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History of Vietnam - Culture and background
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The
history of Vietnam is one of the longest to be found in any country, with
archaeological excavations revealing a past that goes back almost as far as
earth’s recorded time. To study this extensive history in detail would take you,
the reader literally years, thus I have cut it down, deleted some of the less
important periods and have concentrated on those I feel will be of more interest
to the general traveller considering visiting this fascinating and beautiful
country.The country has seen both prosperous times as well as years of slumber. Evolving
over literally thousands of years Vietnam and its progressive expansions have
always been under constant pressure from her powerful neighbour, China and
throughout the county’s history, China features very strongly.
Vietnam
has her own legends concerning the origins of the race but according to the
history books the Vietnamese first appeared as one of many scattered peoples
living in what is now South China and Northern Vietnam just before the beginning
of the Christian era.According to local tradition, the small Vietnamese kingdom of Au Lac, located in
the heart of the Red River valley, was founded by a line of legendary kings who
had ruled over the ancient kingdom of Van Lang for thousands of years.
Archaeological findings indicate that the early peoples of the Red River delta
area were among the first East Asians to practice agriculture and by the first
century BC had achieved an advanced level of civilization.
The Chinese Influence In 221 BC the Ch'in
dynasty in China conquered the neighbouring states and became the first to rule
over a united China. The Ch'in Empire, however, did not survive the death of its
founder, Shih Huang Ti and this was soon felt by Vietnam.The Chinese commander in the south built his own kingdom, Nam Viet (South Viet;
Chinese, Nan Y?eh); the young state of Au Lac was included. In 111 BC, Chinese
armies conquered Nam Viet and included it in the growing Han Empire. This
conquest had fateful consequences for the future course of Vietnamese history.Chinese rulers attempted to include Vietnam politically and culturally into the
Han Empire. Administrators were brought in to replace the local rulers and
political systems along Chinese lines were imposed. Confucianism became the
official ideology. The Chinese language was introduced as the official language
and Chinese script as the writing. Chinese art, architecture and music also
influenced Vietnamese history.
Vietnamese resistance to rule by the Chinese was
fierce but ineffectual and the Vietnamese during these times had a fondness for
murdering anyone in power, including their families that weren’t popular, a
practice that continued up until the 1600’s.The most famous early revolt took place in AD 39, when two widows of local
aristocrats, the Trung sisters, led an uprising against foreign rule. The revolt
was briefly successful and the older sister, Trung Trac, established herself as
ruler of an independent state. Chinese armies returned to the attack, however,
and in AD 43 Vietnam was re-conquered.
Independence
The
Trung sisters' revolt was the first in a series of uprisings that took place
during the thousand years of Chinese rule in Vietnam. In 939, Vietnamese forces
under Ngo Quyen took advantage of chaotic conditions in China and set up an
independent state. Ngo Quyen's death a few years later prompted a period of
civil strife, but in the early 11th century the first of the great Vietnamese
dynasties was founded.Under the astute
leadership of several dynamic rulers, the Ly
dynasty ruled Vietnam for more than 200 years,
from 1010 to 1225. The rise of this dynasty
encouraged a feeling of patriotism among the
Vietnamese despite the retention of many of the
political and social laws that had been
introduced during Chinese rule.
Confucianism continued to provide the foundation for the political institutions
of the state. The Chinese civil service examination system as the means of
selecting government officials was retained and eventually not just men of noble
background, but the general public could sit the test. The educational system
continued to follow the Chinese model and young Vietnamese were schooled in the
Confucian classics and grew up conversant with the ideas that had shaped Chinese
history.
Vietnamese society, however, filtered through
and native forms of expression continued to flourish. At the village level,
social laws and lifestyle reflected native Vietnamese traditions more than
Chinese.
The
Ly Dynasty Primarily an agricultural state, most of the land was divided
among the nobility. Some landholding farmers also existed, however, and powerful
monarchs frequently attempted to protect this class by limiting the power of
feudal lords and dividing up their large estates. The Vietnamese economy though
was not based solely on agriculture. Commerce and manufacturing thrived, local
crafts appeared in regional markets throughout the area and trade grew.
Change and Expansion The Ly dynasty and its
successor, the Tran from 1225-1400 helped Vietnam become a powerful
nation
in Southeast Asia. China though, still wanted to control the Red River delta and
when the Mongol dynasty came to power in the 13th century, the armies of Kublai
Khan attacked Vietnam in an effort to re-instate it into the Chinese Empire. The
Vietnamese resisted and after several battles sent them back across the border.While the Vietnamese continued to fight the forces from the north an area of
equal and growing concern lay to the south. For centuries, the Vietnamese state
had been restricted to the area around the Red River valley. Tension between
Vietnam and the kingdom of Champa, the seafaring state along the central coast,
began shortly after the restoration of Vietnamese independence.The Cham occupied the capital near Hanoi but were gradually driven further
south. Finally, in the 15th century, Vietnamese forces captured the Cham capital
south of present-day Da Nang. The following generations continued their drive
south wiping out the remnants of the Cham Kingdom closed in on the Mekong delta.Here it came up against, the Khmer Empire, the most powerful state in the
region. By the late 16th century, however, its strength had dwindled and it
offered little resistance to Vietnamese encroachment. By the end of the 17th
century, Vietnam had occupied the lower Mekong delta and began to advance to the
west, threatening to transform the disintegrating Khmer state into a
protectorate.
The Le Dynasty The Vietnamese advancement to
the south coincided with yet more trouble in the north. In 1407 Vietnam again
suffered under the hands of the Chinese. For twenty years, the Ming dynasty
tried to get Vietnam back, but in 1428, resistance forces under the
rebel
leader Le Loi won hands down and restored Vietnamese independence once more.Le Loi became the first emperor of the Le Dynasty that maintained power for more
than a hundred years. Then in the 16th century it began to decline again. Power
then went to two rival clans, the Trinh and the Nguyen. When the former became
dominant, the Nguyen were granted leadership in the south, subsequently dividing
Vietnam into two separate areas.By the late 18th century, the Le dynasty was near collapse. Nearly all the paddy
fields were controlled by powerful lords, this in turn made the peasants angry
which then led them to revolt and in 1789 Nguyen Hue, the ablest of the Tay Son
brothers, a powerful family at the time revolted, briefly restoring Vietnam to
united rule.Like many of his Vietnamese predecessors Nguyen Hue died shortly after ascending
the throne; a few years later Nguyen Anh, one of the heirs to the Nguyen house
in the south, defeated the Tay Son armies. He became Emperor Gia Long and
established a new dynasty in 1802.
The French
Pierre
Pigneau de Behaine, a French missionary, raised a mercenary force to help Nguyen
Anh seize the throne in the hope that the new emperor would provide France with
trading and missionary privileges. The Nguyen dynasty, however, was suspicious
of French influence.
Roman Catholic missionaries and their Vietnamese converts were then persecuted,
and a number executed during the 1830’s. Religious groups in France demanded
action from the government in Paris and eventually Emperor Napoleon III sent
naval expedition in 1858 which he hoped would force the Vietnamese and the court
to accept a French protectorate.The first French attack at Da Nang Harbour failed to achieve its objectives, but
a second further south was more successful and in 1862 the court at Hue agreed
to cede several provinces in the Mekong delta, later called Cochin China, to
France. In the 1880s the French returned to the offensive, launching an attack
on the north. After severe defeats, the Vietnamese accepted a French
protectorate over the remaining territory of Vietnam.French colonial rule met with little resistance. The national sense of identity,
however, had not been destroyed and anti-colonial sentiment soon emerged. Poor
economic conditions contributed to hostility towards these new rulers and
despite the French occupation having brought improvements in transportation,
communications, commerce and manufacturing, colonialism brought little
improvement in livelihood to the masses.In the countryside, peasants struggled to survive, paying exorbitant taxes as
well as working hard in the fields. Workers in factories, coal mines and on
rubber plantations laboured in abysmal conditions for low wages. By the 1920’s,
nationalist parties began to demand reform and independence. In 1930 the
revolutionary Ho Chi Minh formed an Indochinese Communist party.
World War
Until
World War II started in 1939, such groups laboured without success. In 1940,
however, Japan demanded and received the right to place Vietnam under military
occupation, restricting the local French administration to figurehead authority.The Communists seized the opportunity and organized the Vietminh Front that
prepared to launch an uprising at the war's end. The Vietminh (League for the
Independence of Vietnam) emphasized moderate reform and national independence
rather than specifically Communist aims.When the Japanese surrendered to the Allies in August 1945, Vietminh forces
arose throughout Vietnam and declared the establishment of an independent
republic in Hanoi. The French, however, were unwilling to concede independence
and in October drove the Vietminh and other nationalist groups out of the south.
For more than a year the French and the Vietminh sought a negotiated solution,
but the talks, held in France, failed to resolve differences and war broke out
in December 1946.
The French leave
The conflict lasted for nearly eight years. The
Vietminh retreated building up their forces while the French formed a rival
Vietnamese government under Emperor Bao Dai, the last ruler of the Nguyen
dynasty. Unfortunately Vietminh forces lacked the strength to defeat the French
and were forced to restricted their activities to guerrilla warfare.In 1953 and 1954 the French fortified a base at Dien Bien Phu. After months of
siege the Vietminh overran the fortress in a decisive battle. As a consequence,
the French government could no longer resist the pressure at home and in June
1954 agreed to end the war. They divided the country at the 17th parallel, with
the Vietminh in the North and the French and their Vietnamese supporters in the
South. To avoid permanent partition, a political protocol was drawn up, calling
for national elections to reunify the country two years after the signing of the
treaty.
The Socialist Republic of Vietnam Today,
the socialist republic of Vietnam is the unification of North and South
Vietnam.
Vietnam has established friendly diplomatic relations with many countries in the
world.In 1990 the European Union established official diplomatic relations with
Vietnam. In 1992 Vietnam signed a 1976 ASEAN agreement on regional amity and
cooperation, regarded as the first step towards ASEAN membership, which occurred
in 1996. Vietnam established diplomatic relations with South Korea in 1992, the
United States removed a trade embargo in 1994 and in 1995 Vietnam and the United
States agreed to exchange low-level diplomats. By 1997, the two countries had
established full diplomatic relations.Peace has settled for the first time in many years and suddenly the country is
reaping the rewards. Tourism is slow but beginning to boom and the economy
improves almost daily. It has become the country of new discoveries and
adventures with a potential that is only now showing it’s shy and beautiful face
to the rest of the world. |
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