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Phan Xích Long

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Template:Vietnamese name Template:Infobox revolution biography Phan Xích Long, also known as Hồng Long, born Phan Phát Sanh (1893–1916), was a self-styled 20th century Vietnamese mystic and geomancer who declared himself the Emperor of Vietnam. He attempted to exploit religion as a cover for his own political ambitions, having started his own ostensibly religious organisation. Claiming to be a descendant of Emperor Ham Nghi, Long staged a ceremony to coronate himself, before trying to seize power in 1913 by launching an armed uprising against the colonial rule of French Indochina. His supporters launched an attack on Saigon in March 1913, drinking potions that purportedly made them invisible and planting bombs at several locations. The insurrection against the French colonial administration failed when none of the bombs detonated and the supposedly invisible supporters were apprehended. The French authorities caught and imprisoned Long and his supporters. In 1916, southern Vietnam was hit by uprisings against French rule, with many of Long's supporters attempting to break him out of jail. The French easily repelled the attack on the jail, decimating Long's movement. Following attempted breakout, Long and his key supporters were put to death. Many of the remnants of his support base went on to join what later became the Cao Dai, a major religious sect in Vietnam.

Early career

Long was born in 1893 southern Vietnam as Phan Phát Sanh. His place of birth is disputed; the historian Smith says that he was from Cholon, the Chinese business district of Saigon,[1] while Oscar Chapuis records Tan An as his place of birth.[2] Sanh's father was a police officer.[1][2][3] As a youth, Sanh travelled from Vietnam to Siam, earning his living as a fortune-teller.[2][3]

In mid-1911, he formed a secret society on the unverified pretense that he was a descendant of Ham Nghi,[3] the boy emperor of the 1880s. Led by Ton That Thuyet and Phan Dinh Phung—two high-ranking mandarinsHam Nghi's Can Vuong movement battled against French colonisation in the decade leading up to 1895. Their objective was to expel the French authorities and establish Ham Nghi as the emperor of an independent Vietnam. This failed, and the French exiled Ham Nghi to Algeria, replacing him with his brother Dong Khanh.[3] From then on, the French retained the monarchy of the Nguyen Dynasty, exiling any emperors who rose against colonial rule and replacing them with more cooperative relatives.[4]

At the time of Sanh's activities in the 1910s, there were two members of the Nguyen Dynasty who commanded respect among Vietnamese monarchists. The first was the boy emperor Duy Tan, who was himself deported in 1916 after staging an uprising.[5] Duy Tan's grandfather, Emperor Duc Duc, was the adopted son of the childless Emperor Tu Duc, the last independent emperor of Vietnam.[4] The second figure who was seen by Vietnamese as a possible leader of an independent monarchy was Prince Cuong De. Cuong De was a direct descendant of Emperor Gia Long, who had established the Nguyen Dynasty and unified Vietnam in its modern state. Cuong De was a prominent anti-colonial activist who lived in exile in Japan.[3]

Sanh's two main assistants were Nguyen Huu Tri and Nguyen Van Hiep, whom he met at Tan Chau in Chau Doc Province (now in An Giang Province). The trio agreed to plot an uprising against the French under the cover of a religious sect.[1] The genesis of their cooperation is unclear, but it may have started before mid-1911.[1] Tri and Hiep were said to have been in awe when Sanh produced a golden plaque that read "heir to the throne".[2] The men agreed that the geographical foci of their movement would be in Cholon and Tan An in Vietnam and Kampot in Cambodia.[1] The trio decided to model their actions on an uprising that had occurred in Kampot in 1909. On that occasion, a group of Cambodians of Chinese descent had marched into the town wearing white robes, claiming to be followers of a Battambang-based Cambodian prince who would overthrow French rule and lead them to independence.[1] After the formation of the sect, Sanh temporarily moved abroad, spending time in Siam and Cambodia.[2] During this time, Sanh learned sorcery and magic, supplementing his mystical training with a military education. He learned pyrotechnics for the purpose of making fireworks and bombs.[2]

Coronation

Sanh returned to southern Vietnam, and began dressing as a Buddhist monk. He travelled through the six provinces of the Mekong River Delta region.[3] His associates Hiep and Tri found an elderly man from Cholon in Saigon, and presented the senior citizen to the populace as a "living Buddha". The old man took up residence with Sanh, and peasants and tradespeople soon began flocking to their makeshift temple, located in a house in Cholon's Thuan Kieu Street.[6][7] As their temple was located in a prominent commercial area, the group began to collect more funds. The donors made offerings of gold and silver, with some individual donations being worth as much as 1,500 piastres.[3] When the "living Buddha" unexpectedly died in February 1912, he was interred in the family shrine of a notable follower. Sanh's strategists declared that before the old man had died, he named Sanh as the rightful Emperor of Vietnam.[3] In the meantime, the old man's remains became the object of veneration, providing further cover for political plotting and fundraising under the pretext of staging funeral rites.[7] After the completion of the funeral rites, Sanh and his followers staged an impromptu coronation ceremony at Battambang in October 1912.[6] Sanh took on the name Phan Xích Long and was also known as Hồng Long, both of which mean "red dragon".[3]

Vast crowds of locals began flocking to pay homage to Long, vowing to contribute labour and finance in an effort to expel the French from Vietnam and install Long as the independent monarch. By this time, Long was claiming to have received a letter from Cuong De, which supposedly confirmed Long's royal descent. Long's followers spared no expense in decorating Long with royal accoutrements. They made a medallion inscribed "Phan Xích Long Hòang Đế" (Vietnamese:Emperor Phan Xich Long) and a royal seal with a dragon's head with the words "Đại Minh Quốc, Phan Xích Long Hòang Đế, Thiên tử" (Greater Ming State, Emperor Phan Xich Long, Son of Heaven). The words "Đại Minh" were interpreted as either having arbitrarily been copied from local Chinese Vietnamese secret society slogans, or as a strategic ploy to invoke the names of the Ming Dynasty to appeal to the Chinese who had emigrated to Vietnam after the fall of the Ming. Long's supporters produced a sword with the inscription "Tien da hon quan, hau da loan than" (First strike the debauched king, next the traitorous officials) and a ring inscribed "Dân Công" (Popular Tribute).[3]

Long's strategy of proclaiming himself as a royal descendent or claiming to have supernatural powers in order to rally support for political ends was not new; it has been repeatedly used throughout Vietnamese history. In 1516, a man calling himself Tran Cao rebelled against the Le Dynasty, claiming to be a descendant of the deposed Tran Dynasty and a reincarnation of Indra.[8] During the 19th century, there was a Buddhist revival and many people masqueraded as monks claiming to have supernatural powers. These false monks were frequently able to start new religious movements and secret societies based on millenarianism. Quickly gathering large numbers of disciples, they staged rebellions against Vietnamese imperial and French colonial armies alike. However, these uprisings were typically incoherent and caused minimal disruption to the ruling authorities.[9][10] On the other hand, the French were often troubled by resistance movements in southern Vietnam that were led by more conventionally motivated nationalist militants, such as the guerrilla outfits of Truong Dinh and Nguyen Trung Truc.[11][12]

Long spent part of 1912 in Battambang, having a pagoda built there late in the year. In December 1912, he unsuccessfully applied for a land concession in Battambang.[1] His activities attracted the attention of French colonial officials—in March 1913, just days before the planned uprising in Saigon, the Resident of Kampot visited the temple and spotted the collection of white robes, which were similarly styled to the uniforms worn during the 1909 uprising.[7]

Military buildup

After the coronation ceremony, Long was taken to the That Son (Seven Mountains) region in Chau Doc, in the far south of the Mekong Delta. There the peasants built a temple for him. They used a small restaurant in a nearby village as a reception centre for the temple, as the temple was increasingly used as a military base, where fighters, weaponry and munitions were being assembled for an uprising.[13] In the village of Tan Thanh, a local leader recruited his peasants for Long's revolt. The village chieftain predicted that a new Vietnamese monarch would descend from the sky at Cholon in March 1913, and that only the royalists would survive this miracle.[7]

Long took the lead in preparing the explosives, claiming that his experience as a fortuneteller, mystic and natural healer made him an expert. The bombs were made from cannon shot, carbon, sulphur and saltpeter, which were then wrapped together.[13] Long's organisation printed a royal proclamation with wooden blocks, declaring their intention to attack French military installations. They called on merchants to flee and convert their colonial bank notes into solid copper cash.[13]

Failed uprising

On March 22, the French arrested Long in the coastal town of Phan Thiet, some 160 kilometres to the east of Saigon.[1][6] The arrest came three days after the Resident of Kampot had found white robes in Long's Battambang temple.[1] After nightfall on March 23, the bombs were taken into Saigon and placed at strategic points, with proclamation notices being erected in close proximity. None of the bombs successfully detonated.[3]

On March 28, the second phase of the operation started when several hundred rebels marched into Saigon dressed all in white.[1] Before the march, they had ingested potions that purportedly made them invisible. However, the French military were able to capture more than 80 of the supposedly invisible rebels during demonstrations against French rule.[1][13] The police raided the homes of several people who were known to be involved with Long's plot, resulting in more arrests. They captured most of Long's main supporters, rendering the organisation impotent.[1] However, Tri managed to escape.[7]

Imprisonment, attempted jailbreak and execution

Those involved were taken before a tribunal in November 1913, where the leaders freely stated their intentions of overthrowing the French colonial regime. Of the 111 people arrested, the tribunal convicted 104, of whom 63 received prison sentences.[7][13] The French intended to deport Long, but the outbreak of World War I in 1914 interrupted their plans. As a result, Long remained in Saigon Central Prison.[6]

In February 1916, uprisings broke out in southern Vietnam, with rebels demanding the restoration of an independent monarchy. One of their many objectives was to secure Long's release by breaking down Saigon prison.[14] Before daybreak on February 15, 1916,[6][7] between 100 and 300 Vietnamese armed with sticks, farm implements and knives moved along the Arroyo Chinoise waterway and disembarked near the centre of Saigon. They then attempted to proceed to the Central Prison to forcibly release Long.[7] Long had provided his followers with a detailed strategy from his prison cell, and the attack was led by a Cholon gang leader named Nguyen Van Truoc with Tri's assistance.[6][7] The French had anticipated the trouble, and police arrived quickly, dispersing Long's followers with ease.[14] Although some of the disciples reached the prison, none managed to breach its defenses. Ten of Long's men were killed, whereas only one sentry perished. The French arrested 65 rebels on the spot, including Tri.[7] Of these, 38 were sentenced to death.[6] Long was sentenced to death for his participation in the uprising, and he was executed on February 22, 1916.[15]

Similar events occurred across southern Vietnam, and in one case in Ben Tre, another self-proclaimed mystic launched an uprising that was similar to Long's 1913 effort.[16] The French continued their crackdown against Long's followers, making a further 1,660 arrests, which resulted in 261 incarcerations. The damage inflicted on Long's organisation led many of his followers to disperse and join a group that has now developed into the Cao Dai politico-religious sect based in Tay Ninh.[6] In the years immediately after World War II, the Cao Dai's numbers swelled to 1.5 million.[17] Long's demise did not end the sequence of self-proclaimed mystics who raised armies and engaged in politics; during World War II, Huynh Phu So claimed to be a living Buddha and quickly gathered more than a million supporters. He raised a large peasant army and battled both the French and the communist Vietminh independence movement, before being killed by the latter.[18]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Smith, p. 105.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Chapuis, p. 119.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Marr, p. 222.
  4. ^ a b Chapuis, pp. 10–20.
  5. ^ Marr, pp. 232–233.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Chapuis, p. 120.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Smith, p. 106.
  8. ^ Anh, p. 238.
  9. ^ Chapuis, pp. 110–120.
  10. ^ Anh, pp. 239–242.
  11. ^ Marr, pp. 27–31.
  12. ^ Chapuis, p. 121.
  13. ^ a b c d e Marr, p. 223.
  14. ^ a b Marr, p. 230.
  15. ^ Sơn Nam (1997). Cá tính miền Nam (in Vietnamese). Nhà xuất bản trẻ. p. p. 90. {{cite book}}: |page= has extra text (help)
  16. ^ Smith, p. 107.
  17. ^ Karnow, p. 159.
  18. ^ Chapuis, pp. 127–132.

References


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