Penang: Britain’s First Settlement in Malaya
George Woodcock gives an account of an Imperial enterprise in south-east Asia.
George Woodcock gives an account of an Imperial enterprise in south-east Asia.
For twenty-five years, King Mindon preserved a peaceful and progressive atmosphere in nineteenth-century Burma.
Though UK governments rejected US requests to send troops to Vietnam, Britain did not stay out of the war, says Marc Tiley.
The connexions of the French with Vietnam began in the eighteenth century; D.R. Watson describes how their legacy was passed to the United States in 1954.
A.J. Stockwell examines the life and work of the British in Malaya before independence was declared, in 1957.
Marilyn V. Longmuir looks at the historical background to the Burmese obsession with pristine bank notes.
Patrick Turnbull writes that the Battle of Dien Bien Phu, which opened on March 3rd, 1954, and continued until early May, marked the end not only of French, but of European hegemony in Asia.
The last Vietnamese emperor was born on October 22nd, 1913.
Nearly four centuries ago, long before the French and the Americans, writes C.R. Boxer, the Spaniards intervened in Cambodia.
During the second half of the seventeenth century, writes Robert Bruce, France hoped to dominate Siam and convert its sovereign to the Christian faith.