ABSTRACT

Black Flags in Vietnam (1968) examines nineteenth-century conflict between China, Vietnam and France. For the first thousand years of its history, Vietnam had been an integral part of China, and during subsequent centuries of self-rule had acknowledged Chinese suzerainty. In the 1850s, France, seeking a base for the political and commercial penetration of southern China, occupied Saigon and the Mekong Delta, hoping to navigate the river. This plan failed, and they turned instead to the Red River, which flows from China through northern Vietnam to Hanoi and the sea. China, weakened by years of domestic strife, seemed in no position to protect her vassal. Then, by a strange quirk of fortune, a band of Chinese freebooters, the Black Flags, who had crossed into Vietnam in search of pillage, defeated two French expeditions. In 1884, Peking went to war.

chapter Chapter One|27 pages

The Birthpangs of Vietnam

chapter Chapter Two|13 pages

Martyrs and Mandarins

chapter Chapter Three|15 pages

‘With opium in one hand ...’

chapter Chapter Four|12 pages

The First French Offensive

chapter Chapter Five|16 pages

The French Explore

chapter Chapter Six|15 pages

The Black Flags

chapter Chapter Seven|13 pages

Jean Dupuis

chapter Chapter Eight|21 pages

Francis Garnier

chapter Chapter Eight|18 pages

China—Divided Counsels

chapter Chapter Ten|16 pages

Halliday Macartney and the Marquis Tseng

chapter Chapter Eleven|8 pages

China's Suzerainty Challenged

chapter Chapter Twelve|18 pages

Henri Riviére—Tragedy Repeated

chapter Chapter Thirteen|12 pages

Hue Capitulates

chapter Chapter Fourteen|14 pages

The Rage of Liu Yung-fu

chapter Chapter Fifteen|11 pages

Peace or War?

chapter Chapter Sixteen|11 pages

France : The Day of Glory

chapter Chapter Seventeen|9 pages

Formosa and Tongking

chapter Chapter Eighteen|14 pages

Catastrophe

chapter Chapter Nineteen|9 pages

The Aftermath