France

From E20

La troisième République française
Third French Republic
File:Flag of France.svg File:France coa.png
Flag and Coat of Arms of France
Motto: "Libertie, Egalitarie, Fraternitie"
Anthem: "La Marseillesaise"
Capital Paris
Political system Unitary Republic
Spoken languages
 - Official
 - Unofficial


French
Catalan, Provencal, Basque, Corse, German (in Alsace-Lorraine)
Government
Parliamentary Republic
- Head of State President Georges Clemenceau
- Head of Government Prime Minister Aristide Briand
Independence 486 A.D. (Unified by Clovis)
Area
 - Total
 - % water

547030km²
Negligible
Population
 - Total

42,800,000 (1919 est.)
Currency
Franc


Contents

[edit] History of France

[edit] Anciens Regime

[edit] Revolutionary France

The First Republic

Napoleon and the Empire

The Bourbon Restoration

[edit] The Second Republic, Napoleon III, and the Second Empire

The Franco-Prussian War

[edit] The Third Republic and Recent History

[edit] Politics of France

[edit] Political Parties

{see French Political Parties article)

[edit] Women's Suffrage

[edit] Demographics of France

[edit] Religion

80goes up my ass ,,,,,,,% of France's population was reported as belonging to the Roman Catholic Church as of the last census. The remainder consists of Protestants, Jews, and a few Muslims from French North African holdings. Although the government of the Third Republic has officially separated Church and State, Catholicism is still an important factor in many people's lives, and the Catholic Church has a good deal of support among the Right.

[edit] Language

French is the official language of France. Other regional languages include Basque, Catalan, Corse, Italian (in Savoy and Nice), and German (in Alsace-Lorraine), Provencal, Breton, and Flemish.

[edit] France Outre-mer

[edit] Overseas Departments

There are currently three Overseas Departments, all located in North Africa: Algiers, Oran, and Constantine. Each department is named for the principal city located within the department. Legally, these departments are a part of France, and as such send representatives to the Senate and National Assemby. Approximately one-third of the population is French, with the remaining two-thirds either Berber or Arab. Technically any resident of the Overseas Departments may apply for French citizenship (the requirement to convert to Catholicism was revoked as part of the separation of Church and State), though the vast majority of Muslims in Algeria choose not to apply, as that is seen as surrender to the conquering French government.

Social services are of comparable quality to Metropolitan France, and economic and land reform has stopped many of the more prejudiced acts of the local French population and put more power in the hands of the natives.

The Armée d'Afrique serves as the military force for the Overseas Departments, in conjunction with the Légion Étrangére. Unlike the Metropolitan Army, the Armée d'Afrique is an all-volunteer force, much like the Legion and the colonial armies.

In 1914-1915 there was a short-lived uprising by the Berbers in Algeria, coinciding with similar insurrections in Morocco and Libya. All were crushed by the French and Italian militaries.

[edit] Colonial Holdings

The Second French Colonial Empire, or more commonly the French Empire, controls the second-largest empire in the world, though it is much reduced in size from its height in 1906.

The Empire is concentrated in Africa, in extensive holdings in North Africa (Algeria and the protectorates of Morocco and Tunisia) and the western third of the continent. West Africa is centered around the colony of Senegal and its capital Dakar, the oldest French settlement in the area.

Colonial Territories of France:
Territories du Sud (those parts of Algeria not in the départements outremers)
Senegal
Upper Volta
Côte d’Ivoire
French Sudan
Niger
Mauritania
Guinea Française
Dahomey
Guyanne Française
Madagascar (codominium with Italy)
Pondicherry
Karikal
Yananon
Mahe
Chandernagore
French Southern and Antarctic Lands

[edit] Protectorates

French protectorates are those nominally independent states which France grants military protection in exchange for economic concessions. They range from the independent-in-all-but-name Republic of Hainan, to the de facto colonies of Syria and Tunisia.

French Protectorates
Republic of Hainan
Republic of Syria
Palestine
Lebanon
Sultanate of Morocco
Sultanate of Tunisia

[edit] Economy of France

[edit] Military of France

The French maintain one of the best militaries in the world, which, although it is a conscript force, relies on élan (fighting spirit) and finesse just as much as it does blunt force. As of the end of the Great War, the French Army was commonly held to be arguably the best in the world, with only the Imperial German Army able to offer a serious counter.

The French Navy is under limitations placed on it by the Washington Naval Treaty, and operates 10 battleships, 15 cruisers, 40 submarines, and 2 fleet carriers. The Infanterie Marine (two brigades) is officially a part of the Navy.

The Third Republic maintains four armies: the Metropolitan Army, the African Army, the Colonial Army, and the Foreign Legion. The active strength of these force sums to seventeen corps-sized units, in addition to various and sundry divisions and brigades. As per constitutional law, the Metropolitan Army can only be stationed in France during peacetime, and the Legion and colonial forces cannot be stationed in Europe except in wartime.

(more to come)

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