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Thành Thái

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Emperor Thanh Thái
成泰帝
Emperor Thanh Thai in court costume
Emperor of Đại Nam under French protectorate of Annam and Tonkin
Reign2 February 1889 – 3 September 1907
PredecessorĐồng Khánh
SuccessorDuy Tân
Emperor of the Nguyễn dynasty
Reign2 February 1889 – 3 September 1907
PredecessorĐồng Khánh
SuccessorDuy Tân
Born(1879-03-14)March 14, 1879
Imperial City, Huế, Đại Nam
DiedMarch 20, 1954(1954-03-20) (aged 75)
Saigon, State of Vietnam
Burial
Spouse5 concubines
Issue50 including 22 princes and 28 princesses
prince Nguyễn Phúc Vĩnh San
Names
Nguyễn Phúc Bửu Lân ()
Nguyễn Phúc Chiêu ()
Era name and dates
Thanh Thái (): 1845–1889
Posthumous name
Hoài Trạch Công (懷澤公)
Temple name
none
HouseNguyễn Phúc
FatherDục Đức
MotherEmpress Dowager Từ Minh
ReligionRuism

Thanh Thái (Hanoi: [tʰajŋ̟˨˩ tʰaːj˧˦], chữ Hán: ; 14 March 1879 – 20 March 1954) born Nguyễn Phúc Bửu Lân (阮福寶嶙), was the son of Vietnamese Emperor Dục Đức and Empress Dowager Từ Minh.[1][2] He reigned as emperor for 18 years, from 1889 to 1907. Thanh Thái was one of the three "patriotic emperors" in Vietnamese history, along with Hàm Nghi and Duy Tân (his son), for their actions and views against French colonial rule in Vietnam.[3]

Biography

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Early life

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While the emperor Tự Đức was alive, Prince Quang Thái was placed under house arrest with his family for having connections with those who opposed him. When the emperor Đồng Khánh died, however, the French colonial authorities and the high-ranking mandarins decided that Quang Thái was the ideal successor and enthroned him as the new Vietnamese emperor, Emperor Thanh Thái.

At the age of 10, Thanh Thái was recognized as being very intelligent and was already realizing that the French were keeping watch over him through palace spies. Whereas Đồng Khánh had tried to be friendly with the French, Emperor Thanh Thái took a course of passive-resistance. Although he refrained from outright rebellion (which would have been political suicide), he made his feelings clear in other ways, symbolic gestures and biting remarks. He was also a man of the people, and a monarch who cared deeply for his country. The emperor would often slip out of the Forbidden City dressed in the clothes of a commoner to talk with his people directly and see how they were being affected by government policies.

Opposing French authority

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To show that he was friendly with Western civilization, Thanh Thái was the first Vietnamese monarch to cut his hair in the French style and learn to drive a car. He encouraged French-style education, but maintained bitter feelings over their control of his country.[4] He also supported numerous building projects and took an interest in the everyday lives of his subjects. When traveling among his people, he would hold impromptu "town hall meetings" where the Emperor sat on a mat with his subjects in a circle around him, discussing the issues of the day and hearing their point of view.

Thanh Thái watching the battle between elephant and tiger, Le Petit Journal, 1904
Oil painting "Les Mandarins et les Autorites Françaises Attendant L’Arrivee de l’Empereur Thanh Thai”, 1903.

Slowly, as the emperor began to realize how thoroughly his palace had been infiltrated with French spies, he had to feign insanity to escape their constant scrutiny. With his enemies believing he was a harmless lunatic, Thanh Thái was able to push more forcefully for Vietnamese autonomy while waiting for the right time to overthrow the French colonial rule. He was on his way to join a resistance movement in China when he was arrested by French forces who declared him insane and forced the Emperor to abdicate.

In 1907, his son was installed as Emperor Duy Tân. Thanh Thái was exiled first to Vũng Tàu in South Vietnam and when Duy Tân rebelled against the French they were both exiled to Réunion Island in 1916.

Unlike Hàm Nghi, the lives of Thanh Thái and Duy Tân were tough. They even had no money to pay for rent. In 1925, Emperor Khải Định knew his situation and sent 1,000 piastres to him. Khải Định later occasionally gave him money.

He never gave up hope for the liberation of his country. In May 1947, he was allowed to return home, but was kept under house arrest in Vũng Tàu. He died in Saigon on 24 March 1954 and was buried on the grounds of An Lang (Tomb of Duc Duc) in an old commune, Hương Thủy district, Thừa Thiên Huế Province, at the age of 75.

There are now roads in Vietnam named in his honour.

Honours

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Cabinet

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References

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  1. ^ "Log In | Prezi".
  2. ^ "My familial origins : Nguyễn Phước - Thanh Thai (Lepelerin.info)".
  3. ^ Vietnamese Royal Exile in Japan Page 97 "The young, rebellious Duy Tân vas exiled to Reunion, to join his deposed father, ex-Emperor Thanh Thái, or the “mad king” ..."
  4. ^ Van Dan Nong, Churchill, Eden and Indo-China, 1951–1955 2011 Page xiii "Thanh Thái founded the 'Hué national school' and the traditional mandarinate examinations were allowed by the French to ...
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Media related to Emperor Thành Thái at Wikimedia Commons

Thành Thái
Born: 14 March 1869 Died: 24 March 1969
Regnal titles
Preceded by Emperor of Vietnam
1889–1907
Succeeded by