mihou Rang: Administrateur

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 | Sujet: SLAVES INTO SOLDIERS: SOCIAL ORIGINS OF THE Ven 16 Juin - 15:50 | |
| CHAPTER 12
SLAVES INTO SOLDIERS: SOCIAL ORIGINS OF THE TIRAILLEURS SENEGALAIS Myron Echenberg The origins of France's colonial army in West Africa are commonly dated from the creation of the Tirailleurs Senegalais by Governor Louis Faidherbe in 1857 (Boisboissel 1956: 48 ). In fact the roots of the African Tirailleurs are much older. They can be traced back to the first years of company rule in seventeenth century Senegambia, when British and French mili- tary recruiters took on local Africans as soldiers and sailors in order to augment European units which formed the core of the small company detachments (Boisboissel 1956: 47-48 ). During the course of the nineteenth century the Tirail- leurs underwent several transformations, as Table 12.1 indi- cates. At the beginning of the post-Napoleonic era in 1820, TABLE 12.1 GROWTH OF THE TIRAILLEURS, 1820-1914 Year Size Year Size Year Size 1820 23 1862 900 1900 8,400 1823 125 1867 1,000 1902 8,639 1827 200 1872 625 1904 9,000 1831 400 1882 1,200 1911 11,980 1839 150 1886 1,600 1912 12,920 1848 250 1888 2,000 1913 14,790 1852 350 1891 2,400 1914 17,356 1857 500 1893 5,087 1895 5,987 1920s 48,000
Curtin, Philip D.; Lovejoy, Paul E. / Africans in bondage : studies in slavery and the slave trade : essays in honor of Philip D.
Curtin on the occasion of the twenty-fifth anniversary of African Studies at the University of Wisconsin (1986)
Echenberg, Myron Chapter 12: Slaves into soldiers: social origins of the Tirailleurs Senegalais, pp. [unnumbered]-333 ff. _________________ Le Mensonge peut courir un an, la vérité le rattrape en un jour, dit le sage Haoussa Ma devise: se SURPASSER ,ne JAMAIS ABDIQUER,TOUJOURS RESTER HUMBLE |
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