Nông Văn Vân's Rebellion

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Date1833–1835
Location
northern highland of Red River (Cao Bằng, Thái Nguyên, Lạng Sơn Provinces), Dai Nam
Result Rebellion suppressed
Nông Văn Vân's Rebellion
Date1833–1835
Location
northern highland of Red River (Cao Bằng, Thái Nguyên, Lạng Sơn Provinces), Dai Nam
Result Rebellion suppressed
Belligerents
Anti-government ethnic minorities and peasants
Chinese miners
Vietnamese court
Commanders and leaders
Nông Văn Vân 
Lê Văn Khoa 
Huang Alian
Zhao Wenzhao
Nong Yagao (POW)
Minh Mạng
Nguyễn Công Trứ
Strength
7,000 rebels
5,000 Han Chinese, Tày and Nùng mine workers
Unknown
Casualties and losses
Unknown Unknown

The Nông Văn Vân Rebellion was an armed mass-movement of ethnic minorities and immigrant workers in Cao Bằng Province, near the border with China, against the government of Emperor Minh Mạng (r. 1820–1841) of Dai Nam (as Vietnam was known then), from 1833 to 1835.

The tho ty (tusi) system along the Sino-Vietnamese borders had existed since its establishment by king Lê Lợi in 1428, awarded autonomy and honors to ethnic minorities clans that who have long support to the Vietnamese royal family. When Emperor Minh Mạng abolished the tho ty in 1829 during his administrative reforms, along with the assimilation program, these chiefs were worried about being lost their traditional privileges and autonomy.[1]

The Nong family was an influential Tày clan in the Sino-Vietnamese mountains that has origins that can be traced back to the 11th century Nung hero Nung Tri Cao. For a long time, they were allies of the House of Lê, the ruling dynasty of Dai Viet from the 15th to 18th century. As Minh Mạng tightened control over the tribal highland and its private mines, Nông Văn Vân, a Tày chieftain, took strong opposition to the emperor's policy.

Rebellion

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References

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