FRENCH COLONIAL EXPANSION 127
expansion; but, after suffering several severe defeats at their
hands, Samory placed himself and his country under French
protection in 1886.
In the treaties of 1887 and 1889 this relationship was
confirmed; but his territory was limited to the east side
of the Niger and the Bafing (or Tankisse) Rivers. He did
not long remain satisfied with this situation, but invaded
Kenedugu, seizing and sacking its capital, Sikasso, and made
a league with the Sultan of Segu and with the Sefas to
drive out the French. The French forces resumed opera-
tions, and in a brilliant series of maneuvers, lasting from
1891 to 189+ and conducted by Colonels Archinard, Hum-
bert, and Combes (known among the natives as “Coumbo,
the All-conquering”), reduced Samory to desperate straits.
Owing to the recall of Colonel Archinard and the decision
of the French Government to stop operations in the Sudan
for a time, he was given, however, a breathing space for
three or four years.
Meanwhile in July, 1887, Captain Binger left Bamaku
on what appeared to be a madcap attempt to reach the
Ivory Coast. Passing in the rear of the British colony
of Sierra Leone, he visited Bissandugu and Sikasso in the
Samory country, pushed on south and east into the Gou-
rounsi and Mossi districts, where for a time he was thought
to have lost his life, made treaties with the chiefs of Kong
and Bonduku, and reached Assinie finally in the spring of
1889. A distance of four thousand kilometers had been
traversed and the French possessions of Senegal and the
Ivory Coast definitely united. Between 1890 and 1895,
Captains Quiquandon and Destanave completed the union
of the two districts, by establishing the French supremacy
from Tiola to the Bobos country, and by making treaties
with the chiefs of the Gourounsi and Mossi countries. In
December of the year 1890, M. Monteil crossed the whole