¶ … Vietnamese domination by other countries. Specifically it will compare the Vietnamese experience of domination by France and China. Vietnam's relative recent history has been marked by domination and colonialism, mainly by France. Most westerners know Vietnam as the location of one of America's only unsuccessful wars. However, Vietnam has a long history, and much of it consisted of domination and colonialism at the hands of foreign invaders. China and France played heavily in this domination, and Vietnamese relations with China have been strained throughout its' history.
Domination and control by others fills Vietnam's history. The first country to control and dominate them was China, who ruled over Vietnam from 111 BC to 939 AD, and again from 1407 to 1428. One author notes, "China has been the longest-running enemy of Vietnam. Most of the heroes in Vietnamese history have been people who have fought against China" (Suter 2005). In fact, they maintained control over parts of Vietnam until the French took power -- they signed away their control in 1885. This domination built up a strong nationalistic tendency in the Vietnamese, and that helped them maintain their culture and beliefs even during Chinese control.
Chinese domination taught the Vietnamese to rebel, largely because the Chinese taxed the Vietnamese, took away their lands to give to Chinese immigrants, and forced them to pay for Chinese troops housed in Vietnam. Another author notes, "Over the past one thousand years, the Vietnamese have no less than seven times defeated attempts by China to assert its influence by armed force. No theme is more consistent in Vietnamese history than the theme of resistance to foreign aggression" (Tucker 1999, 6). In effect, Vietnam's long history with Chinese aggression helped form their reaction to French rule and French manipulation of their country. Had the Chinese not dominated Vietnam for so long, the Vietnamese people might not have been so rebellious against the French, and they might have grudgingly accepted the French rule.
The French had a presence in Southeast Asia since the 1600s, but it was not until 1846 that they turned their real attention to Vietnam, although French missionaries had been in the country for many years. France believed the Vietnamese emperor was persecuting the French missionaries, so the French blockaded the Tourane (which is now Da Nang) harbor and began to bombard the city. In 1858, French troops entered to country to save missionaries in Vietnamese custody. Fighting continued until 1862, when emperor Tu Duc signed a treaty with the French that essentially made much of Vietnam a French colony. The entire area came under French rule in 1884, and China abdicated her domination over the country shortly after that. France continued to rule Vietnam, except for a brief period during World War II, when the Japanese occupied Vietnam, until 1954.
From the beginning, much of the Vietnamese population bitterly opposed French Colonialism. As the French took over Vietnam, they gradually replaced the emperor and his officials with "residents" of their own. The emperor no longer had any power or authority, and indirect rule ended. As noted, the Vietnamese were fiercely nationalistic, and this helped them remain true to their culture during China's reign over the country. This also helped make them more resistant to domination from France. Historian D.R. SarDesai notes, "Chinese culture failed to obliterate Vietnamese social traditions, particularly in the countryside, where the bulk of the people lived" (SarDesai 2005, 45). While the Chinese had left most of the Vietnamese governing systems, especially in small rural villages, untouched, the French came in and changed everything, including how these autonomous villages governed themselves. The peasants were essentially disenfranchised from the government, because only French-educated people could vote, and this did away with two millennia of self-government. They began to resist the French rule, and they continued to resist until they finally gained their freedom. In fact, SarDesai notes that resistance and then rebellion began to occur just as soon as France took control in Vietnam (SarDesai 2005, 46). Another writer notes, "In July 1885 Vietnamese nationalists acting in the name of Emperor Ham Nghi led a brief rebellion, launching a major attack on the French at the fort of Mang Ca near the capital" (Tucker 1999, 36). As the rebellion continued, many Vietnamese sought to overthrow the monarchy and establish democratic rule in the country, actions that continued until they finally gained their freedom in...
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Summary In essence, the Vietnam War started as an anticolonial war against the French and soon morphed into a fully blown military conflict that eventually occasioned the Cold War clash between democracy anchored on free markets on one hand and international communism on the other. In the north of Vietnam was the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRV) and in the south of Vietnam was the republic of Vietnam – with the
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