Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Vichy France
Episode Date: September 16, 2024After the Nazi invasion of France in 1940, the French were forced to sign a lopsided armistice that gave control over most of the country to Germany. However, about 40% of Frace was not occupied by ...the Germans. It was controlled by a French government that came to power after the invasion and collaborated with and sided with Germany. The government ruled much of France for four years until the Allied invasion of France, and after liberation, the collaborators paid the price. Learn more about Vichy France and the governing of France during the Second World War on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Sign up at butcherbox.com/daily and use code daily to get chicken breast, salmon or ground beef FREE in every order for a year plus $20 off your first order! Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Ben Long & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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After the Nazi invasion of France in 1940, the French were forced to sign a lopsided armistice
agreement that gave control over much of the country to Germany.
However, about 40% of France was not occupied by the Germans.
It was controlled by a French government that came to power after the invasion and collaborated
with Germany.
The government ruled much of France for four years until the Allied invasion, and after liberation,
the collaborators paid the price.
Learn more about Vichy France and the governing of France
during the Second World War on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
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Before the events of this episode, the regime in France was known as the Third Republic.
The Third Republic was established in the wake of the 1870 Franco-Prussian War.
Emperor Napoleon III was removed from power and was replaced by a parliamentary system with a weak presidency.
Despite being the longest lasting regime since the start of the French Revolution,
the period of the Third Republic was noted for its frequent change in governments.
The Third Republic was a highly unstable institution, despite having existed.
through the First World War, and a host of social and technical changes that took place in the early
20th century, including the rise of socialist and nationalist movements. From 1935 to 1940, France had been
led by a series of left-wing prime ministers from various socialist parties. In March of 1940,
the Parliament selected a more centrist leader, Paul Rayneau, who was a member of the Democratic-Republican
alliance. Rayneau had been against the appeasement of Nazi Germany and was militantly anti-Nazi.
He was the prime minister in power when Germany invaded France in May of 1940.
As I recounted in my episode on the Maginot line, the German invasion of France shocked everyone,
including both the French and the Germans.
The entire operation was over in just six weeks, which was far faster than even the Germans anticipated.
France had one of the largest armies in Europe, and Germany assumed that it would be one of the most difficult fights that they would have in Europe.
However, France put too much emphasis on its static defense line, which the Germans just went around.
The end result was a route of the French army, as well as of the British Expeditionary Force,
which was on continental Europe.
Once Paris fell on June 10th, the government relocated, and there was a movement to sign an
armistice with the Germans to try to save something from the disaster.
Reynot refused to sign an armistice with the Germans, which most ministers wanted,
so he resigned as Prime Minister on June 16th.
The government was then put into the hands of deputy prime minister,
Philippe Patin, who supported an armist.
And here I should mention who Philippe Patan was.
He wasn't just another French politician.
Patton was one of the heroes of the First World War.
He was the army chief of staff during the war
and was awarded the title of Marshal of France,
the highest military honor that can be bestowed upon French generals.
He was one of only three men to have been made a Marshal of France during the war.
So Patin, at least at this point in the war, was considered a real French hero.
And I should also note that he was 84 years old when he became prime minister.
Hitler demanded that the armistice be signed at the same spot in the exact same rail car as the armistice that ended the First World War.
In fact, Hitler sat in the same chair as Marshall Ferdinand Folk had done in 1918 and left early the same way folk did as well.
The armistice was extremely lopsided in favor of Germany.
There was no negotiation.
The French were told to take it or leave it.
The terms of the agreement included a ceasefire and the establishment of a demarcation line through France.
The Germans would occupy the north and west of France along the Atlantic, which consisted of about 60% of French territory.
The French government would control the remaining 40%, plus France's overseas territories.
on paper France would still retain its status as a sovereign country, but the reality was quite different.
The French army would be limited to 100,000 men.
All current French prisoners of war from the Battle of France would remain in captivity until Britain had been removed from the conflict, which never ended up happening.
And the French fleet was to be disarmed and confined to its ports under German and Italian control.
Both the French and Germans thought that Britain would come
to terms quickly. Instead, all the French prisoners remained as prisoners of war until
1945. And at top of all that, the entire German occupation would be paid for by the French.
The reason why Hitler allowed an independent France to exist is because they didn't want to
control France completely. If they occupied all of France, it would tie up an enormous number of
men, and it would give the French populace more reason to rebel and fight back.
The new French government under Philippe Patan moved its administrative seat to the city of Vichy
in what became known as the Zone Libra, or Free Zone of France, as opposed to the zone occupy
that the Germans occupied.
And I should note, there was a small part of southeastern France that was occupied by Italy.
The new government in Vichy began to change things almost immediately.
On July 10th, the parliament officially dissolved the Third Republic, and on July 11th,
Patan assumed the new position of Chief of State, which was formerly the equivalent position of president.
Patan had basically assumed dictatorial control over France, at least the parts that the Germans didn't directly occupy.
The regime's motto was work, family, homeland, emphasizing traditional values as a counterbalance to the perceived disorder of the Republican period.
Vichy France was characterized by an ideology that included elements of nationalism, authoritarianism, and in some of the
cases, alignment with Nazi racial policies. The government restructured itself to consolidate
power around Patan, who wielded significant personal authority. The Vichy government's policies
were very collaborationist, although they resisted openly joining Italy and Germany as part of the Axis
Alliance. Technically, France was neutral for the rest of the war, which meant that French troops
wouldn't be fighting outside of France on behalf of Germany. When the government was formed, most people
in France were initially supportive, if only because it halted the German advance. However,
that honeymoon with the French public didn't last very long. Vichy officials cooperated with
German authorities and the deportation of Jews and other persecuted groups to concentration camps,
implemented anti-Semitic laws, and recruited labor for German factories. The regime abolished
many Republican institutions, replacing elected positions with appointments made by Patan. The regime also
sought to reshape French culture and society through propaganda and controlled media,
promoting its values and justifying its collaboration with Germany.
Patin, the former hero of France, had become a dictator and a collaborator at the highest level
of government. While the Vichy regime was officially in charge of the government, it faced
internal opposition from the French resistance, which comprised various groups across the political
spectrum that fought against both the German occupation and Vichy's authority. The resistance conducted
espionage, sabotage, and guerrilla warfare, and also worked with the Allied forces to prepare for the liberation
of France. In addition to the occupied and free zones in France, there was a third France. Free France.
Free France was the government in exile that was led by General Charles de Gaul. The free French government
was headquartered in London. Initially, most French colonies, side of the war.
sided with the Vichy government. Cameroon was the only colony in Africa that initially
sided with Free France, along with various territories in the Pacific and South Asia. A referendum was held
in French Polynesia, which was 5,564 to 18 against the Vichy government. A fundamental moment
in the Vichy government took place in April 1942 when Pierre Laval was appointed prime minister. He had
previously been removed from government when Patan came to power. In a radio address to the
nation, he said the quiet part out loud when he said he hoped for a German victory to stop the
spread of Bolshevism. The facade of the Vichy government being independent melted away, as the French
public saw that they were just a puppet of Germany. The division between the occupied and free zones in
France ended in November 1942 when the Allies conducted Operation Torch, the invasion of North Africa.
By this time, two years after the German invasion of France, most of the overseas French soldiers became
disillusioned with the Vichy government and shifted their support to the free French government.
After limited resistance to the Allied landing, French troops eventually arrested the Vichy French
leaders and threw their support to the Allies. One of the reasons Germany allowed a non-occupied
zone in France is because they didn't want North Africa to serve as a base to continue the fight
against Germany. Now that North Africa was under Allied control and all overseas French
territories were under the control of the free French government in exile, the reason
for the free zone no longer existed. A November 8th, Hiller ordered Case Anton, the operation to occupy
the free zone in the island of Corsica. Italy also dramatically expanded its zone of occupation
in France. In June 1943, De Gaulle and other free French leaders established the French Committee
of National Liberation. Based in Algeria, this was recognized as the legitimate French government
by the Allies, and they represented France to the alliance.
The end of the Vichy government came with the Allied invasion of Europe on D-Day, June 6, 1944.
As the Allies moved across France, the Vichy government continued to lose power until everything collapsed on August 25th with the liberation of Paris.
A small group of Vichy officials fled to Germany, and with the approval of Hitler, set up a government in exile at Castle Zieg Marengen, located in the German state of Baden-Vertenburg.
Known as the Zieg-Marringen enclave, it became a haven for Vigernern.
officials and French collaborators. From September
1944 until the end of the war, they basically played pretend government. There, they did
things like issue posted stamps and met with officials from other access powers, but
fundamentally they ruled no territory and no people. In April 1945, as the Third
Reich collapsed, the enclave was disbanded. Its members were captured by French forces or
fled further into Germany. In the aftermath of the war, there was widespread public acts of
revenge against collaborators, as well as legal consequences. Approximately 120,000 people were
investigated for their collaboration with the Nazi regime and the Vichy government. Of those investigated,
around 50,000 cases went to trial. The outcomes ranged widely, from acquittals to sentences that
included imprisonment, and in some cases, the death penalty. Pierre Laval, the prime minister
of the Vichy government, who openly supported a German victory in the war, was found guilty of
treason and was executed on October 15, 1945.
Philippe Patan, who retained the position of chief of the French state throughout the entirety
of the war, was also put on trial and found guilty of treason and the special crime of
indignatee national indignity, which was a crime created to close a legal loophole as defendants
could say that they didn't commit treason as they were technically working for the French state.
Patan was sentenced to death and was stripped of all his property and honors.
De Gaul, who was the head of the provisional government of the French Republic,
commuted Patan's sentence to life in prison because of his advanced age.
He was 89 at the time of sentencing.
Soon after his prison sentence began, he started showing signs of dementia.
By 1949, he was barely lucid and required full-time care.
He died in 195 at the age of 95.
In the years since, France has struggled with the legacy of Philippe Petan, one of France's
greatest heroes of the First World War and one of the greatest villains of the second.
Vichy France was unlike any other government during the Second World War.
Most conquered countries were either directly occupied or had a local government that was
appointed by the conquerors.
Vichy France was different.
It had the veneer of being independent, and its leaders were in fact selected, at least initially,
by an elected French parliament.
However, in the end, it was nothing more than a puppet government for the Germans.
And many of those in the Vichy government ended up paying for it with their lives.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Benji Long and Cameron Kiever.
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