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Early Nineteenth-Century Vietnamese Catholics and Others in the Pages of the Annales de la Propagation de la Foi

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 June 2004

Nola Cooke
Affiliation:
The Division of Pacific and Asian History, RSPAS, Australian National University. e-mail: nola.cooke@anu.edu.au

Abstract

Western secular historiography has conventionally viewed the history of Catholicism in Vietnam through a political optic, a perspective which has distorted the early nineteenth-century religious situation in both Vietnam and France. This article discusses how Vietnamese understood Catholicism at the popular level and what attracted people to the religion, as well as introducing an important European Catholic fund-raising society whose interventions into Vietnam long predated any serious French political designs on the country.

Type
Articles
Copyright
© 2004 The National University of Singapore

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Footnotes

This article is a revised version of a paper presented at the 3rd International Convention of Asia Scholars, Singapore, 19–22 Aug. 2003. I wish to thank the Australian Research Council for the funding that made it possible and Father Gérard Moussay and Brigitte Appavou of the archives of the Missions-Étrangères de Paris [MEP] for their assistance during my time there.