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French Guinea

French colony in West Africa (1891-1958); now the country of Guinea


Summary

French colony in West Africa (1891-1958); now the country of Guinea

FieldValue
native_namefr
conventional_long_nameFrench Guinea
common_nameFrench Guinea
subdivisionConstituent
nationFrench West Africa
life_span1891–1958
year_start1891
event_endIndependence
year_end1958
date_end2 October
p1Imamate of Futa Jallon
flag_p1Flag of the Imamate of Futa Djallon (1896-1912).svg
s1History of Guinea#Sékou Touré's rule (1958–1984)Guinea
flag_s1Flag of Guinea.svg
image_flagFlag of France.svg
flagFlag of France
flag_typeFlag
image_mapFrench west africa guinea.png
image_map_captionGreen: French Guinea
Lime: French West Africa
Dark gray: Other French possessions
Darkest gray: French Republic
anthem"La Marseillaise"
capitalConakry
religionRoman Catholic,Islam
leader1Noël Ballay
year_leader11891-1900
leader2Jean Ramadier
year_leader21956-1958
title_leaderGovernor
todayGuinea

Lime: French West Africa Dark gray: Other French possessions Darkest gray: French Republic

French Guinea () was a French colonial possession in West Africa. Its borders, while changed over time, were in 1958 those of the current independent nation of Guinea.

French Guinea was established by France in 1891, within the same borders as its previous colony known as Rivières du Sud (1882–1891). Prior to 1882, the coastal portions of French Guinea were part of the French colony of Senegal.

In 1891, Rivières du Sud was placed under the colonial lieutenant governor at Dakar, who had authority over the French coastal regions east to Porto-Novo (modern Benin). In 1894 Rivières du Sud, Côte d'Ivoire and Dahomey were separated into 'independent' colonies, with Rivières du Sud being renamed as the Colony of French Guinea. In 1895, French Guinea was made one of several dependent colonies and its Governor became one of several Lieutenant Governors who reported to a Governor-General in Dakar. In 1904, this federation of colonies was formalised as French West Africa. French Guinea, Senegal, Dahomey, Côte d'Ivoire and Upper Senegal and Niger, were each ruled by a lieutenant governor, under the Governor General in Dakar.

Colonial history

Main article: History of Guinea

Guinea was ruled by France until 1958. It became independent from France in 1958 following its voters' rejection of Charles de Gaulle's Constitution of 1958. At the time French Guinea was the only colony to reject the new constitution. French Guinea became the modern-day country of Guinea, keeping French as its official language.

References

  • Jean Suret-Canale. French Colonialism in Tropical Africa 1900–1945. Trans. Pica Press (1971)
  • Jean Suret-Canale. Guinea in the Colonial System, in Essays on African History. Translated, Hurst (1980)
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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