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Military of the Nguyễn dynasty

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Military of the Nguyễn dynasty
Quân thứ (軍次)
Lính vệ and officers in 1919.
Active
  • 1558–1945

(Continuous period)

  • 1558–1777

(As the military of the Nguyễn lords)[a]

  • 1778–1802

(As the forces of Nguyễn Ánh)

  • 1802–1891

(As the national military of the Nguyễn dynasty)

  • 1885–1945

(As the Garde Indigène de l'Annam et du Tonkin)

  • 1945
(As the Imperial Vietnamese Army)
Disbanded23 August 1945
Country Nguyễn lords
Nguyễn dynasty
French protectorates of Annam and Tonkin
Empire of Vietnam
AllegianceEmperor of the Nguyễn dynasty,
 France (1884–1945)
 Japan (1945)
BranchImperial Guards
Provincial armies and militias
Siege
Elephant
Cavalry
Infantry
TypeArmy, Navy
RoleMilitary force (until 1885, 1945)
Police and ceremonial force (1885–1945)
Size
  • 1558: 3,000
  • 1627: 100,000
  • 1803: 150,000
  • 1840: 50.000
  • 1847: 128.000[1]
  • 1885: 70.000[2]
  • 1886: 7,500[2]
Motto(s)忠勇 才畧 (Trung dũng Tài lược) - Valeur et discipline (under French command)[3]
Colours
  Red
  Yellow
[4]
MarchĐăng đàn cung[5]
Engagements
Nguyễn lords
Nguyễn dynasty
Decorations
Commanders
Supreme CommanderLord / King (1558–1802)
Emperor (1802–1945)
Notable
commanders
Hoàng Kế Viêm, Lê Văn Duyệt, Lê Văn Khôi, Nguyễn Cư Trinh, Nguyễn Huỳnh Đức, Nguyễn Văn Thành, Nguyễn Văn Tồn, Nguyễn Văn Nhơn, Nguyễn Tri Phương, Phan Văn Thúy, and Trương Minh Giảng
Insignia
Flag
Badge of the Imperial Guards during the Bảo Đại period.[9]

The Military of the Nguyễn dynasty (Vietnamese: Quân thứ; chữ Hán: 軍次) were the main military forces of the Nguyễn dynasty from 1802 to August 1945 when it was dismantled by the August Revolution.[10] The Nguyễn military force was initially formed by Nguyễn Hoàng as a division of the military of the Revival Lê dynasty in 1558 starting out with 3000 soldiers.[10] During this period it was the military forces of the domain of the Nguyễn lords and commonly fought the Trịnh lords who controlled northern Vietnam.[10] During the Tây Sơn Rebellion it was expelled out most of the county by the Tây Sơn dynasty.[10] After the exiled Nguyễn Phúc Ánh returned and defeated the Tây Sơn rebels he crowned himself as the Gia Long Emperor and the Nguyễn military became the national military of Vietnam.[10]

During the French domination period it became two of the five indigenous guards of French Indochina and was turned into a collection police and ceremonial forces.[2] While the Emperor was still nominally the supreme commander actual power fell in the hands of the French administration relegating the Emperor to a rubber stamp office.[10] Following the abolition of the Nguyễn dynasty its military was also disbanded making the Vietnamese People's Army the new national military of Vietnam, which would be administered by the newly established Democratic Republic of Vietnam.[10]

History

[edit]

Origins (1558–1777)

[edit]

Initially the Nguyễn military was established when Nguyễn Hoàng brought a force of 3,000 to the Thuận Hóa province.[10] Since 1600 the army would be instrumental for the administration of the state. The armed forces of the Nguyễn lords included infantry (步兵; bộ binh), marines (水兵;thủy binh), artillery (砲兵; pháo binh), and elephant corp (tượng binh).[10] While the Nguyễn lords were nominally a part of the Revival Lê dynasty they increasingly became more independent leading to them having military clashes with the north.[11]

The infantry and marine forces were armed with a fleet of about 200 warships and many transport boats carrying troops, supplied, and food, the main fighting force of the Nguyễn lords period was the infantry.[10]

The standing army numbered about 40,000 people, when the Trịnh–Nguyễn War broke out, the Nguyễn army amounted to 100,000 people.[10] During this period the Nguyễn army was supplied with firearms by the Kingdom of Portugal.[10][12]

Nguyễn Phúc Ánh's struggle with the Tây Sơn dynasty (1778–1802)

[edit]

Following the Tây Sơn insurgency only a small part of the Nguyễn military remained, these were under the command of Nguyễn Phúc Ánh.[10]

Nguyễn Phúc Ánh's forces, headed by the former Nguyễn lord in the Citadel of Saigon, equipped his military forces with the help and training of several French advisors.[10] Though the treaty between Nguyễn Phúc Ánh and Louis XVI in 1787 was never ratified.

The Nguyễn loyalists overcame the Tay Sons in Binh Thuan (1794), Qui Nhon (1799 and 1801), Huế (June 1802), Hanoi (July 1802) to become the first force that able to unify the Vietnamese nation that stretched from Guangxi, China to the Gulf of Thailand, after three centuries of disintegration period.

Independent period (1802–1883)

[edit]
Various types of Nguyễn dynasty soldiers

The military of the Nguyễn dynasty maintained the old organisational structures of the imperial dynasties that went before it.[10] The army of the Nguyễn dynasty was divided into two regular parts, a standing army and a division stationed in the capital called the Imperial Guards, whose main task was to protect the Citadel of Phú Xuân (Huế).[10]

The imperial army numbered 13,000 men invaded Cambodia in 1809 and 1813 to protect the faction of the king Ang Chan II of Cambodia, established the Viceroy of Cambodia, with Trương Tấn Bửu held the title Viceroy. In 1827 they were mobilised to intervene in the Vientiane Kingdom in Laos. In 1833 when the Chakri Siamese army invaded Cambodia, much of the Nguyen army stationing in Cambodia had to withdraw back to suppress the Lê Văn Khôi revolt and Nông Văn Vân's Rebellion.

As the military of the Nguyễn dynasty held substantial influence in its government, the Minh Mạng Emperor reformed the government to become a civil meritocracy decreasing the dominant role of the military in Nguyễn society.[13]

In 1834 the Minh Mạng Emperor launched a military campaign resulting in the annexation of Cambodia after the Siamese army had been forced to retreat. Minh Mạng died in early 1841. Siam launched the second invasion of Cambodia. Although the Nguyễn army successfully retook Phnom Penh in 1845, the emperor of Vietnam Thieu Tri sought to make peace with Siam. A peace treaty between Siam and Vietnam was signed in March 1847, which resulted in the independence of Cambodia in 1848. Between 1802 and 1862, the Nguyễn army also had faced 405 internal rebellions and revolts from small to large scales, mostly were the Lê Loyalists, ethnic minorities, and princely.[14] The imperial army gradually lost to France and Spain during the Cochinchina campaign (1858–1862).

From the Minh Mạng to the Tự Đức period the standing army of the Nguyễn dynasty numbered around 120,000 people.[10] However, due to outdated fighting equipment, poor training, and little attention from the imperial court the Nguyễn army became increasingly backwards in comparison with contemporary military forces, allowing the country to be conquered by the French in 1883.[10]

French domination period (1884–1945)

[edit]

When the French Republic consolidated its rule over eastern Indochina in 4–5 July 1885, the imperial army was organised under the Garde indigène (Indigenous Guard), leaving only 8,000–10,000. The functions of the Garde indigène de l'Annam was limited to simple police duties and ceremonial functions, serving under French officers.[15]

During the French domination period the military of the Nguyễn dynasty was divided into two components, namely the Vệ binh (衛兵, Imperial Guards) and the Cơ binh (Soldiers).[10] The Vệ binh consisted only of the Thân binh force with about 2,000 soldiers in four guards (vệ) and one army of musicians serving the ceremonies of the Nguyễn court (which employed about 50 musicians).[10] The Cơ binh consisted mainly of infantry and remained to serve in the provinces of the French protectorate of Tonkin, where these forces directly controlled by the provincial heads of the Nguyễn dynasty in Tonkin, but under the supervision of the French resident (公使法, Công sứ Pháp).[10] The Cơ binh had about 27,000 troops, divided into four divisions (đạo), stationed in the provinces around Hanoi and the Red River Delta.[10]

In 1891, the governor-general of French Indochina issued a decree to establish a military force directly organised, equipped, and commanded by the French, this force initially consisted of about 4,000 troops.[10] These French commanded troops were stationed in all provinces and districts of Vietnam.[10] With this decree of the governor-general of French Indochina effectively put an end to the Nguyễn military as the armed forces of the independent imperial state.[10]

In 1933 the Bảo Đại Emperor abolished the Ministry of War (兵部, Binh Bộ) while reforming the structure of the Nguyễn dynasty's imperial court.[16] The Nguyễn dynasty's last minister of war was Phạm Liệu.[16] The functions and services of the Ministry of War were transferred to the Ministry of Personnel, making it responsible for the management of the military.[17]

The Ministry of Personnel of the government of the Nguyễn dynasty issued an ordonnance dated 13-11-Bảo Đại 12 (15 December 1937) which stated that any member of the Nguyễn military who is either demoted or dishonourably discharged will lose all their titles, ranks, privileges, and honorary degrees within the mandarinate.[18]

Empire of Vietnam (1945)

[edit]

Following the August Revolution launched by the Indochinese Communist Party the Nguyễn dynasty was abolished, which also meant that its military was disbanded.[10]

Organisation

[edit]
Military dress under the Nguyễn's reign

The Vietnamese army in 1802 had around 150,000 men served as provincial soldiers (linh co) plus 12,000 royal guards (lính vệ), total numbered 162,000 men. During the reign of Minh Mạng (r. 1820–1841), the provincial army was decreased down to 50,000 to 60,000 men. During the reign of Tự Đức (r. 1848–1883), the army reduced itself further to a 44,000 man army (32,000 linh co and 12,000 linh ve), with only ten percent of the linh co soldiers were fully armed and well-disciplined at that time.

Centre army (lính vệ)

[edit]
lính vệ and officers in 1919.

The emperor had about 12,000 centre army soldiers (lính vệ, permanent soldiers, royal guards), obligated to protect the imperial capital of Huế and its adjacent areas, armed with European muskets, rifles, and bayonets. Lính vệ soldiers wore black gauze tunics with flower decorations, red insignia in front and back with characters on them; small hats made of lacquered redwood; sometimes white boots, but most soldiers wore slippers or barefoot.[19]

Provincial army (lính cơ)

[edit]

The provincial army had five armies called trung quân (centre army), tả quân (left army), hữu quân (right army), tiền quân (front army), and hậu quân (rear army). Each division was commanded by a Ngũ quân Đô Thống (French: maréchal, rank 1A). The maréchal of the trung quân was the commander-in-chief held responsible for the defensive of the royal city of Hue and surrounding areas, while other four armies Below a maréchal were Thống chế and Đề đốc (general, rank 2A), each commanded a doanh (2,500 men). Under a general, there were Lãnh binh (French: colonel, rank 3A/B), commanded vệ (each had 500 soldiers, French: bataillon) and Quản cơ (French: chef de régiment provincial, rank 4A/B), commanded (each also had 500 soldiers, French: régiment) Each vệ and had ten đội (50 soldiers) headed by a Cai đội (French: capitaine, rank 5A/B), assisted by a trưởng suất đội (French: lieutenant) and a thợ lại (company clerk). The smallest army unit were squads thập (9 soldiers, French: escouade), commanded by a Chánh đội trưởng suất thập/đội trưởng officer (French: sergent, rank 7A/B) and had a bếp soldier (French: caporal).[20] A normal soldier (lính cơ) during the reign of Minh Mạng received the minimum monthly salary of one quan or a string of cash coins (about 500 coins), which would purchase about 48.9 pounds (22 kilograms) of husked rice, which was only half of what a tenant peasant earned per month.[21]

The soldiers wore red tunics, while officers dressed like common gentlemen with a black ao dai, even during wartime.[22] Each officer often carried a sword or a pistol. During ceremonies, the officers had to wear green silk robes, specific animal decorations based upon ranks, and black silk turbans. The army structure is listed below:[23]

Army structure in 1830[24]
Rank Symbol Title Unit
Nhất phẩm Qilin Ngũ quân Đô Thống chưởng phủ sự, Ngũ quân Đô Thống (Marshals, maréchal) đạo (army, 10,000 soldiers)
Nhị phẩm Bai Ze Thống chế, Đề đốc, Chưởng vệ (generals) doanh (2,500–4,800 soldiers)
Tam phẩm Lion Lãnh binh, Vệ úy, phó Vệ úy, Đốc binh (imperial colonels) vệ (500 soldiers) bataillon
Tứ phẩm Tiger Quản cơ, phó Quản cơ, Hiệp quản (provincial colonels) cơ (500 soldiers) régiment
Ngũ phẩm Black panther Cai đội (captains) đội (50 soldiers) compagnie
Lục phẩm Bear Chánh đội trưởng suất đội (lieutenants)
Thất phẩm Leopard and Seahorse Chánh đội trưởng suất thập (Leopard for senior sergǣnts) (Seahorse for sergǣnts) thập (10 soldiers) escouade
Bát phẩm Rhinoceros Đội trưởng suất thập (corporals) ngũ (5 soldiers) section
Cửu phẩm None Thơ lại individual clerk
A Cochinchinese (southern Vietnam) rifleman in 1843.
Four cannons of emperor Gia Long (caliber 220 mm) that used for the ceremony.

The size of the provincial army depended on each period. During the reign of Gia Long, the provincial army numbered up to 150,000 to 200,000 men. During the reign of Minh Mang, it was 36,000 to 60,000.[25] During a later period under Thieu Tri and Tu Duc (1841–1883), the army was practically undisciplined 32,000 peasant-soldiers, with only 10% of them armed with muskets or rifles. The rest had to use spears or knives. The training was minimal. When the French attacked Saigon, there were about 7,000 Vietnamese combatants instead of the reported 12,000, and there weren't reserves and mobilization to deal with the casualties rather than local recruits.[26] The artillery organ had only 200 cannons, which almost were exceedingly heavy, outdated, and no match to European guns.[27]

War elephants

[edit]
Imperial war elephant.

War elephants were recruited in the military like the previous Vietnamese military. Established by Gia Long in 1803, the Royal Elephant Corp Elephants of the Guard (Tượng Quân) served the emperor's escort when he needed it. Commanded by a Chưởng tượng quân, the corp was divided into five regiments (515 men per regiment), each regiment had five companies, each company had four squads. The Elephants of the Guard later was renamed to Elephants of the Inner Guard (Thị Nội Tượng) in 1815, and then in 1829 it became known as the Elephants of the Capital (Kinh Tượng). The local army also had its elephant corps.[28] In the 1840s, the Vietnamese employed about 280 elephants with 2,340 men of 55 elephant companies in military service.[29]

Vietnamese war elephants were relatively small, ranging from 1.8 m (5.9 ft) to 2.8 m (9.2 ft) in height. Each elephant carries a red hemp bridle, a howdah, a chain crupper, belly-strap, a silk flag, two leather belts, 30 arrows, 30 javelins, an iron hook. The howdah usually depicted a lion or a dragon. [30]

The last war elephant battle was raged on 5 July 1885, when French troops of 11th battalion chasseurs a Pied were charged by Vietnamese war elephants from within the Hue citadel, which forced the French to retreat to an embankment where they fire back in cover and eventually drove the elephants back.[31]

Tirailleurs

[edit]
Sketch of soldiers from 1875.

During the French conquest, thousands of Vietnamese and Muong volunteers, including many Christians, formed auxiliaries and professional military groups known as tirailleurs that helped the French suppress and subjugate rebellions campaigns in Tonkin, Cambodia, and Laos.[32] The majority of these tirailleur units were commanded by French officers. Each tirailleur soldier was armed with a musket, and later a chassepot rifle and bayonet.[33]

[edit]

The navy was part of the Vietnamese military and its bureaus. J. H. Moor in his 1837 account reported that in 1823, the Nguyen navy consisted of 50 schooners with 14 guns, 80 gunboats (sloop-of-war), 100 vessels, 300 galleys with 80 to 100 rowing oars, and 500 galleys with 40 to 80 oars.[34] Another two hundred galleys owned by the emperor in Hue "were built based on European and European-Vietnamese mixed styles, with fourteen guns on each."[35] John White, an American lieutenant and naval captain that visited Saigon in 1819, had once commented: "Cochinchina [Southern Vietnam] is perhaps, of all the powers in Asia, the best adapted to maritime adventure."[36][37]

18th and 19th-century Vietnamese warship.

Later during the reign of Thieu Tri and Tu Duc, Vietnamese naval superiority was no longer. Lacking a view interested in the military and financial support, the court quickly abandoned the great navy. Gunships gradually were transformed into trading ships to serve the failing economy.[38] Technology drastically falling behind Europe. In the 1880s, the Vietnamese royal navy had seven corvettes, 300 junks, two steamers purchased at Hong Kong, and five French vessels, all were later absorbed by the French Indochinese navy.[39]

Citadels

[edit]
[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Officially a division of the military of the Revival Lê dynasty until 1802.
  2. ^ Known in French as the Sapèque d'Honneur. These include traditional Vietnamese decorations based on cash coins.
  3. ^ Known in French as the Sapèque d'Argent.
  4. ^ Known in French as the Sapèque d'Or.

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ Hoàng Cơ Thụy. Việt sử khảo luận. Paris: Nam Á, 2002. Page 976.
  2. ^ a b c Karl Hack and Tobias Rettig. (2006). Colonial armies in Southeast Asia. New York: Routledge. p. 133. ISBN 0-415-33413-6.
  3. ^ Harrold E. Gillingham, Notes on the Decorations and Medals of French Colonies and Protectorates. New York, 1928 (ANS Publication no 36) - p46.
  4. ^ Ban tổ chức (Organising Committee) (25 June 2022). "Chế độ Y quan triều Nguyễn. - Triển lãm CHẾ ĐỘ Y QUAN TRIỀU NGUYỄN trưng bày hơn 100 phiên bản tài liệu, hình ảnh, hiện vật đặc sắc về chế độ y quan (áo mũ, nghĩa rộng là trang phục) của các tầng lớp trong xã hội triều Nguyễn, nét tinh tế của nghệ thuật thẩm mỹ nhưng cũng rất chặt chẽ trong sự phân cấp phẩm hàm" (in Vietnamese). Trung tâm Lưu trữ quốc gia I (National Archives Nr. 1, Hanoi) - Cục Văn thư và Lưu trữ nhà nước (State Records And Archives Management Department Of Việt Nam). Retrieved 28 June 2022.
  5. ^ Ngan Duong (15 December 2020). "Changing of the guard at Hue Imperial Citadel. - Visitors to Hue can learn more about Vietnam's former Nguyen Dynasty by attending the changing of the guard ceremony at the imperial citadel". VnExpress International. Retrieved 28 June 2022.
  6. ^ Gillingham, Harrold E. (Harrold Edgar), 1864-1954 (1928). "Notes on the decorations and medals of the French colonies and protectorates. § Annam - Kim-Tiên, or Sapèque in gold 44 & Ngân-Tiên, or Sapèque in silver 45". American Numismatic Society. Retrieved 24 March 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ Order of 21 July 1890 - Journal Official Indo-Chine Française (1890) pt2 p678.
  8. ^ R.D. Stiot, "La médaille de la Garde indigène de l'Indochine", Carnet de la Sabretache, 2e Trimestre 1984, Nouvelle Series No 71, pp 16.
  9. ^ a b De Rode Leeuw - Armorial of Vietnam § Imperial Guard by Hubert de Vries. Retrieved: 16 August 2021.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Bách khoa tri thức Quốc phòng toàn dân (National Defense Knowledge Encyclopedia of the People). (2022). "Lực lượng vũ trang nhà Nguyễn (1558 - 1945)" (in Vietnamese). The Ministry of National Defense - Government of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam. Retrieved 28 June 2022.
  11. ^ Woodside (1995), p. 170: "the 'kingdom of cochinchina' was the polity of the nguyễn lords (chúa), who had become the more and more independent rivals of the trịnh lords of the north – if not of the lê emperors whose affairs the trịnh lords managed..."
  12. ^ Li Tana (1998). Nguyen Cochinchina. Cornell Southeast Asia Program. p. 144. ISBN 0-87727-722-2.
  13. ^ TS. Vũ Đức Liêm (5 June 2022). "Châu bản và việc phục dựng lịch sử chính trị triều Minh Mạng (1820-1841)" (in Vietnamese). Trung tâm Lưu trữ quốc gia I (National Archives Nr. 1, Hanoi) - Cục Văn thư và Lưu trữ nhà nước (State Records And Archives Management Department Of Việt Nam). Retrieved 25 June 2022. Đây là câu chuyện về một thế giới bị lãng quên của nền chính trị triều Minh Mạng. Phủ bụi hàng trăm năm, từ dưới mái hiên dột nát của toà Đông Các cho tới hành lang của Viện Đại học Huế, cuộc hành trình của các Châu bản triều Nguyễn không chỉ phản ánh số phận vương triều và sự chuyển dời thời đại mà bản thân chúng còn là chứng nhân tham dự trực tiếp vào những bước ngoặt thời đại. Bài viết này giúp tái hiện về một bước chuyển như thế của lịch sử: thời kỳ Minh Mạng và hé lộ một thế giới ẩn mình đằng sau các trang tài liệu lưu trữ.
  14. ^ Heath (2003), p. 163.
  15. ^ Karl Hack, Tobias Rettig (Hrsg.): Colonial Armies in Southeast Asia. Abingdon 2006, ISBN 978-0-415-33413-6; Kapitel 5, S. 138 f.
  16. ^ a b Phương Anh (tổng hợp) (9 September 2016). "Bảo Đại - Vị Hoàng đế cuối cùng trong lịch sử phong kiến Việt Nam. - Bảo Đại tên thật là Nguyễn Phúc Vĩnh Thụy, là vị Hoàng đế thứ 13 và cuối cùng của triều đại nhà Nguyễn, cũng là vị Hoàng đế cuối cùng trong lịch sử phong kiến Việt Nam" (in Vietnamese). BẢO TÀNG LỊCH SỬ QUỐC GIA (VIETNAM NATIONAL MUSEUM OF HISTORY). Retrieved 22 June 2022.
  17. ^ Protectorate government of Annam - Bulletin administratif de l'Annam, Publication date : 1933-07-01. Pages: 835-836. (in French).
  18. ^ Protectorate government of Annam - Bulletin administratif de l'Annam, Publication date : 1938-02-15. Pages: 45-46. (in French).
  19. ^ Heath (2003), p. 195.
  20. ^ Heath (2003), p. 176.
  21. ^ Choi (2004a), p. 171.
  22. ^ Gutzlaff (1849), p. 141.
  23. ^ Heath (2003), p. 196.
  24. ^ Bezacier (1941), p. 332.
  25. ^ Gutzlaff (1849), p. 140.
  26. ^ Chapuis (2000), p. 14.
  27. ^ McLeod (1991), p. 47.
  28. ^ Heath (2003), p. 180.
  29. ^ Heath (2003), p. 182.
  30. ^ Heath (2003), p. 181.
  31. ^ Heath (2003), p. 183.
  32. ^ Heath (2003), p. 202.
  33. ^ Heath (2003), p. 203.
  34. ^ Li (2004b), p. 127.
  35. ^ White (1824), p. 264.
  36. ^ White (1824), p. 265.
  37. ^ Li (2004b), p. 120.
  38. ^ Li (2004b), p. 131.
  39. ^ Heath (2003), p. 184.

Sources

[edit]
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