i want to know this too! it sounds like you need a parentwho is a french citizen, and that grandparents don't do it...
No. The spouse would have to naturalize in France to become a french citizen. Children of this couple, who are born in the US, are dual French-US citizens at birth. The process for "recognizing" french citizenship is complicated, however.
Citizenship is 'la citoyenneté' in French.
French
she is French means she has French citizenship, she is a citizen of France.
la citoyenneté
It is a French word for citizenship.
Nationality, or citizenship as in dual citizenship [double nationalite, or double citoyennete].
Because Corsica was once again passed from Italian control back to the French. Napoleon was born therefore on French soil. There is blood citizenship and soil citizenship. Blood citizenship refers to having relatives who are citizens (not good enough just to be born in the country to be a citizen--that's soil citizenship) France has long recognized both types of citizenship.
If the marriage is legally recognised in Australia and she has Australian citizenship then yes you will get Australian citizenship.
The treaty giving back the French colony of Pondichéry, to India came into effect in Aug. 1962. Under the terms of the treaty, the people living there had a six-month period to make a choice between either the French or Indian nationality. The people who did not express their willingness to gain French citizenship were automatically given Indian citizenship at the end of the 6-month period.You can claim French citizenship ONLY IF your father, specifically requested French citizenship at the time meaning that he is/was a French citizen.
French passports are for French nationals. If your father holds French citizenship - which is possible from the fact he was born on a French territory, but not automatic - you can in turn apply for French citizenship. It is very unlikely that you could get French citizenship if your father isn't himself French. If he his, that will not be granted automatically either. To size up your chances, contact the French embassy or consulate in your home country.