Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-fwgfc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-15T22:54:24.588Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Education for Empire in Lyon during the Third Republic

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

John F. Laffey*
Affiliation:
Concordia University, Montreal

Extract

France acquired the world's second largest overseas empire during the nineteenth century. This achievement appears all the more remarkable when measured against the scant holdings retained at the end of the Napoleonic Wars, the nation's weak industrial base, the banking community's marked preference for investment in the state debts of European and Mediterranean countries, the stagnant demographic pattern, and the mass of the population's distaste for imperialist adventures. Among those clamouring for the extension of imperial holdings could be found many military men and missionaries and a more restricted number of ideologues and politicians. But the strongest support for imperialism came from the business elites of the port cities and the centres of textile production. Despite their frequent invocations of grandeur and the mission civilisatrice, the motives of these bourgeois magnates remained essentially economic. They wanted the semi-colonial areas, as well as the colonies, to supply them with markets, raw materials and more profitable returns on investments. Local Chambers of Commerce, not unnaturally, became the pivotal institutions providing sustained support for imperialist endeavours. The provincial business communities discovered, however, that the realization of their economic dreams required more than economic activity. Most obviously, they had to deploy their substantial political influence in efforts to sway government policy. During the Third Republic, when France's empire reached its greatest extent, they also utilized the Chambers of Commerce to lend support to local geographical societies, colonialist organizations, colonial congresses, and endeavours in the field of imperial education. If these undertakings never completely realized the hopes of their backers, they still enjoyed successes substantial enough to call forth continued support.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 1975 by New York University 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Notes

Grants from Montreal's Inter-University Centre for European Studies and the Canada Council facilitated the research for this article. I wish to thank both bodies for this aid.

1. Laffey, John F., “Municipal Imperialism in Nineteenth Century France,” Historical Reflections/Réflexions historiques, I, 1 (June, 1974), 81114.Google Scholar

2. For nineteenth century undertakings, see Laffey, John F., “Roots of French Imperialism in the Nineteenth Century: The Case of Lyon,” French Historical Studies, v. 6, No. 1 (Spring, 1969): 7892, and Laffey, John F., “Les racines de l'impérialisme français en Extrême-Orient,” Revue d'histoire moderne et contemporaine, v. 16 (April-June, 1969): 282–99. A study of twentieth century developments will appear shortly.Google Scholar

3. Isaac, Auguste, Discours, “Réception de M. Doumer, Gouverneur général de l'Indochine,” Compte rendu des travaux de la Chambre de commerce de Lyon, Année 1901 (Lyon, 1902), pp. 470–98, 473–82, p. 477. Henceforth this annual publication will be cited as CRTCCL. These volumes were always published in Lyon the year after the events and deliberations described in them had taken place. The date included in the citation will be the date in the title and not the date of publication. This study ends in 1938 because the author has not seen the 1939 CRTCCL. Given the conditions of 1940, it may never have appeared.Google Scholar

4. Comité d'expansion universitaire en Orient,” CRTCCL, 1912, pp. 429–30; “Ecole technique de Beyrouth,” CRTCCL, 1913, pp. 380–83; “Comité d'expansion universitaire en Orient,” CRTCCL, 1919, pp. 469–70; “Ecole technique de Beyrouth (Association lyonnaise pour le développement a l'étranger de l'enseignement supérieure et technique),” Ibid., pp. 470–471.Google Scholar

5. Création d'une êcole d'enseignement technique à Shanghai,” CRTCCL, 1919, pp. 473–75; “Création d'une école d'enseignement technique a Shanghai,” CRTCCL, 1920, pp. 549–52.Google Scholar

6. Subvention en faveur d'une Ecole professionelle à Pekin,” CRTCCL, 1926, pp. 470–71; “Ecole des hautes études industrielles et commerciales de Tien-tsin,” Ibid., pp. 471–72; “Ecole des hautes études industrielles et commerciales de Tien-tsin,” CRTCCL, 1927, pp. 521–22.Google Scholar

7. Société des Missions africaines de Lyon,” CRTCCL, 1923, pp. 430–31.Google Scholar

8. Organisation de l'enseignmement au Maroc—Mission d'études de M. Busquet,” CRTCCL, 1920, pp. 553–54.Google Scholar

9. Celle, Anatoile, Discours, “Reception de M. Lucien Saint, commissaire résident général au Maroc,” CRTCCL, 1931, pp. 269–75, 269–72, p. 271.Google Scholar

10. CRTCCL, 1912, p. 429.Google Scholar

11. Création d'une Université chinoise à Lyon,” CRTCCL, 1921, pp. 629–30; “Institut franco-chinois,” CRTCCL, 1923, p. 495.Google Scholar

12. Chambre de commerce de Lyon, , Projet d'une Ecole de Commerce a Lyon: Rapport et Déliberation (Lyon, 1870); Conseil d'administration, Les cinquante premieres années de l'Ecole supérieure de commerce de Lyon, sous le patronage de la Chambre de commerce, reconnue par l'Etat (Lyon, 1923).Google Scholar

13. Aynard, Edouard, Discours, “Inauguration de l'Université de Lyon,” CRTCCL, 1896, pp. 316–25, 316–23, p. 317.Google Scholar

14. Création d'une école coloniale,” CRTCCL, 1890, pp. 331–37, p. 333.Google Scholar

15. Ibid., p. 337.Google Scholar

16. Privilege de l'Ecole coloniale de Paris,” CRTCCL, 1895, pp. 256–61, 258–59. In the same year Emile Boutmy, the director of the prestigious Ecole des Sciences politiques, also launched a savage attack on the Ecole Coloniale in which he made some of the same points as the Lyon Chamber. Boutmy, Emile, Le recrutement des administrateurs coloniaux (Paris, 1895).Google Scholar

17. Journal des Chambres de commerce françaises, September 10, 1895, pp. 281–82.Google Scholar

18. Recrutement des administrateurs colonaix—Question de l'Ecole coloniale,” Chambre de commerce de Marseille, , Compte rendu des travaux pendant l'Année 1895 (Marseille, 1896), pp. 110–15; “Question de l'Ecole coloniale,” commerce de de Lille, Chambre, Archives, XXX, 1895 (Lille, 1896), pp. 500–03; “Séance du 28 janvier 1896,” Chambre de commerce de Roubaix, , Archives, XII, 1896 (Roubaix, 1897), pp. 9–26, 9–12.Google Scholar

19. “Organisation de la section commerciale de l'Ecole coloniale,” CRTCCL, 1897, p. 299. Although the government denied any monopoly, it wanted the school's graduates to dominate the colonial bureaucracy. But the claims of seniority, political influence and the ambiguity of its stand in regard to the monopoly of posts, all worked against it, and as late as 1914 the school's graduates accounted for only one-fifth of the membership of the colonial service. Girardet, Raoul, L'Idée coloniale en France, 1871–1962 (Paris, 1972), p. 77.Google Scholar

20. CRTCCL, 1895, p. 259.Google Scholar

21. Pila, Ulysse, Vingt ans de progrès colonial: necessité d'un enseignement colonial, conference faite à la Société d'économie politique de Lyon (Lyon, 1900), p. 29.Google Scholar

22. Foncin, P., “Bordeaux et esprit colonial,” Bulletin de la Société de géographie commerciale de Bordeaux, 26e a., Nos. 7–8 (April 2 and 16, 1900), pp. 129–36, p. 135.Google Scholar

23. La Chambre de Commerce de Marseille et l'Exposition coloniale de 1906 (Marseille, 1908), pp. 225–29.Google Scholar

24. Rossigne, R., Ecole supérieure de commerce et d'industrie de Bordeaux, 1874–1934 (Bordeaux, 1937), p. 49.Google Scholar

25. Création à Lyon d'une chaire d'études coloniales,” CRTCCL, 1894, p. 173.Google Scholar

26. Zimmerman, Maurice, “Lyon colonial,” Lyon et la région lyonnaise en 1906, II, Economie sociale—Agriculture—Commerce—Industrie—Transports—Navigation—Aérostation (Lyon, 1906), pp. 230–83, p. 247.Google Scholar

27. Projet de création a l'Ecole de commerce d'une section d'enseignement coloniale,” CRTCCL, 1895, pp. 272–73.Google Scholar

28. Zimmerman, , Lyon et la région lyonnaise, p. 247.Google Scholar

29. Organisation du cours d'enseignement colonial,” CRTCCL, 1899, pp. 332–48, p. 332.Google Scholar

30. Ibid., p. 348.Google Scholar

31. Ibid., pp. 333, 340. The inclusion of English among the colonial courses reflected not only France's inferiority to Great Britain in the imperial sphere, but also the Anglophilia of a business community which had extensive dealings with the British in the Far East and found its most important foreign market in Great Britain.Google Scholar

32. Ibid., pp. 343, 345.Google Scholar

33. Cours d'enseignement colonial,” CRTCCL, 1900, pp. 377–80, 379–80.Google Scholar

34. Cours d'enseignement colonial,” CRTCCL, 1902, pp. 316–20, 318–19.Google Scholar

35. Cours d'enseignement colonial,” CRTCCL, 1901, pp. 461–65, p. 462.Google Scholar

36. CRTCCL, 1899, p. 349; “Chaire de langue chinoise à la Faculté des lettres,” CRTCCL, 1913, p. 384.Google Scholar

37. Enseignement colonial,” CRTCCL, 1904, pp. 162–69, 166–68.Google Scholar

38. CRTCCL, 1900, p. 380; “Collections de produits pour le musée colonial,” Ibid.Google Scholar

39. Enseignement colonial,” CRTCCL, 1903, pp. 237–43, p. 239.Google Scholar

40. Association des anciens élèves de l'enseignement colonial,” CRTCCL, 1907, p. 296.Google Scholar

41. CRTCCL, 1901, p. 461.Google Scholar

42. CRTCCL, 1904, p. 165.Google Scholar

43. Enseignement colonial,” CRTCCL, 1905, pp. 197203, p. 199.Google Scholar

44. CRTCCL, 1904, p. 165.Google Scholar

45. Mission d'exploration commerciale au Maroc,” CRTCCL, 1906, pp. 269–72; “Annexe—Mission économique au Maroc—Rapport de M. Alfred Charmetant, Lauréat de l'Ecole supérieure de commerce de Lyon, Elève des Cours d'Enseignement colonial,” Ibid., pp. 343–95.Google Scholar

46. Allocations diverses,” CRTCCL, 1913, pp. 385–86, p. 385.Google Scholar

47. Enseignement colonial,” CRTCCL, 1919, pp. 365–78, 365–66.Google Scholar

48. Ecole supérieure de commerce,” CRTCCL, 1914, pp. 367–69.Google Scholar

49. CRTCCL, 1919, p. 366.Google Scholar

50. Association des anciens élèves de l'enseignement colonial,” Ibid., pp. 378–79, p. 378.Google Scholar

51. Enseignement colonial,” CRTCCL, 1920, pp. 494513, 504, 502.Google Scholar

52. Développement possible de l'Enseignement colonial à Lyon,” CRTCCL, 1922, pp. 595–97. The Chamber made the mistake of including in the 1922 CRTCCL a list of ten French colonial schools which carried the notation that information about Paris' Ecole Coloniale remained confused. The directors of the Ecole Coloniale hastened to provide more exact information which the Chamber, contriving to give the impression that exact information still did not add up to precise goals, duly published in 1923. “Documentation sur l'enseignement colonial,” Ibid., pp. 597–98. p. 598; “Documentation sur l'enseignement colonial,” CRTCCL, 1923, pp. 428–29.Google Scholar

53. Enseignement colonial,” CRTCCL, 1923, pp. 405–20, p. 406.Google Scholar

54. Pradel, L., Discours, , “Cinquantenaire de l'Ecole supérieure de commerce de Lyon—Réception de M. Léon Bérard, ministre de l'instruction publique et des beaux-arts,” Ibid., pp. 540–58, 545–51, p. 549.Google Scholar

55. Ecole de préparation coloniale,” CRTCCL, 1924, pp. 583601.Google Scholar

56. Pradel, L., Discours, , “Inauguration du Musée colonial.—Réception de M. Daladier, ministre des colonies,” Ibid., pp. 601–13, 604–08, p. 607.Google Scholar

57. Daladier, Edouard, Discours, Ibid., pp. 608–12.Google Scholar

58. Souscriptions diverses,” CRTCCL, 1925, p. 387.Google Scholar

59. Ecole de préparation coloniale et Musée colonial,” Ibid., pp. 553–70, 558–59.Google Scholar

60. Ecole de préparation coloniale et Musée colonial,” CRTCCL, 1926, pp. 597611, 599–600.Google Scholar

61. Ecole de préparation coloniale et Musée colonial,” CRTCCL, 1927, pp. 637–50, p. 639.Google Scholar

62. Ibid., pp. 641–42.Google Scholar

63. Ecole de préparation coloniale et Musée colonial,” CRTCCL, 1928, pp. 577–90, p. 581.Google Scholar

64. Ecole de préparation coloniale et Musée colonial,” CRTCCL, 1929, pp. 549–72, p. 557.Google Scholar

65. Ibid.Google Scholar

66. Expose de la situation industrielle et commerciale de la circonscription de la Chambre de commerce de Lyon pendant l'année 1934,” CRTCCL, 1934, pp. 367422, p. 373. The 1936 CRTCCL is filled with material related to the Popular Front; see, for example, “Initiatives et demarches de la Chambre de commerce a propos des grèves, occupations d'usines et désordres sociaux,” CRTCCL, 1936, pp. 246–48.Google Scholar

67. Ecole de préparation coloniale et Musée colonial,” CRTCCL, 1930, pp. 499506, p. 501; “Ecole de préparation coloniale et Musée colonial,” CRTCCL, 1931, pp. 469–76, p. 471.Google Scholar

68. Ecole de préparation coloniale et Musée colonial,” CRTCCL, 1932, pp. 6366, p. 63.Google Scholar

69. Ibid.Google Scholar

70. Ecole de préparation coloniale et Musée colonial,” CRTCCL, 1933, pp. 98100, p. 98.Google Scholar

71. Ecole de préparation coloniale et Musée colonial,” CRTCCL, 1935, pp. 98100, p. 98.Google Scholar

72. Service ordinaire de la Chambre,” Ibid., pp. 122–23, p. 123.Google Scholar

73. Ecole de préparation coloniale et Musée colonial,” CRTCCL, 1936, pp. 425–27, p. 425.Google Scholar

74. Ecole de préparation coloniale et Musée colonial,” CRTCCL, 1937, pp. 369–71, p. 369.Google Scholar

75. Ecole de préparation coloniale et Musée colonial,” CRTCCL, 1938, pp. 279–81, p. 279.Google Scholar

76. Herriot, Edouard, Discours, CRTCCL, 1923, pp. 551–53, p. 552.Google Scholar

77. Out of many such examples, see, “La Colonisation en Indo-Chine—Réception de M. Beau, gouverneur général de l'Indo-Chine (Rapport de M. Ulysse Pila),” CRTCCL, 1905, pp. 204–53; “Reception de M. Alapetite, ministre plenipotentiaire, résident général de France à Tunis (20 octobre 1907),” CRTCCL, 1907, pp. 302–21; “Réception de M. le général Lyautey, resident général de France au Maroc,” CRTCCL, 1916, pp. 389–403; “Mission en Syrie. Réception du Géneral Gouraud,” CRTCCL, 1919, pp. 400–55; “Reception de M. Merlin, gouverneur général de l'Indochine; de M. Garbit, gouverneur général de Madagascar, et de M. Carde, gouverneur général de l'Afrique occidentale française,” CRTCCL, 1923, pp. 558–72; “Reception de M. Robin, gouverneur général de l'Indochine,” CRTCCL, 1934, pp. 30–4.Google Scholar

78. Expose de la situation industrielle et commerciale de la circonscription de la Chambre de commerce de Lyon pendant la année 1914,” CRTCCL, 1914, pp. 151, p. 10.Google Scholar