Vietnam Historical Setting
Hanoi temple dedicated to King An Duong Vuong (ruler of Kingdom of Au
Lac, third century B.C.)
THE VIETNAMESE TRACE the origins of their culture and nation to
the fertile plains of the Red River Delta in northern Vietnam.
After centuries of developing a civilization and economy based on
the cultivation of irrigated rice, the Vietnamese began expanding
southward in search of new ricelands. Moving down the narrow
coastal plain of the Indochina Peninsula, through conquest and
pioneering settlement they eventually reached and occupied the
broad Mekong River Delta. Vietnamese history is the story of the
struggle to develop a sense of nationhood throughout this narrow
1,500-kilometer stretch of land and to maintain it against
internal and external pressures.
The first major threat to Vietnam's existence as a separate
people and nation was the conquest of the Red River Delta by the
Chinese, under the mighty Han dynasty (206 B.C.-A.D. 220), in the
first century B.C. At that time, and in later centuries, the
expanding Chinese empire assimilated a number of small bordering
nations politically and culturally. Although Vietnam spent 1,000
years under Chinese rule, it succeeded in throwing off the yoke
of its powerful neighbor in the tenth century.
The Vietnamese did not, however, emerge unchanged by their
millennium under Chinese rule. Although they were unsuccessful in
assimilating the Vietnamese totally, the Chinese did exert a
permanent influence on Vietnamese administration, law, education,
literature, language, and culture. Their greatest impact was on
the Vietnamese elite, with whom the Chinese administrators had
the most contact. The effects of this Sinicization (Hanhwa ) were much less intensive among the common people, who
retained a large part of their pre-Han culture and language.
China's cultural influence increased in the centuries
following the expulsion of its officials, as Vietnamese monarchs
and aristocrats strove to emulate the cultural ideal established
by the Middle Kingdom. Even for the Vietnamese elite, however,
admiration for Chinese culture did not include any desire for
Chinese political control. In the almost uninterrupted 900 years
of independence that followed China's domination, the Vietnamese
thwarted a number of Chinese attempts at military reconquest,
accepting a tributary relationship instead. During this period,
learning and literature flourished as the Vietnamese expressed
themselves both in classical Chinese written in Chinese
characters and in Vietnamese written in chu nom, a script
derived from Chinese ideographs.
During the Chinese millennium, other cultural influences also
reached the shores of the Red River Delta. A thriving maritime
trade among China, India, and Indonesia used the delta as a
convenient stopover. Among the array of goods and ideas thus
brought to Vietnam was Buddhism from India. While the Vietnamese
aristocracy clung to Chinese Confucianism, during most periods
the common people embraced Buddhism, adapting it to fit their own
indigenous religions and world view.
As the Red River Delta prospered, its population began
expanding southward along the narrow coastal plains. The period
from the twelfth century to the eighteenth century was marked by
warfare with both the Cham and Khmer, the peoples of the
Indianized kingdoms of Champa and Cambodia, who controlled lands
in the Vietnamese line of march to the south. The Cham were
finally defeated in 1471, and the Khmer were forced out of the
Mekong Delta by 1749. Vietnamese settlers flooded into the
largely untilled lands, turning them to rice cultivation. The
southward expansion severely taxed the ability of the Vietnamese
monarchy, ruling from the Red River Delta, to maintain control
over a people spread over such a distance.
The inability of the ruling Le dynasty to deal with this and
other problems led to the partition of the country by the
nobility in the sixteenth century. After two hundred years of
warfare between competing noble families, a peasant rebellion
reunified the country in the late eighteenth century. The rebels,
however, were unable to solve the problems of a country ravaged
by war, famine, and natural disasters and lost control to a
surviving member of the Nguyen noble family. Nguyen Anh took the
reign name Gia Long (a composite derived from the Vietnamese
names for the northern and southern capitals of the country
during partition) and established a new centrally located capital
at Hue in 1802.
Gia Long and his successors also were unable or unwilling to
solve the persisting problems of the country, particularly the
age-old dilemma of land alienation, the concentration of large
tracts of land in the hands of a few and the resulting creation
of vast numbers of landless peasants. The monarchy and
aristocracy grew more and more removed from the people by the
mid-nineteenth century. This period also climaxed the growth of
European expansionism, as Western nations sought to carve out
colonies in Asia and other parts of the non-Western world.
Between 1858 and 1873, the French conquered Vietnam, dividing it
into three parts--Cochinchina, Annam, and Tonkin--roughly
corresponding to the areas referred to bt the Vietnamese as Nam
Bo (southern Vietnam), Trung Bo (central Vietnam), and Bac Bo
(northern Vietnam). To the Vietnamese, however, these were
geographical terms, and the use of them to imply a political
division of their homeland was as odious as the loss of their
independence.
French colonial rule was, for the most part, politically
repressive and economically exploitative. Vietnamese resistance
in the early years was led by members of the scholar-official
class, many of whom refused to cooperate with the French and left
their positions in the bureaucracy. The early nationalists
involved themselves in study groups, demonstrations, production
and dissemination of anticolonialist literature, and acts of
terrorism. Differences in approach among the groups were
exemplified by Phan Boi Chau, who favored using the Vietnamese
monarchy as a rallying point for driving out the French, and Phan
Chu Trinh, who favored abolishing the monarchy and using Western
democratic ideas as a force for gradual reform and independence.
The success of these early nationalists was limited both by their
inability to agree on a strategy and their failure to involve the
Vietnamese peasantry, who made up the vast majority of the
population. After World War I, another Vietnamese independence
leader arose who understood the need to involve the masses in
order to stage a successful anticolonial revolt. Ho Chi Minh,
schooled in Confucianism, Vietnamese nationalism, and MarxismLeninism , patiently set about organizing the Vietnamese peasantry
according to Communist theories, particularly those of Chinese
leader Mao Zedong.
The defeat of the Japanese, who had occupied Vietnam during
World War II, left a power vacuum, which the Communists rushed to
fill. Their initial success in staging uprisings and in seizing
control of most of the country by September 1945 was partially
undone, however, by the return of the French a few months later.
Only after nine years of armed struggle was France finally
persuaded to relinquish its colonies in Indochina. The 1954
Geneva Conference left Vietnam a divided nation, however, with Ho
Chi Minh's communist government ruling the northern half from
Hanoi and Ngo Dinh Diem's regime, supported by the United States,
ruling the south from Saigon (later Ho Chi Minh City). Another
two decades of bitter conflict ensued before Vietnam was again
reunified as one independent nation.
Data as of December 1987
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