Cuando tropas Hispano-Filipinas ganaron Indochina para los franceses
Semana de Manila was also linked to Spanish Franocist Foreign Propaganda, the Spanish
Speaking community of Manila, and the Catholic Church, especially the Spanish Friars, which
had played an important role in Filipino history. On September 7, 1950, J.E Casariego published
a historical article about the Cochinchina campaign (1858-1862), a joint naval expedition force
on behalf of the French Empire and the Kingdom of Spain against the Nguyễn period
Vietnamese state that inaugurated the French conquest of Vietnam.
Beyond the factual information in the article (most of the Spanish troops were in fact Filipinos),
Casariego showed both resentment of France (to whom, he argues, Spain gifted an empire) and
a staunch defense of colonial and “civilizing intervention”. This suggests that for many of the
hispano-centric Filipinos, who identified with the Catholic Religion and were somehow nostalgic
for the Spanish Empire, the advance of communism during the Cold War (and specifically the
conflict in Vietnam) was seen as a menace to civilization akin to the paganism that in 1857
burned Spanish Missionaries in Tonkin, and, therefore a movement backward in the universal
history that Spanish (and in general European) colonialism was seen to have introduced into the
Philippines and Asia.
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Fecha
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1950
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Fuente
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“¡Cuando tropas Hispano-Filipinas ganaron Indochina para los franceses”, Semana, Vol. VI, N.º
153, August 19, 1940, pp.28-29.
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Relación
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Torres-Pou, Joan. "Las crónicas de la Guerra de Cochinchina". In Asia en la
España del siglo XIX, (Leiden, The Netherlands: Brill, 2013) doi:
https://doi.org/10.1163/9789401209519_005.
Rodríguez, Mario Esteban. “La Influencia Del Colonialismo Occidental En Las
Relaciones Internacionales Del Sudeste de Asia Tras La Segunda Guerra
Mundial: La Impronta Francesa En Indochina.” Estudios de Asia y Africa 39,
no. 3 (125) (2004): 573–96. http://www.jstor.org/stable/40313561 .