 1897, at which time the Vietnamese military resistance, known as Cần Vừơng (Save the King) had ended. 1 In that same year, Governor General Paul Doumer (1857-1932) founded the Indochinese ...

  3. Throughout the nineteenth century, in times of religious conflict, Catholic workers regularly sought French diplomatic and military support to defend what they considered to be their right to evangelize.

  4. Indochina, the countries of Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia formerly associated with France, first within its empire and later within the French Union. French rule was ended in 1954 with the Geneva Accords. The term Indochina refers to the intermingling of Indian and Chinese influences in the culture of the region.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. The French East India Company, a trade organization formed to expand trade and propagate Catholicism, gained a foothold in Indochina in 1668. Thereafter a pattern was established which continued for centuries.

  6. The religion spread and eventually displaced Hinduism and Mahayana Buddhism as the popular religion of Angkor. After a long series of wars with neighboring kingdoms, Angkor was sacked by the Ayutthaya Kingdom and abandoned in 1432 because of ecological failure and infrastructure breakdown.

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  8. The term Indochina (originally Indo-China) was coined in the early nineteenth century. It emphasizes the cultural influence on the area of Indian civilization and Chinese civilization. The term was later adopted as the name of the colony of French Indochina (today's Cambodia, Vietnam, and …. Follow. Wikipedia.