Lan Xang

Kingdom of Lan Xang
ລ້ານຊ້າງ
1354–1707
 

 

1400 CE
Teal: Lan Xang
Purple: Lanna
Orange: Sukhothai Kingdom
Blue Violet: Ayutthaya Kingdom
Red: Khmer Empire
Yellow: Champa
Blue: Dai Viet
Capital Luang Phrabang, Later Vientiane (Viang Chan)
Language(s) Lao
Religion Buddhism
Government Monarchy
King
 - 1354-1385 Fa Ngum
 - 1373–1416 Samsenethai
 - 1548–1571 Setthathirath
 - 1637-1694 Sourigna Vongsa
Historical era Middle Ages and Renaissance
 - Founded by Fa Gnum 1354
 - Kingdom split 1707
History of Laos

This article is part of a series
Early history of Laos
Lan Xang (1353–1707)
Dark ages of Laos (1707–1893)
Kingdom of Luang Phrabang (1707–1949)
Kingdom of Vientiane (1707–1828)
Principality of Phuan (1707–1949)
Kingdom of Champasak (1713–1946)
Colonial era
French rule and colonial administration (1893–1953)
Lao Issara (1945–49)
Modern era
Post-independence Laos (1953–75)
Pathet Lao
North Vietnamese Invasion
Laotian Civil War (1953–75)
Communist Laos (1975–present)
Insurgency in Laos (since 1975)

Laos Portal

The Lao kingdom of Lan Xang Hom Kao (Lao: ລ້ານຊ້າງ lâansâang - ລ້ານ "million" + ຊ້າງ "elephant"+ "Under the White Parasol"; Pali: शिसत्तनखनहुत्, Sisattanakhanahut; Burmese: လင်းဇင်း, IPA: [lɪ́ɴzɪ́ɴ]; Vietnamese: Vạn Tượng) was established in 1354 by Fa Ngum.

Exiled as an infant to Cambodia, Prince Fa Ngum of Xieng Dong Xieng Thong married a daughter of the Khmer king. In 1349 he set out from Angkor at the head of a 10,000-man army to establish his own country. Fa Ngum organized conquered principalities into provinces (muang), claimed the crown of Xieng Dong Xieng Thong from his Uncle, in June 1354 now with an army of more than 50,000 soilders was crowned ruler of Lan Xang at Vientiane, the site of one of his victory of Phay Nam. The "million elephants under the white parasol" of the kingdom's name alluded to his formidable war machine. The Kingdom of Lan Xang extended from the borders of China south to Sambor below the Mekong rapids at Khong Island, and from the Vietnamese border to the western escarpment of the Khorat Plateau. It was thus one of the largest kingdoms in Southeast Asia.

The early years of Fa Ngum's rule were uneventful. However, the next six years (1362 to 1368) were troubled by conflict between Fa Ngum's Mahayana Buddhism and the region's traditional Theravada Buddhism. He severely repressed popular agitation and had many temples torn down. In 1368 Fa Ngum's Khmer wife died. He then married a daughter of the king of Ayutthaya, who seems to have had a pacifying influence on her husband. She was instrumental in welcoming a religious and artistic mission that brought a carved figure of the Buddha, the Phra Bang, for which the capital was renamed Luang Prabang. Popular resentment continued to build, however, and in 1373 Fa Ngum withdrew to Muang Nan. His son, Oun Heuan, who had been in exile in southern Yunnan, returned and assumed the regency of the kingdom his father had created. Oun Heuan a peaceful ruler unlike his father succeeded Fa Ngum on his death in 1393, calling himself King Samsenethai (300,000 Thai), ending Mongol overlordship of the middle Mekong Valley.

The kingdom of Lan Xang, made up of Lao, Tai, and various ethnic hill tribes, lasted for another 600 years and briefly reached an even greater extent in the northwest. Fa Ngum's descendants remained on the throne for almost 600 years after his death. They maintained the independence of Lan Xang to the end of the 17th century by a complex network of vassal relations with lesser princes. At the same time, the rulers fought off invasions from Vietnam (1478-79), Siam (1536), and Burma (1571-1621).

In 1694, a series of rival princes fought for the throne, and in 1707 the country split into three kingdoms: Luang Prabang, Vientiane, and Champasak, several attempts by Vientiane to unite the Lao Kingdoms were prevented by Siamese intervention, as a result of being three splintered Kingdoms, all three ended up paying tribute to Siam. Muang Phuan enjoyed a semi-independent status as a result of having been annexed by a Vietnamese army in the 15th century, an action that set a precedent for a tributary relationship with the court of Viet Nam at Hué.

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