Principality of Thuận Thành
Panduranga under Nguyễn Lord's protectorate / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Principality of Thuận Thành, commonly known to the Cham as Pänduranga or Prangdarang,[2] neologism Panduranga Champa, was the last Cham state that centered around the modern day city of Phan Rang in south-central Vietnam. Both Thuận Thành of Vietnamese perspectives and Panduranga were mutually used to refer to the last Cham polity. The decline and fading of Champa did not happen in a short period. Instead, for a long period from the late 17th century to 1832, Panduranga had been confined as an ad hoc client state of various Vietnamese dominions, but still maintained its faint independence. After a Cham revolt in 1692–94 and pressures from Cham king Po Saktiraydapatih, Southern Vietnamese lord Nguyễn Phúc Chu abolished his annexation of Panduranga and revived the Champa kingdom under the byname of Trấn Thuận Thành or the Principality of Thuận Thành, effectively made it a client state of the Nguyễn domain throughout the 18th century. Constant upheavals, social unrest, and the Tay Son rebellion in Dai Viet overthrew the ruling Nguyen and Trinh domains and Le dynasty during the late 18th century, and as long civil wars between Vietnamese factions raged, the principality of Thuận Thành continued to survive until summer 1832 when Vietnamese emperor Minh Mang annexed and incorporated the kingdom of Thuận Thành into his territory, decisively marking the final demise of the millennial Champa Kingdoms.[3]
Principality of Thuận Thành | |||||||||
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1695–1832 | |||||||||
Capital | Phan Rí 11°10′26″N 108°33′58″E | ||||||||
Common languages | Cham (Akhar Thrah & Jawi) Malay Chru Roglai Vietnamese | ||||||||
Religion | Cham folk religion, Hinduism (Cham Balamon), Shiite Bani Islam, Sunni Islam, Buddhism | ||||||||
Government | Monarchy under Vietnamese overlordship, then Selective monarchy (1793–1832) | ||||||||
King | |||||||||
• 1695–1727 | Po Saktiraydapatih | ||||||||
• 1828–1832 (last Cham ruler) | Po Phaok The | ||||||||
Historical era | Early modern | ||||||||
• Established | 1695 | ||||||||
• Absorbed into Empire of Vietnam | 1832 | ||||||||
• Neo-Champa (Ja Thak Wa and Po War Palei) | 1834–35 | ||||||||
Population | |||||||||
• 1750 | 500,000 | ||||||||
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Today part of | Vietnam |