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  1. History of the photo. Albert Sarraut (1872-1962), French politician and Prime Minister in 1933 and 1936. France, circa 1930. A certificate of authenticity will be sent to you by mail.

  2. Born in Saigon in French Indochina, Marion was the granddaughter of former Prime Minister Albert Sarraut. [2] She studied at the École nationale supérieure des arts et techniques du théâtre [ fr] for three years, [3] and subsequently participated in the creation of the magazine Cahiers du Cinéma. She spent a significant amount of time ...

  3. Albert Sarraut was a delegate of the Radical Party in the French Parliament from 1902–1924. As governor general in Indochina (1911–1914, 1916–1919), he promoted participation of the population in the administration and reformed, for example, the education system.

  4. Founded 12 Aug. 1919, the Musée Albert Sarraut of Phnom Penh (to become National Museum of Cambodia) initially gathered Khmer art items and exhibits coming from a) EFEO archaelogical discoveries on the Cambodian territory b) individual donations or sales from people who had found artefacts by chance c) HM King Sisowath's collection at the Royal Palace.

  5. Asia. Location Creators Needed. 1987 Location Debuts. Schools. Community content is available under CC-BY-SA unless otherwise noted. Fantasy. Sci-fi. Marvel. 1 appearance (s) of Lycée Albert Sarraut 1 image (s) of Lycée Albert Sarraut Lycée Albert Sarraut at Wikipedia.

  6. 3 Albert Sarraut débarque à Saigon en novembre 1911. La domination coloniale se présente alors sous la forme de l’Union Indochinoise composée de quatre pays de protectorat (le Tonkin, l’Annam, le Cambodge et le Laos), d’une colonie (la Cochinchine) et d’un territoire à bail (Guangzhouwan) dans le Guandong, au sud de la Chine.

  7. Albert Sarraut, French Colonial Development, and the Communist Threat, 1919–1930* Martin Thomas University of Exeter There are now few supporters of the idea that, in the twentieth century, France valued its colonies for economic reasons above all. Historians attempting to explain French attachment to empire generally place greater emphasis ...