Champa Wins Independence from Dai Viet
The historical narrative of Champa's independence from Dai Viet highlights a complex relationship between the Cham people and the Vietnamese, rooted in cultural and territorial conflicts. The Chams, believed to have migrated from regions like Java and Malaysia, established a kingdom along the coast of what is now central and southern Vietnam. Culturally influenced by Indian civilization, the Chams developed a distinct identity that set them apart from the Chinese-influenced Vietnamese.
Champa's journey to independence saw it oscillate between periods of conflict and temporary alliances with the Vietnamese. Notably, in the early 1300s, despite being declared a province of Dai Viet following military defeat, Champa experienced a resurgence under King Che Anan, who successfully resisted Vietnamese control from 1323 to 1326. This period marked a revival of Champa’s autonomy, allowing it to flourish culturally and politically amidst the decline of the Vietnamese Tran Dynasty.
However, the resurgence was short-lived, as internal strife and external pressures led to a decline in Cham power. By the mid-15th century, Vietnamese forces had decisively defeated Champa, culminating in the loss of significant territories. Today, the descendants of the Chams continue to exist as a minority in Vietnam, reflecting a legacy of a once-thriving Southeast Asian civilization. The history of Champa serves as a poignant reminder of the dynamic interactions and enduring complexities of regional identities in Southeast Asia.
Champa Wins Independence from Dai Viet
Date 1323-1326
Locale Central Vietnam
The successful rebellion by the king of Champa and his subsequent ability to resist Vietnamese military efforts to reinstall their rule is a significant episode in the more than fifteen hundred years of strife between the Vietnamese and Cham people that would end much later with the utter defeat of the Chams.
Key Figures
Tran Nhan Tong (1258-1308), emperor of Vietnam, r. 1278-1293Tran Anh Tong (1266-1320), emperor of Vietnam, r. 1293-1314Tran Minh Tong (d. 1358), emperor of Vietnam, r. 1314-1329Jaya Sinhavarman III (Che Man, d. 1307), king of Champa, r. 1288-1307Huyen Tran (fl. fourteenth century), sister of Tran Anh Tong, married to King Jaya Sinhavarman III in 1306Jaya Sinhavarman IV (Che Chi; d. 1313), king of Champa, r. 1307-1312Che Nang (fl. fourteenth century), Vietnamese-installed vassal king of Champa, r. 1312-1318Che Anan (d. 1342), king of Champa, r. 1318-1342Che Bong Nga (d. 1390), king of Champa, r. 1360-1390
Summary of Event
From the moment the Chams entered recorded history in the first century, they were in conflict with the Vietnamese then living under Chinese rule in northern Vietnam. Most Chams are believed to have migrated from Java and Malaysia to the coast of south and central Vietnam, where they settled and intermarried with the indigenous Rhade and Jarai people of the central Vietnamese highlands. Culturally, the Chams were thoroughly Indianized, like their neighbors in Cambodia and Thailand to the west. Their Indianized culture set the Chams apart from the Chinese-influenced Vietnamese culture.
Apart from surviving inscriptions on Cham monuments, what is known of Cham history comes from Chinese and Vietnamese sources and thus has to be evaluated with caution.
The kingdom of Champa was founded by a group who rebelled against Chinese rule in 192, and it was known as Lin-yi by the Chinese and Lam Ap by the Vietnamese. After 875, the Vietnamese called the Cham the Chiem Thanh. At the height of its power in the tenth century, the kingdom of Champa stretched over a coastal area ranging south from the Gate of Annam north of modern Da Nang up to Cape Vung Tau just east of modern Ho Chi Minh City. The Chinese and Vietnamese considered the Cham fierce barbarians and pirates, but with a reputation for cleanliness.
When the Vietnamese gained independence from China in 939, their conflict with the Chams continued. In 982, the Vietnamese emperor Le Dai Hanh captured and destroyed the Cham capital of Indrapura, near the modern Vietnamese city of Quang Nam. Although the Chams would rebuild the city, intermittent warfare with the Vietnamese continued. In 1054, the Vietnamese emperor renamed his nation Dai Viet (“great land of the Vietnamese”), a name that would remain official until the nineteenth century.
In 1070, the victorious Vietnamese obtained the three northernmost provinces of Champa. They ranged south up to the modern city of Quong Tri, near where Vietnam would be partitioned into North Vietnam and South Vietnam from 1945 to 1976. This Vietnamese conquest cemented the enmity of the two people for centuries to come.
In the early 1200’, Champa was occupied by the Khmer of Cambodia. After gaining independence again in 1220, the kingdom of Champa experienced renewed warfare with the Vietnamese. However, in 1252, when Mongol invaders from the north suddenly threatened both peoples, the Chams and Vietnamese united to defeat the Mongols, and their relationship became friendly.
In 1301, the former Vietnamese emperor Tran Nhan Tong visited the king of Champa, Jaya Sinhavarman III. The former emperor promised the king of Champa his daughter, beautiful princess Huyen Tran, as the king’s fifth wife. Princess Huyen was the sister of the current Vietnamese emperor, Tran Anh Tong, the son in whose favor Tran Nhan Tong had abdicated, as was the custom of Vietnam’s Tran Dynasty (1225-1400). The Vietnamese debated the promise of their former emperor until 1306; their reluctance to let a Vietnamese princess marry a Cham “barbarian” was overcome only when the king of Champa agreed to cede to Vietnam two more northern Champa provinces, which included the modern cities of Hue and Da Nang.
One year after his 1306 wedding, King Jaya Sinhavarman III died. Cham aristocratic custom demanded that his young wife kill herself to be burned with her husband on his funeral pyre. The princess refused to do so, and the Vietnamese court sided with her. Her former Vietnamese lover went into Champa and rescued her. This incensed the Chams, and war broke out.
In 1312, the Vietnamese sent a punitive expedition to Champa. The new king, Jaya Sinhavarman IV, was captured and died in captivity near modern-day Hanoi. The Vietnamese formally declared the kingdom of Champa a province of Dai Viet. They replaced the king with his brother, Che Nang. Che Nang had to agree to reign as a “vassal prince of the second rank” in the service of the Vietnamese emperor, and Cham independence came to a temporary end.
In 1314, Che Nang rebelled against his Vietnamese masters but was defeated and fled to his mother in Java, Indonesia. The Vietnamese installed Che Anan as their viceroy in Champa. By 1323, Che Anan also had rebelled against the Vietnamese and refused to pay tribute. Emperor Tran Minh Tong, who had succeeded his father who had abdicated in 1314, sent troops south to subdue the Chams. However, the Chams fought off the Vietnamese. By 1326, Tran Minh Tong had abandoned the military effort against the Chams, who no longer recognized Vietnamese rule and no longer paid tribute. Thus, Champa had regained its independence from Dai Viet, which it had formally lost in 1312.
Significance
King Che Anan’s stubborn defeat of all Vietnamese forces sent against him from 1323 to 1326 ushered in a new era of Champa’s revival. For a while, it looked as if Champa could retain its national and cultural independence from its Vietnamese enemies to the north. Although the next Vietnamese emperor claimed in an inscription carved into a huge mountain rock facing Laos that the royal heirs of Champa paid homage to him, this claim seems rather suspect to modern historians. There is evidence that Champa remained independent of Dai Viet and flourished.
Che Anan’s successor failed to win back the provinces lost to the Vietnamese in 1070 and 1306, but he defeated all Vietnamese attempts to reimpose their rule in Champa. As Vietnam’s Tran Dynasty declined, the Chams gained even more power.
When Che Bong Nga became king of Champa in 1360, he renewed warfare with the Vietnamese. Beginning in 1371, he plundered the Vietnamese capital of Thang Long (near modern-day Hanoi) three times. He terrorized the Vietnamese all over their country, killing their emperor in battle in 1377. A year later, Champa had recovered all five provinces once lost to Vietnam. Its power seemed unstoppable. However, Che Bong Nga died in 1390. Some accounts speak of his death in a naval battle, others relate that he was poisoned.
With Che Bong Nga’s death, Champa’s good fortunes came to an end. By 1401, the Vietnamese had recaptured the five northern provinces and conquered the royal Cham city of Indrapura. The Cham revival that had begun with regained independence in 1323-1326 could thrive only while Vietnam was weakened by internal dynastic decay, and Champa blossomed under its warrior king Che Bong Nga. Later, the Vietnamese would prove victorious.
In 1407, a Vietnamese fleet was poised to take the Cham capital of Vijaya, near modern-day Qui Nhon. It had to turn back only because Vietnam faced invasion by the Chinese. After a brief time of Chinese rule, from 1407 to 1428, Vietnam renewed its struggle with Champa. In 1446, Vijaya was taken, and war ended with total Vietnamese victory over Champa in 1471. The Chams lost much of their land. In the early nineteenth century, their remaining state was erased by the Vietnamese. As of the early twenty-first century, about sixty thousand descendants of the Champa lived as a minority in Vietnam. Theirs is a lost empire of Southeast Asia, with archaeological evidence speaking of its past history.
Bibliography
Chapuis, Oscar. A History of Vietnam. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1995. Discusses the events in detail from both a Champa and a Vietnamese point of view. Very readable. Maps, bibliography, and index.
Hall, Daniel George. A History of Southeast Asia. 4th ed. London: Macmillan Press, 1981. Still a standard work on the period. Chapter 8 surveys the history of Champa, chapter 9 that of Vietnam, from the beginnings to the sixteenth century. Illustrations, maps, bibliography, and index.
Huard, Pierre, and Maurice Durand. Viet Nam: Civilization and Culture. Translated by Vu Thiěn Kim. 2d ed. Hanoi: Ecole Française d’Extrěme-Orient, 1994. General overview of the event from a Vietnamese perspective. Contains a general historic survey and much background on Vietnamese culture through the ages, richly illustrated.
Raj, Hans. History of South-East Asia. Delhi, India: Surjeet Publishers, 2002. Comprehensive account incorporating fresh historical, archaeological, and anthropological research and insights. Maps, bibliography, and index.