Po Saut
Po Saut | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
King of Champa King of Panduranga | |||||
King of Champa | |||||
Reign | 1659–1693 | ||||
Predecessor | Po Jatamah | ||||
Successor | Po Saktiraydapatih | ||||
Born | ? Champa | ||||
Died | 1693 Đàng Trong, Đại Việt | ||||
| |||||
Father | Po Saktiraydapaghoh | ||||
Mother | Po Mul, daughter of Po Rome |
Po Saut (?–1694), also spelled Po Saot or Po Sot, sometimes known as Wan Daim,[1] was the king of Panduranga Champa who ruled from 1660 to 1693. In Vietnamese records, he was mentioned as Bà Tranh (婆爭).[2] He was also the last king of independent Champa.[3]
According to the Cham chronicles, Po Saut was a son of king Po Saktiraydapaghoh, his mother Po Mul being a daughter of Po Rome.[4] He was of Churu and Rhade parentage via his mother. He was a Muslim; in 1685, he requested a copy of the Quran from Father Ferret, a French missionary serving in Champa.[3] A Cham manuscript provides the following cryptic characterization of his reign: "Subsequently a man comparable to a sledge is seen, taking the Banis [Muslims] across there, having a size similar to a bronze hanrang [?]. He constantly summoned the turtledoves [the people] to make them embrace the Muslim faith. Bodies and souls fall to the others. Then Po Saut was king."[5]
After 1653, Champa paid tribute to the realm of the Vietnamese Nguyễn clan, Đàng Trong, but was still fully autonomous. Champa came however into conflict with Vietnam after the death of the relatively inefficient Đàng Trong ruler Nguyễn Phúc Trăn (1691) and the accession of his adolescent son. Po Saut aimed to gain back the Phan Rang region which had been lost to the Vietnamese Nguyễn lord in 1653.[6] Hostilities began in 1692 but Champa was conquered by Vietnamese general Nguyễn Hữu Cảnh. Po Saut was captured in early 1693 and transferred to Phú Xuân (present-day Huế). In there, Nguyễn Phúc Chu gave him a royal pardon. He died in the next year.[7]
References
- ^ "Po Rome vị vua Champa dòng dõi Hồi giáo (Islam)". www.kauthara.org.
- ^ Tran Ky Phuong; Bruce M. Lockhart (2011). The Cham of Vietnam: History, Society and Art. NUS Press. p. 261. ISBN 978-9971-69-459-3.
- ^ a b Vietnam-Champa Relations and the Malay-Islam Regional Network in the 17th–19th Centuries
- ^ E. Aymonier (1890) "Legendes historiques des Chams", Excursions et reconnaisances 14, p. 177.
- ^ E. Aymonier (1890) "Legendes historiques du Chams", Excursions et reconnaisssances 14, p. 177.
- ^ K.W. Taylor (2013) A History of the Vietnamese. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 321.
- ^ 大南寔錄前編 • Đại Nam thực lục tiền biên ( q.07-09), page 7