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・ Jean-Baptiste Bullet
・ Jean-Baptiste Bécœur
・ Jean-Baptiste Bédard
・ Jean-Baptiste Bédard (carpenter)
・ Jean-Baptiste Bédard (politician)
・ Jean-Baptiste Bénard de la Harpe
・ Jean-Baptiste Campenon
・ Jean-Baptiste Capronnier
・ Jean-Baptiste Cardonne
・ Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux
・ Jean-Baptiste Carrier
・ Jean-Baptiste Cavaignac
・ Jean-Baptiste Cazeau
・ Jean-Baptiste Cervoni
・ Jean-Baptiste Chabot
Jean-Baptiste Chaigneau
・ Jean-Baptiste Chanfreau
・ Jean-Baptiste Chappe d'Auteroche
・ Jean-Baptiste Charcot
・ Jean-Baptiste Chardon
・ Jean-Baptiste Charles Bouvet de Lozier
・ Jean-Baptiste Charles Matthieu
・ Jean-Baptiste Chaudié
・ Jean-Baptiste Chaussard
・ Jean-Baptiste Chautard
・ Jean-Baptiste Chavannes
・ Jean-Baptiste Chavannes (agronomist)
・ Jean-Baptiste Cinéas
・ Jean-Baptiste Claude Eugène Guillaume
・ Jean-Baptiste Claudot


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Jean-Baptiste Chaigneau : ウィキペディア英語版
Jean-Baptiste Chaigneau

Jean-Baptiste Chaigneau (1769–1832) was a French Navy sailor and an adventurer who played an important role in Vietnam in the 19th century. He served the Nguyễn Dynasty from 1794 to 1819, and 1821 to 1826,〔Tran, p. 206.〕 and took the Vietnamese name of Nguyễn Văn Thắng ().〔
==Role in Vietnam==

Jean-Baptiste Chaigneau was among the soldiers who were gathered by Father Pigneau de Béhaine to support the efforts of Nguyễn Phúc Ánh to conquer Vietnam. He came to Vietnam with Pigneau in 1794.〔(''The Mandarin Road to Old Hué'' by Alastair Lamb , p.180 )〕 Chaigneau supported the offensives of Nguyễn Ánh, such as the 1801 naval offensive in Thi Nai.〔McLeod, p.11〕
Once Nguyễn Ánh became emperor Gia Long, Chaigneau remained at the court to become a mandarin.〔Tran, p.16〕 Chaigneau received the title of ''truong co'', together with Philippe Vannier, de Forsans and Despiau, meaning second-class second-degree military mandarins, and later received the title of Grand Mandarin once Gia Long became emperor, with personal escorts of 50 soldiers.〔McLeod, p.20.〕 He also married into a Vietnamese Catholic mandarin family, as did Vannier or Laurent Barizy.〔Tran and Reid, p.207〕 He married Ho Thi Hue, of the Ho Catholic family.〔Tran and Reid, p.209〕
Chaigneau became a Counsellor to Emperor Gia Long under the Vietnamese name of Nguyen Van Thang.〔''Sovereignty Over the Paracel and Spratly Islands'' by Monique Chemillier-Gendreau Page 69 ()〕 From 1816, he was in relation with the French Foreign Minister Armand-Emmanuel du Plessis, Duc de Richelieu.
Chaigneau then traveled to France on the ''Henri'' in 1819,〔McLeod, p.140〕 and returned to Vietnam in 1821, as the French consul in Huế (he was the first French Consul in Cochinchina), with mission to obtain more trade privileges for France.〔(''A Vietnamese Royal Exile in Japan'' by My-Van Tran, Tran My-Van )〕 He offered to Emperor Minh Mạng a peace treaty with France, but this was rejected. Discouraged, he left Vietnam in 1824.〔Chapuis, p.4〕
In 1826, his nephew Eugène Chaigneau was sent to Vietnam to replace him as Consul, but Eugène was denied any audience with the Emperor.〔
Chaigneau had a son, Nguyen Van Duc, also known as Michel Duc Chaigneau, who wrote a memoir on his early life in Huế (''Souvenirs de Huế'') and played a role in the embassy of Phan Thanh Gian to France in 1863.〔 In France, he became a commissioner for the Ministry of Finance.〔Tran and Reid, p.210〕 Another of his sons, Jean Chaigneau, also a half-Vietnamese, later became secretary general of the city of Rennes.〔Tran and Reid, p.209〕

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