Siamese–Vietnamese War (1841–1845)

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Siamese–Vietnamese war (1841–45)
Part of Siamese–Vietnamese Wars and Vietnamese invasions of Cambodia
VietXiem1845.jpg
A map showing the movement of Vietnamese troops (from June to December 1845) during the Siamese-Vietnam War (1841–1845).
Date1841–1845
Location
Result
  • Cambodia came under joint Siamese-Vietnamese suzerainty
  • Vietnamese military victory but abandonment of Cambodia, Siamese General Bodindecha submission to Vietnamese military ultimatum
Belligerents
Đại Nam Empire Rattanakosin Kingdom (Siam)
Khmer anti-Vietnamese rebels
Commanders and leaders
Trương Minh Giảng
Lê Văn Đức
Phạm Văn Điển
Nguyễn Công Nhân
Nguyễn Công Trứ
Võ Văn Giải
Nguyễn Tri Phương
Nguyễn Tiến Lâm
Nguyễn Văn Hoàng
Doãn Uẩn
Tôn Thất Nghị
Former Cambodian queen, princes and ministers:
Ang Mey
Ang Em
Chaofa Talaha (Lung)
Chao Phraya Bodindecha (Sing Sinhaseni)
Kromma Khun Isaret-rangsant
Chao Phraya Nakhon Ratchasima (Thong-in Na Ratchasima)
Chao Phraya Yommaraj Bunnag
Phra Promborrirak
Chameun Waiworanat (Chuang Bunnag)
Ang Duong
Units involved
Imperial Vietnamese army Siamese Royal Army

The 1841–1845 Siamese–Vietnamese War in Cambodia (Thai: อานัมสยามยุทธ (พ.ศ. 2384 – พ.ศ. 2388), Vietnamese: Chiến tranh Việt–Xiêm (1841–1845)) was a military conflict between the Đại Nam, ruled by Emperor Thiệu Trị, and the Kingdom of Siam, under the rule of Chakkri King Nangklao. The rivalry between Vietnam and Siam over the control of the Cambodian heartlands in the Lower Mekong basin had intensified after Siam had attempted to conquer Cambodia during the previous Siamese–Vietnamese War (1831–1834). Vietnamese Emperor Minh Mạng installed Princess Ang Mey to rule Cambodia as a puppet queen regnant of his choice in 1834 and declared full suzerainty over Cambodia, which he demoted to Vietnam's 32nd province, the Western Commandery (Tây Thành Province).[1] In 1841, Siam seized the opportunity of discontent to aid the Khmer revolt against Vietnamese rule. King Rama III sent an army to enforce Prince Ang Duong's installation as King of Cambodia. After four years of attrition warfare, both parties agreed to compromise and placed Cambodia under joint rule.[2][3][4][5]

Background[]

The once-powerful Khmer Kingdom during the 18th century became increasingly influenced by its eastern and western neighbors: Vietnam and Siam. During the reign of the youthful Khmer king Ang Eng (1779–96) Siam conquered Cambodia's Battambang and Siem Reap Provinces in the west. The provincial administrators became vassals, under direct Siamese rule.[6][7]

In the early 17th century, Siam first adopted the tradition to take members of the Cambodian royal family hostage and took them to the court at Ayutthaya, where they were left to be influenced and to compromise each other under Siamese scrutiny. The Vietnamese court in Huế also established those methods and skillfully orchestrated their protégés and interfered in marriage policies. Quarrels among the royal contenders greatly diminished any chances of restoring an effective Cambodian kingship for many decades.[8][9][5]

After Siam's defeat in the Siamese–Vietnamese War (1831–1834), the Vietnamese reinstalled King Ang Chan to the Cambodian throne. Prince Ang Em, who had been a Siamese hostage, was made the governor of Battambang by Chao Phraya Bodindecha (Battambang and Siem Reap had been under direct rule of Siam since 1794).[10] However, King Ang Chan died in January 1834 and left four daughters but no male heir. In 1834, Emperor Minh Mạng chose Princess Ang Mey to rule Cambodia as a queen regnant. However, Queen Ang Mey was only a puppet queen without royal powers, as Minh Mạng incorporated Cambodia into the Vietnamese Empire as Tây Thành Province. The Vietnamese administration of Cambodia was bestowed to Trương Minh Giảng, who was appointed as viceroy. The province's government was based in Phnom Penh.

Emperor Minh Mạng had decreed elaborate plans and designs for cultural, economic, and ethnic development and the assimilation of Cambodia and forwarded them to Trương Minh Giảng. However, the economic and societal realities of Cambodia frustrated all efforts, and hardly any progress had been made in more than a decade.[1][11]

Prince Ang Em, the governor of Battambang, resolved to take actions against the humiliating reign of Queen Ang Mey. In December 1838, Ang Em defected from Siamese tutelage to Vietnam and arrived in Phnom Penh in the hope that Trương Minh Giảng would make him king. Trương, however, arrested Ang Em and sent him to Huế. Siamese General Chaophraya Bodindecha marched from Bangkok to Battambang in 1839 to alleviate the situation. In 1840, the Cambodians had risen against Vietnamese rule in open rebellion. The Cambodian governor of Pursat met Bodindecha and urged him to expel the Vietnamese, who held garrisons in all of the notable settlements in Cambodia. Bodindecha endorsed Prince Ang Duong, Ang Em's younger brother, as the new Siamese candidate for the Cambodian throne.[12][13][5]

Military campaigns[]

Siamese offensives of 1840–1842[]

Map of army routes during the Siamese offensives of 1840–1842. Red represents Siamese routes. Yellow represents Vietnam and Cambodia.
Cô Tô mountain in modern Tri Tôn district, An Giang Province.

In November 1840, the Siamese warlord Chaophraya Bodindecha sent troops led by his son Phra Promborrirak and his brother-in-law Chao Phraya Nakhon Ratchasima Thongin from Sisophon to lay siege on Pursat, which was held by Vietnamese forces. The was a success, as the Siamese army moved south to attack Phnom Penh.

Bodindecha also sent forces, led by Phraya Rachanikul, to take Kampong Svay, which was occupied by Đoàn Văn Sách. The Siamese took Kampong Svay but were defeated by Trương Minh Giảng at the . Phraya Rachanikul's army was cut off and had to retreat with heavy losses. Bodindecha then negotiated a peaceful surrender with the military commander of Pursat before Trương Minh Giảng could reach him.

Emperor Minh Mạng, who had sent reinforcements under Phạm Văn Điển, died after a fall from a horse in February 1841. The new emperor, Thiệu Trị, reversed Vietnamese policies on Cambodia and ordered the retreat of all Vietnamese forces. By October 1841, the Vietnamese had retreated to An Giang Province. Viceroy Trương Minh Giảng evacuated Phnom Penh and committed suicide since he took responsibility for the loss of Cambodia.

The Vietnamese had taken the defected Prince Ang Em to An Giang to rally Cambodian support. However, Bodindecha was now unopposed and sent his son Phra Promborrirak to help Prince Ang Duong to the throne in Oudong and to massacre all remaining Vietnamese people still dispersed in Cambodia.[1]

After Siamese dominance was established in Cambodia, King Rama III ordered the Vĩnh Tế Canal at the Cambodian-Vietnamese border, which enabled Vietnamese naval forces to access the Gulf of Thailand quickly. Bodindecha reminded the king that the canal was guarded by strong Vietnamese forces in Hà Tiên and An Giang. More troops were required to attack the area. The king thus sent his half-brother Prince Isaret (later Viceroy Pinklao), accompanied by Chuang Bunnag (son of Phraklang, later Somdet Chao Phraya Sri Suriyawongse) and five brigantines to attack Hà Tiên (Banteay Meas) and a land force, led by Chao Phraya Yommaraj Bunnag and Prince Ang Duong, to attack An Giang Province.

The fleet of Prince Isaret and Chuang Bunnag arrived at Phú Quốc Island in January 1842. Prince Isaret stayed on the island and ordered Chuang Bunnag to attack Hà Tiên. Chuang Bunnag led the Siamese brigantines to attack Hà Tiên and sent a Cambodian force to take Cô Tô Mountain. The Siamese artillery shelled Hà Tiên intensely. Đoàn Văn Sách, the defender of Hà Tiên, reinforced the city, which did not fall. After a whole week of attacks, Chuang Bunnag was still unable to take Hà Tiên. Chuang then visited Prince Isaret at Phú Quốc, who decided to retreat because of the overwhelming Vietnamese numbers and the unfavorable winds. The Vietnamese had defended against the Siamese in the . Nguyễn Tri Phương led the Vietnamese forces to defeat the Siamese-Khmer army at the . Prince Isaret and Chuang Bunnag then led the Siamese forces to return to Chanthaburi.[1]

On the An Giang Front, Chao Phraya Yommaraj Bunnag and Prince Ang Duong had led 12,000 Siamese soldiers in January 1842 to take the Vĩnh Tế Canal and An Giang Province and penetrated into Hậu Giang Province. Nguyễn Công Nhân was unable to repel the Siamese attacks, and Thiệu Trị sent Tôn Thất Nghị with reinforcements. Phạm Văn Điển, the governor of the An Giang and Hà Tiên Provinces, had joined to defend An Giang but died of illness in April 1842.[14]

In April, the Vietnamese launched an counterattack which pushed the Siamese back. The Siamese were defeated at Châu Đốc, suffered heavy losses, and retreated to Phnom Penh. About 1,200 Thai and 2,000 Cambodian soldiers of the Siamese army were killed. Yommaraj himself was wounded and one of his son dead, and the Vietnamese stopped the pursuit.[15] Nguyễn Công Nhân was made new governor of An Giang and Hà Tiên Provinces.[5]

Interbellum (1842–1845)[]

Famine and diseases ravaged Cambodia from 1842 to 1843, and the war came to a halt since both warring parties had been exhausted of manpower and resources.

Prince Ang Duong and his guardian Phra Promborrirak retreated to Oudong and were supported by Bodindecha at Battambang. Prince Ang Em had come from Huế and joined Nguyễn Tri Phương at Châu Đốc. However, Prince Ang Em died in March 1843 and lefy only Princess Ang Mey under Vietnamese control. Bodindecha abandoned Phnom Penh and returned to Bangkok in 1845.[1]

Vietnamese offensives of 1845[]

The Siamese campaigns of 1841 had failed to bring about lasting peace but greatly devastated and depopulated large areas of central, south, and southeastern Cambodia, which antagonized many Cambodians. By 1845, several noblemen in Prince Ang Duong's court expressed their desire to seek an allegiance with Vietnam, rather than Siam. Emperor Thiệu Trị launched an offensive into Cambodia in three groups[16] with Võ Văn Giải, the governor of Gia Định Province and Biên Hòa Province as supreme commander. Nguyễn Văn Hoàng, the admiral of An Giang, led a Vietnamese fleet from Tân Châu upstream the Bassac River to attack Ba Phnum. Doãn Uẩn, the commander of An Giang, would proceed through Kampong Trabaek District. Both armies would meet at Ba Phnum and jointly attack Phnom Penh. The fleet, led by Nguyễn Công Nhân from Tây Ninh, would follow and reinforce the first two armies.[5]

After Prince Ang Duong had the outspoken Vietnamese sympathizers at his court executed in May 1845, the armies began to advance. Nguyễn Văn Hoàng marched along the Bassac River and, after he had defeated a Cambodian contingent at Preak Sambour, proceeded to Ba Phnum. Doãn Uẩn captured Kampong Trabaek and set up camp at Khsach Sa. Bodindecha hurriedly marched via Battambang to Oudong to defend the capital.

Nguyễn Văn Hoàng and Doãn Uẩn converged at Ba Phnum. Võ Văn Giải arrived from Saigon at Ba Phum to command forces and Nguyễn Tri Phương led reinforcement troops from Châu Đốc to Ba Phnum. Nguyễn Tri Phương and Doãn Uẩn attacked Phnom Penh in September 1845. Phnom Penh was defended by Phra Promborrirak, Bodindecha's son and 5,000 Siamese troops. Nguyễn Tri Phương managed to capture Phnom Penh, and the Thai suffered 600 killed while 1,400 Cambodians were killed.[17] Phra Promborrirak and the Siamese forces retreated to Oudong.[18]

Nguyễn Văn Chương led about 20,000 Vietnamese troops and 1,000 warships, divided into many smaller forces, expected to attack and besiege Oudong from all directions, which was defended by Bodindecha and Duong.[19] Meanwhile Thieu Tri escorted Queen Mey and the Cambodian regalia back to Phnom Penh, planning in order to gain support from the Cambodian population. Nguyễn Tri Phương was stationed at Ponhea Leu, south of Oudong, and Doãn Uẩn was stationed at Kampong Luong, to the north.

The Vietnamese commander, Chương, suddenly fell very ill as the Vietnamese capturing the port of Kampong Luong on the Tonle Sap River in October. Therefore he ordered the army to retreat and cancelled the campaign. Other units began panicking and being demoralised, and the Thai attacked them in Kampong Luong, taking many casualties and prisoners.[20] In December, after some minor clashes between Siamese-Cambodian forces with the Vietnamese command in Kampong Luong, both sides agreed to negotiate.[21] Doãn Uẩn requested for Prince Ang Duong to send a mission to Huế, to apologize, and to submit to Vietnamese rule. After five months, Nguyễn Tri Phương and Doãn Uẩn lifted the siege and returned to Phnom Penh in November 1845.[1]

Aftermath[]

The Vietnamese had to send repeated letters to Ang Duong at Oudong, urge him to submit to Vietnamese rule, and promise to return the Cambodian royal hostages, including his mother. However, Prince Ang Duong and Bodindecha remained silent. Only after the Vietnamese had sent an ultimatum in October 1846 was an agreement finally reached in January 1847. Prince Ang Duong would be crowned King, and tributes would be submitted to both courts at Bangkok and Huế. The Cambodian courtiers and princesses returned to Oudong. Prince Ang Doung sent letters to Emperor Thiệu Trị at Huế, who invested him as King of Cambodia. In January 1848, King Rama III also officially invested Ang Duong as King of Cambodia.

Later, in 1858, a Vietnamese ship along with twenty one crew[22] was blown off course and landed in Bangkok. The Siamese court under King Mongkut then arranged the Vietnamese crew to board a Chinese ship to return to Saigon. Nguyễn Tri Phương, who was then the superintendent of six provinces in Cochinchina, sent a formal letter to Chao Phraya Sri Suriyawongse asking for the return of Vietnamese captives from the war ten years earlier. Sri Suriyawongse replied that those Vietnamese were already settled down in Siam and he instead returned seized arquebuses and ammunition[22] to Nguyễn Tri Phương.

When King Ang Duong of Cambodia died in 1860, a succession dispute arose between his three sons: Norodom, Sisowath and Si Votha, leading to a civil war in Cambodia in 1861. King Mongkut then sent Siamese officials to placate the Cambodian succession dispute,[22] reaffirming Siamese influence over Cambodia until the formation of French protectorate of Cambodia in 1863. The Vietnamese, being engaged in the war with the French, did not intervene.

The peace that had ended the war lasted until the French colonial empire established the French protectorate of Cambodia in 1863.[1]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Kiernan, Ben (17 February 2017). Viet Nam: A History from Earliest Times to the Present. Oxford University Press. pp. 283–. ISBN 978-0-19-062729-4.
  2. ^ Schliesinger, Joachim (2017). The Chong People: A Pearic-Speaking Group of Southeastern Thailand and Their Kin in the Region. Booksmango. pp. 106–. ISBN 978-1-63323-988-3.
  3. ^ Childs Kohn, George (2013). "Siamese-Vietnamese War of 1841–45". Dictionary of Wars. Taylor & Francis. pp. 646–. ISBN 978-1-135-95501-4.
  4. ^ Hirakawa, Sachiko (2004). "Siamese-Vietnamese Wars". In Bradford, James C. (ed.). International Encyclopedia of Military History. Routledge. pp. 1235–. ISBN 978-1-135-95034-7.
  5. ^ a b c d e Vũ Đức Liêm. "Vietnam at the Khmer Frontier: Boundary Politics, 1802–1847" (PDF). Hanoi National University of Education. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  6. ^ Rungswasdisab, Puangthong (1995). War and trade: Siamese interventions in Cambodia 1767–1851 (PhD). University of Wollongong. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
  7. ^ Nolan, Cathal J. (2002). "Thailand". The Greenwood Encyclopedia of International Relations. ISBN 9780313323836. Retrieved November 21, 2015.
  8. ^ Vickery, Michael (1996). "Mak Phœun : Histoire du Cambodge de la fin du XVIe au début du XVIIIe siècle" (PDF). Bulletin de l'École française d'Extrême-Orient. 83: 405–415. Retrieved July 2, 2020. At the time of the invasion one group of the royal family, the reigning king and two or more princes, escaped and eventually found refuge in Laos, while another group, the king's brother and his sons, were taken as hostages to Ayutthaya.
  9. ^ Vickery, Michael (2011). "'1620', A Cautionary Tale" (PDF). In Aung-Thwin, Michael Arthur; Hall, Kenneth R. (eds.). New Perspectives on the History and Historiography of Southeast Asia, Continuing Explorations. London: Routledge. pp. 157–166. Retrieved July 2, 2020. Cambodia had quickly recovered from an Ayutthayan invasion of Lovek in 1593–94
  10. ^ "พระตะบอง เสียมเรียบ ศรีโสภณ "รอยสยาม" และ "สามจังหวัด"กัมพูชา".
  11. ^ Bun Srun Theam (1981). Cambodia in the Mid-Nineteenth Century: A Quest for Survival, 1840-1863 (PDF) (MA). Canberra: Australian National University. Retrieved July 2, 2020.
  12. ^ Schliesinger, Joachim (2017). Chanthaburi City: An Ancient, Multiethnic and Significant Municipality in Southeastern Thailand. Booksmango. pp. 80–. ISBN 978-1-63323-987-6.
  13. ^ Martin, Marie Alexandrine (1994). Cambodia: A Shattered Society. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-07052-3.
  14. ^ "Đại Nam 3 lần đánh bại Xiêm La như thế nào? (Phần 2)".
  15. ^ Thiphakarawong 1961, p. 70, vol. II.
  16. ^ "Đại Nam 3 lần đánh bại Xiêm La như thế nào? (Phần 3)".
  17. ^ Kulap 1971, p. 1054.
  18. ^ Thiphakarawong 1961, p. 100, vol. II.
  19. ^ Kulap 1971, p. 1056–1058.
  20. ^ Kulap 1971, p. 1058.
  21. ^ Thiphakarawong 1961, p. 101, vol. II.
  22. ^ a b c Thipakornwongse, Chao Phraya (1965). The Dynastic Chronicles Bangkok Era the Fourth Reign B.E. 2394-2411 (A.S. 1851-1868). Centre for East Asian Cultural Studies.

Further reading[]

  • Thiphakarawong, Chaophraya (1961), Phraratchaphongsawadan Krung Ratanakosin Ratchakan Thi 3 (Royal Chronicle of the Third Reign of the Bangkok Dynasty)
  • Kulap, K.S.R. (1971), Anam-Sayain yudh (Vietnam-Siam Wars)
  • Economic Equality and Victory in War: An Empirical Investigation
  • 1825–1849
  • Trần Trọng Kim, Việt Nam sử lược, Nxb Tân Việt, Sài Gòn, 1964
  • Sơn Nam, Lịch sử An Giang, NXB Tổng hợp An Giang, 1988.
  • Sơn Nam, Lịch sử khẩn hoang Miền Nam. Nxb Văn nghệ TP. HCM, 1994.
  • Phạm Văn Sơn, Việt sử tân biên, Quyển 4. Tủ sách Sử học Việt Nam, sài Gòn, 1961.
  • Hoàng Văn Lân & Ngô Thị Chính, Lịch sử Việt Nam (1858– cuối XIX), Q. 3, Tập 2. Nxb Giáo dục, 1979.
  • Phạm Việt Trung – Nguyễn Xuân Kỳ – Đỗ Văn Nhung, Lịch sử Campuchia. Nxb Đại học và Trung học chuyên nghiệp, 1981.
  • Liêm, Vũ Đức (2017). "Vietnam at the Khmer Frontier: Boundary Politics, 1802–1847". Cross-Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review. 5 (2): 534–564. doi:10.1353/ach.2016.0018. Retrieved 14 February 2019.