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  1. Abstract. Chapter five focuses on Madagascar. Here Gallieni, invested with both civil and military authority at the highest level, was able to pursue his nascent colonial method on a broad canvas in order to effect the occupation and consolidation of the greater part of the island between 1896 and 1899.

  2. 25 de mar. de 2010 · Rapport d'ensemble sur la pacification, l'organisation et la colonisation de Madagascar, october 1896 à mars 1899 ... Gallieni, Joseph-Simon, 1849-1916.

  3. 30 de jul. de 2014 · Finch’s essential objective is to address the second of these issues, and he does it cogently by bringing into the picture the often-overlooked figure of Marshal Gallieni (1849–1916), mostly remembered for his post-retirement feat of the Taxis de la Marne episode during the Great War, which regrettably overshadowed his influential views on strategies of colonial conquest.

  4. After serving in Martinique Gallieni was made governor of French Sudan, during which time he successfully quelled rebellion by Sudanese rebels. From 1892-96 he served in French Indochina before being dispatched to Madagascar, where he again suppressed revolt, this time of monarchist forces.

  5. www.historyofwar.org › articles › people_gallieniJoseph Gallieni, 1849-1916

    18 de sept. de 2007 · Joseph Gallieni, 1849-1916. Follow @DrJohnRickard. Tweet. Joseph Gallieni was a French general most famous for the incident of the taxis of the Marne, which saw him move troops from the garrison of Paris to the front line in a fleet of Paris taxis. Most of his early military experience came in France’s colonial empire.

  6. It then moves across the Indian Ocean to Madagascar. Here Gallieni, combining the roles of Commander-in-Chief and Governor-General, was able to play out his nascent colonial method on a grand scale. Meanwhile, his subordinates—with Lyautey at the forefront—were able to interpret his method in the execution of their missions.

  7. Just as it ended, so Joseph Simon Gallieni's military career began with war in France. Born in 1849 in Saint-Béat, Pyrenees, to an Italian immigrant father who served as Captain of the local garrison, the young Gallieni attended the Prytanée Militaire at La Flèche in the Loire, and subsequently passed the exam for entrance into the Ecole spéciale militaire in 1868.