Colony of Niger

The Colony of Niger (French: Colonie du Niger) was a French colonial possession covering much of the territory of the modern West African state of Niger, as well as portions of Mali, Burkina Faso and Chad. It existed in various forms from 1900 to 1960 but was titled the Colonie du Niger only from 1922 to 1960.

Colony of Niger
Colonie du Niger (French)
1922–1960
Anthem: La Marseillaise
French West Africa in 1936. Note the Colonie du Niger, lacking the earlier Tibesti area of Chad, includes the later eastern Upper Volta
StatusConstituent of French West Africa
CapitalZinder
(1922–1926)
Niamey
(1926–1960)
Common languagesFrench
Religion
Islam, Christianity
GovernmentColony
(1922–1946)
Overseas territory
(1946–1958)
Autonomous republic
(1958–1960)
Lieutenant Governor 
 1922–1929
Jules Brévié
 1958–1959
Louis Félix Rollet
High Commissioner 
 1959–1960
Jean Colombani
Prime Minister 
 1957–1958
Djibo Bakary
 1958–1960
Hamani Diori
History 
 Established
13 October 1922
 Status changed to overseas territory
13 October 1946
 Autonomy
19 December 1958
 Independence
3 August 1960
Area
19401,292,405 km2 (499,000 sq mi)
19481,218,994 km2 (470,656 sq mi)
Population
 1936
1,747,000
 1940
1,809,576
 1948
2,029,000
CurrencyFrench West African franc
(1922–1945)
CFA franc
(1945–1960)
ISO 3166 codeNE
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Upper Senegal and Niger
First Republic of Niger (1960–1974)
Today part ofNiger
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