BRIEF HISTORY OF VIETNAM
The Vietnamese first appeared in history 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. Historical evidence to substantiate this tradition is
scanty, but archaeological findings indicate that the early peoples of
the Red River delta area may have been among the first East Asians to
practice agriculture, and by the 1st century BC they had achieved a
relatively advanced level of Bronze Age civilization.
Chinese Influence
In 221 BC the Chin dynasty in China completed its conquest of
neighboring states and became the first to rule over a united China.
The Chin Empire, however, did not long survive the death of its
dynamic founder, Shih Huang Ti, and the impact of its collapse was
soon felt in Vietnam. In the wreckage of the empire, the Chinese
commander in the south built his own kingdom of Nam Viet (South Viet;
Chinese, Nan Yüeh); the young state of Au Lac was included. In 111
BC, Chinese armies conquered Nam Viet and absorbed it into the growing
Han Empire. The Chinese conquest had fateful consequences for the
future course of Vietnamese history. After briefly ruling through
local chieftains, Chinese rulers attempted to integrate Vietnam
politically and culturally into the Han Empire. Chinese administrators
were imported to replace the local landed nobility. Political
institutions patterned after the Chinese model were imposed, and
Confucianism became the official ideology. The Chinese language was
introduced as the medium of official and literary expression, and
Chinese ideographs were adopted as the written form for the Vietnamese
spoken language. Chinese art, architecture, and music exercised a
powerful impact on their Vietnamese counterparts. Vietnamese
resistance to rule by the Chinese was fierce but sporadic. 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 only the first in a series of
intermittent uprisings that took place during a thousand years of
Chinese rule in Vietnam. Finally, in 939, Vietnamese forces under Ngo
Quyen took advantage of chaotic conditions in China to defeat local
occupation troops and set up an independent state. Ngo Quyen's death a
few years later ushered in 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. Although the
rise of the Ly reflected the emergence of a lively sense of Vietnamese
nationhood, Ly rulers retained many of the political and social
institutions that had been introduced during the period of Chinese
rule. Confucianism continued to provide the foundation for the
political institutions of the state. The Chinese civil service
examination system was retained as the means of selecting government
officials, and although at first only members of the nobility were
permitted to compete in the examinations, eventually the right was
extended to include most males. The educational system also continued
to reflect the Chinese model. Young Vietnamese preparing for the
examinations were schooled in the Confucian classics and grew up
conversant with the great figures and ideas that had shaped Chinese
history. Vietnamese society, however, was more than just a pale
reflection of China. Beneath the veneer of Chinese fashion and
thought, popular mostly among the upper classes, native forms of
expression continued to flourish. Young Vietnamese learned to
appreciate the great heroes of the Vietnamese past, many of whom had
built their reputation on resistance to the Chinese conquest. At the
village level, social mores reflected native forms more than patterns
imported from China. Although to the superficial eye Vietnam looked
like a "smaller dragon," under the tutelage of the great
empire to the north it continued to have a separate culture with
vibrant traditions of its own.
The Economy Under the Ly Dynasty
Like most of its neighbors, Vietnam was primarily an agricultural
state, its survival based above all on the cultivation of wet rice. As
in medieval Europe, much of the land was divided among powerful noble
families, who often owned thousands of serfs or domestic slaves. A
class of 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 was not based solely on agriculture. Commerce and
manufacturing thrived, and local crafts appeared in regional markets
throughout the area. Vietnam never developed into a predominantly
commercial nation, however, or became a major participant in regional
trade patterns.
Territorial Expansion
Under the rule of the Ly dynasty and its successor, the Tran
(1225-1400), Vietnam became a dynamic force in Southeast Asia. China's
rulers, however, had not abandoned their historic objective of
controlling 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 reincorporate it into the Chinese Empire. The
Vietnamese resisted with vigor, and after several bitter battles they
defeated the invaders and drove them back across the border. While the
Vietnamese maintained their vigilance toward the north, an area of
equal and growing concern lay to the south. For centuries, the
Vietnamese state had been restricted to its heartland in the Red River
valley and adjacent hills. Tension between Vietnam and the kingdom of
Champa, a seafaring state along the central coast, appeared shortly
after the restoration of Vietnamese independence. On several
occasions, Cham armies broke through Vietnamese defenses and occupied
the capital near Hanoi. More frequently, Vietnamese troops were
victorious, and they gradually drove Champa to the south. Finally, in
the 15th century, Vietnamese forces captured the Cham capital south of
present-day Da Nang and virtually destroyed the kingdom. For the next
several generations, Vietnam continued its historic "march to the
south," wiping up the remnants of the Cham Kingdom and gradually
approaching the marshy flatlands of the Mekong delta. There it
confronted a new foe, the Khmer Empire, which had once been the most
powerful state in the region. By the late 16th century, however, it
had declined, 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 mere protectorate.
The Le Dynasty
The Vietnamese advance to the south coincided with new challenges
in the north. In 1407 Vietnam was again conquered by Chinese troops.
For two decades, the Ming dynasty attempted to reintegrate Vietnam
into the empire, but in 1428, resistance forces under the rebel leader
Le Loi dealt the Chinese a decisive defeat and restored Vietnamese
independence. Le Loi mounted the throne as the first emperor of the Le
dynasty. The new ruling house retained its vigor for more than a
hundred years, but in the 16th century it began to decline. Power at
court was wielded by two rival aristocratic clans, the Trinh and the
Nguyen. When the former became dominant, the Nguyen were granted a
fiefdom in the south, dividing Vietnam into two separate zones.
Rivalry was sharpened by the machinations of European powers newly
arrived in Southeast Asia in pursuit of wealth and
Christian Converts.
By the late 18th century, the Le dynasty was near collapse. Vast
rice lands were controlled by grasping feudal lords. Angry
peasants-led by the Tay Son brothers-revolted, and in 1789 Nguyen Hue,
the ablest of the brothers, briefly restored Vietnam to united rule.
Nguyen Hue died shortly after ascending the throne; a few years later
Nguyen Anh, an heir to the Nguyen house in the south, defeated the Tay
Son armies. As Emperor Gia Long, he established a new dynasty in 1802.
French Intervention
A French missionary, Pierre Pigneau de Behaine, had 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, but his hopes were disappointed. The Nguyen dynasty was
suspicious of French influence. Roman Catholic missionaries and their
Vietnamese converts were persecuted, and a few were executed during
the 1830s. Religious groups in France demanded action from the
government in Paris. When similar pressure was exerted by commercial
and military interests, Emperor Napoleon III approved the launching of
a naval expedition in 1858 to punish the Vietnamese and force the
court to accept a French protectorate. The first French attack at Da
Nang Harbor failed to achieve its objectives, but a second farther
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.
Colonial Rule and Resistance
The imposition of French colonial rule had met with little
organized resistance. The national sense of identity, however, had not
been crushed, and anti-colonial sentiment soon began to emerge. Poor
economic conditions contributed to native hostility to French rule.
Although French occupation brought improvements in transportation and
communications, and contributed to the growth of commerce and
manufacturing, colonialism brought little improvement in livelihood to
the mass of the population. In the countryside, peasants struggled
under heavy taxes and high rents. Workers in factories, in coalmines,
and on rubber plantations labored in abysmal conditions for low wages.
By the early 1920s, nationalist parties began to demand reform and
independence. In 1930 the revolutionary Ho Chi Minh formed an
Indochinese Communist party. Until World War II started in 1939, such
groups labored 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.
Seizing the opportunity, the Communists organized the broad Vietminh
Front and prepared to launch an uprising at the war's end. The
Vietminh (short for Viet Nam Doc Lap Dong Minh, or 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 Expulsion of the French
The conflict lasted for nearly eight years. The Vietminh retreated
into the hills to build up their forces while the French formed a
rival Vietnamese government under Emperor Bao Dai, the last ruler of
the Nguyen dynasty, in populated areas along the coast. Vietminh
forces lacked the strength to defeat the French and generally
restricted their activities to guerrilla warfare. In 1953-1954 the
French fortified a base at Dien Bien Phu. After months of siege and
heavy casualties, the Vietminh overran the fortress in a decisive
battle. As a consequence, the French government could no longer resist
pressure from a war-weary populace at home and in June 1954 agreed to
negotiations to end the war. At a conference held in Geneva the two
sides accepted an interim compromise 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.
Partition
After Geneva, the Viet Minh in Hanoi refrained from armed struggle
and began to build a Communist society. In the southern capital,
Saigon, Bao Dai soon gave way to a new regime under the staunch
anti-Communist president Ngo Dinh Diem. With diplomatic support from
the United States, Diem refused to hold elections and attempted to
destroy Communist influence in the South. By 1959, however, Diem was
in trouble. His unwillingness to tolerate domestic opposition, his
alleged favoritism of fellow Roman Catholics, and the failure of his
social and economic programs seriously alienated key groups in the
populace and led to rising unrest. The Communists decided it was time
to resume their revolutionary war.
The American War
In the fall of 1963, Diem was overthrown and killed in a coup
launched by his own generals. In the political confusion that
followed, the security situation in South Vietnam continued to
deteriorate, putting the Communists within reach of victory. In early
1965, to prevent the total collapse of the Saigon regime, U.S.
President Lyndon Johnson approved regular intensive bombing of North
Vietnam and the dispatch of U.S. combat troops into the South. The
U.S. intervention caused severe problems for the Communists on the
battlefield and compelled them to send regular units of the North
Vietnamese army into the South. It did not persuade them to abandon
the struggle, however, and in 1968, after the bloody Tet offensive
shook the new Saigon regime of President Nguyen Van Thieu to its
foundations, the Johnson administration decided to pursue a negotiated
settlement. Ho Chi Minh died in 1969 and was succeeded by another
leader of the revolution, Le Duan. The new U.S. president, Richard
Nixon, continued Johnson's policy while gradually withdrawing U.S.
troops. In January 1973 the war temporarily came to an end with the
signing of a peace agreement in Paris. The settlement provided for the
total removal of remaining U.S. troops, while Hanoi tacitly agreed to
accept the Thieu regime in preparation for new national elections. The
agreement soon fell apart, however, and in early 1975 the Communists
launched a military offensive. In six weeks, the resistance of the
Thieu regime collapsed, and on April 30 the Communists seized power in
Saigon.
The Socialist Republic of Vietnam
In 1976 the South was reunited with the North in a new Socialist
Republic of Vietnam. The conclusion of the war, however, did not end
the violence. Border tension with the Communist government in Cambodia
escalated rapidly after the fall of Saigon, and in early 1979 the
Vietnamese invaded Cambodia and installed a pro-Vietnamese government.
A few weeks later, Vietnam was itself attacked by its Communist
neighbor and erstwhile benefactor, China. In the mid-1980s, Vietnamese
troops were stationed in Cambodia and Laos. Vietnam substantially
reduced its forces in Laos during 1988 and withdrew virtually all its
troops from Cambodia by September 1989. Within Vietnam, postwar
economic and social problems were severe, and reconstruction proceeded
slowly. Efforts to collectivize agriculture and nationalize business
aroused hostility in the south. Disappointing harvests and the
absorption of resources by the military further retarded Vietnam's
recovery. In the early 1990s, the government encouraged foreign
investment and sought to improve relations with the United States.
Recent policies, trade agreements, and treaties have positioned
Vietnam for peace, growth and prosperity in the twenty-first century. |