French conquest of Vietnam

French conquest of Vietnam

Top: French and Spaniard armadas attacking Saigon, 18 February 1859.
Bottom: French marines storm Vietnamese defenders on the shore of Thuận An (Huế) on 20 August 1883.
Date1 September 1858 – 9 June 1885
(26 years, 9 months, 1 week and 1 day)
Location
Result

French victory

Belligerents
 Second French Empire (1858–71)
 French Third Republic (1871–85)
 Kingdom of Spain (1858–62)
 Đại Nam (1858–83)
 Qing Empire (1883–85)
Black Flag Army (1873–85)
Commanders and leaders
Napoleon III
Adolphe Thiers
Patrice de MacMahon
Jules Grévy
Charles Rigault de Genouilly
François Page
Léonard Charner
Louis Adolphe Bonard
Francis Garnier  
Jules Ferry
Henri Rivière  
Amédée Courbet
Sébastien Lespès
Louis Brière de l'Isle
Jacques Duchesne
Isabella II of Spain
Carlos Palanca Gutiérrez
Tự Đức #
Dục Đức 
Hiệp Hòa 
Kiến Phúc
Hàm Nghi
Nguyễn Tri Phương  (DOW)
Hoàng Diệu  
Hoàng Kế Viêm
Tôn Thất Thuyết (exiled)
Phan Thanh Giản  
Empress Dowager Cixi
Guangxu Emperor
Prince Gong
Zuo Zongtang
Zhang Peilun
Feng Zicai
Su Yuanchun
Liu Yongfu

The French conquest of Vietnam1 (1858–1885) was a series of military expeditions that pitted the Second French Empire, later the French Third Republic, against the Vietnamese empire of Đại Nam in the mid-late 19th century. Its end results were victories for France as they defeated the Vietnamese and their Chinese allies in 1885, incorporated modern-day Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia into the French colonial empire, and established the territory of French Indochina over Mainland Southeast Asia in 1887.

A joint Franco-Spanish expedition was initiated in 1858 by invading Tourane (modern day Da Nang) in September 1858 and Saigon five months later. This four-year campaign resulted in Emperor Tu Duc signing a treaty in June 1862, granting the French sovereignty over three provinces in the South. The French annexed the three southwestern provinces in 1867 to form Cochinchina. Having consolidated their power in Cochinchina, they conquered the rest of Vietnam through a series of campaigns in Tonkin between 1873 and 1886. French ambitions to subjugate Tonkin were opposed by the Qing dynasty, the region being part of the Chinese sphere of influence.

The French eventually drove most of the Chinese troops out of Vietnam, but remaining groups in some Vietnamese provinces continued to resist France's control over Tonkin. The French government sent Fournier to Tianjin to negotiate the Tianjin Accord, according to which China recognized the French authority over Annam and Tonkin, abandoning its claims to suzerainty over Vietnam. On June 6, 1884, the Treaty of Huế was signed, dividing Vietnam into three regions: Tonkin, Annam, and Cochinchina, each under three separate regimes. Cochinchina was a French colony, while Tonkin and Annam were protectorates, and the Nguyễn court was put under French supervision.