Directory
References

évolué

French-African colonial group
Also known as: assimilationist

Learn about this topic in these articles:

Assorted References

  • opposition to Algerian Reformist Ulama
    • In Association of Algerian Muslim Ulama

      Gallicized Algerian Muslims, known as évolués—Arabs by tradition and Frenchmen by education—insisted that Islam and France were not incompatible. They rejected the idea of an Algerian nation and stated that Algeria had for generations been identified in terms of its economic and cultural relations with France.

      Read More

role in

    • Algeria
      • Algeria
        In Algeria: Nationalist movements

        Often called assimilationists, they pursued gradualist, reformist tactics, shunned illegal actions, and were prepared to consider permanent union with France if the rights of Frenchmen could be extended to native Algerians. This group, originating from the period before World War I, was loosely organized under the name…

        Read More
    • Congo
    • Niger
      • Niger
        In Niger: Colonial administration

        …tiny new elite, the so-called évolués—i.e., those who had been trained in French schools. Many were descendants of former slaves, and most were Songhai-Zarma. Indeed, the people of the west had proved to be far more open to European influence than, for instance, the Hausa.

        Read More

    cleruchy, in ancient Greece, body of Athenian citizens in a dependent country holding grants of land awarded by Athens. The settlement in Salamis, which Athens captured from Megara in the 6th century bc, may have been the earliest cleruchy. Athens made wide use of the institution to cripple dependent states: plantations took the best territory, and the colonizers were garrisons for the future. With the establishment of the Delian League and the Second Athenian League in the 5th and 4th centuries bc, the cleruchy became a regular arm of Athenian imperialism.

    Athenian cleruchs, separate in prestige and privilege from the native peoples among whom they were placed, retained full Athenian citizenship—voting, paying taxes, and serving in the forces—and governed their internal affairs with archon and Ecclesia on the Athenian model. Cleruchies were placed strategically on main lines of communication (e.g., on Andros, Naxos, and Samos and at Sestos on the Hellespont) and provided permanent bases for the Athenian police fleets. At the same time, the financial advantage of being a cleruch encouraged thousands of Athenian citizens to resettle, relieving the pressure of population in Athens and increasing the financial and military strength of the state.