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・ Frenchman's Cove
・ Frenchman's Cove Provincial Park
・ Frenchman's Cove Resort
・ Frenchman's Creek
・ Frenchman's Creek (film)
・ Frenchman's Creek (novel)
・ Frenchman's Creek Beach and Country Club
・ Frenchman's Farm
・ French Third Republic
・ French tian
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・ French tickler (disambiguation)
・ French toast
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French Togoland
・ French Togoland autonomy referendum, 1956
・ French Togoland parliamentary election, 1958
・ French Togoland Representative Assembly election, 1946
・ French Togoland Representative Assembly election, 1951
・ French Togoland Territorial Assembly election, 1952
・ French Togoland Territorial Assembly election, 1955
・ French Top 100 singles of the 1990s
・ French Top 100 singles of the 2000s
・ French Tower
・ French Towns and Lands of Art and History
・ French Township
・ French Township, Adams County, Indiana
・ French Township, St. Louis County, Minnesota
・ French Trotter


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French Togoland : ウィキペディア英語版
French Togoland

French Togoland (French: ''Le Togo français'') was a French colonial mandate in West Africa, which later became the Togolese Republic.
== Mandate territory ==

On August 26, 1914, the German protectorate of Togoland was invaded by French and British forces and fell after five days of brief resistance. Togoland was divided into French and British administrative zones in 1916, and following the war, Togoland formally became a League of Nations mandate divided for administrative purposes between France and the United Kingdom.
After World War II, the mandate became a UN trust territory, still administered by French commissioners.
By statute in 1955, French Togoland became an administrative republic within the French union, although it retained its UN trusteeship status. A legislative assembly elected by universal adult suffrage had considerable power over internal affairs, with an elected executive body headed by a prime minister responsible to the legislature. These changes were embodied in a constitution approved in a 1956 referendum. On September 10, 1956, Nicolas Grunitzky became prime minister of the Administrative Republic of Togo. However, due to irregularities in the plebiscite, an unsupervised general election was held in 1958 and won by Sylvanus Olympio. On April 27, 1960, in a smooth transition, Togo severed its constitutional ties with France, shed its UN trusteeship status, and became fully independent under a provisional constitution with Olympio as president.

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