![]() ![]() Les doctorant.e.s sont aussi encouragé.e.s à l’auto-proposition de candidature pour ce prix. Veuillez communiquer avec les doctorant.e.s et les encourager à soumettre les documents de leur intervention (écrits et visuels). Les président.e.s et les discutant.e.s des sessions sont invité.e.s à proposer la candidature des doctorant.e.s pour ce prix. Graduate students should submit an electronic copy of their presented paper and any accompanying visual materials to the Vice-President of the French Colonial Historical Society at within one week of the conclusion of the annual conference. Graduate students are encouraged to self-nominate for this prize. Please contact graduate students and encourage them to submit their presentation materials. Panel Chairs and Discussants are urged to nominate graduate students for this prize. À partir de 2019, le prix s’est modifié pour reconnaître la meilluere intervention d’un.e doctorant.e lors de notre congrès annuel. De 2000 à 2018, le prix s’est décerné au meilleur article publié dans French Colonial History par un.e doctorant.e ou un.e chercheur/se en début de carrière. ![]() Le prix Eccles s’est créé par les collègues de Bill Eccles au sein de la SHCF avec l’intention de poursuivre son travail en soutenant ceux qui sont en début de leur carrière dans notre domain. Ce prix honore la mémoire de William John Eccles (1917-1998), un éminent historien du Canada Français et un partisan exceptionnel des doctorant.e.s. ![]() Eccles s’est décerné à un.e doctorant.e jugé.e d’avoir présenté la meilleure intervention au congrès annuel de la Société de l’Histoire Coloniale Française. In 2019, the Prize was repurposed for the best graduate student paper presented at our annual meeting.Ĭhaque année, le prix W. From 2000 to 2018, the Prize was awarded to the best article published in French Colonial History by a graduate student or recent post-graduate scholar. The Prize was created by Bill Eccles’s FCHS colleagues to continue his work by encouraging those at the beginning of their careers in our field. The Prize honors the memory of William John Eccles (1917-1998), a distinguished historian of French Canada and an outstanding supporter of graduate students. Eccles Prize is awarded annually to the graduate student judged to have presented the best paper at the Society’s Annual Meeting. However, his actions helped him to preserve some freedom.The W. Hàm Nghi endured the French government’s domination policy of surveillance and suspicion throughout his life. But in spite of his actions, the French Third Republic government managed to use him to their advantage, for example publishing a letter written at the beginning of World War I in which Hàm Nghi had offered France his help. Through them Hàm Nghi was able to communicate with Indochina. Hàm Nghi also set up a communications network made up of close relations, both French and Vietnamese alike, in Algiers. He organised a political network around himself which helped him to negotiate his exile conditions with the French government. However, in spite of the surveillance of the French government, Hàm Nghi managed to retain a certain freedom of action. On the other hand, the French government in Algeria wanted to protect the Prince of Annam who was perceived as harmless. The French government in Indochina and in mainland France were very suspicious of Hàm Nghi, whom they considered to be a dangerous enemy of France. Nevertheless, not everyone in the French government agreed with this form of domination and the exile conditions of Hàm Nghi were regularly negotiated, as there were two conflicting views of the prisoner. His letters to Algeria and mainland France were checked, while he could neither send nor receive any to Indochina. Hàm Nghi was constantly under surveillance and escorted during his travels. The government sent Hàm Nghi to Algiers in fairly comfortable exile conditions but it organised a strong surveillance system around him to prevent him from communicating with Indochina. As the deposed emperor could have been asked to rule Annam again, it was necessary to treat him well in the hope of making him pro-French. more The vietnamese emperor Hàm Nghi (1871-1944), was sent into exile in Algiers from 1889 to 1944 by the French government, in order to end the resistance against the French colonisation in Indochina.Īs soon as Hàm Nghi arrived in Algiers, the French government set up a policy of domination, intending to prevent any attempt at revolt from Hàm Nghi. The vietnamese emperor Hàm Nghi (1871-1944), was sent into exile in Algiers from 1889 to 1944 by.
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