emperor of Vietnam
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Also known as: Minh Menh, Nguyen Phuoc Chi Dam
Also spelled:
Minh Menh
Original name:
Nguyen Phuoc Chi Dam
Born:
May 24, 1792, Saigon [now Ho Chi Minh City], Vietnam
Died:
Jan. 11/21, 1841, Hue
Title / Office:
emperor (1820-1841), Vietnam
House / Dynasty:
Nguyen dynasty
Notable Family Members:
father Gia Long

Minh Mang (born May 24, 1792, Saigon [now Ho Chi Minh City], Vietnam—died Jan. 11/21, 1841, Hue) was an emperor (1820–41) of central Vietnam who was known for his anti-Western policies, especially his persecution of Christian missionaries.

Prince Chi Dam was the fourth son of Emperor Gia Long (reigned 1802–20) and his favourite concubine and thus was not in line for the throne. He was chosen by Gia Long as his successor, however, because of his outspoken criticism of Europeans. Chi Dam took the reign name Minh Mang.

Napoleon Bonaparte. Napoleon in Coronation Robes or Napoleon I Emperor of France, 1804 by Baron Francois Gerard or Baron Francois-Pascal-Simon Gerard, from the Musee National, Chateau de Versailles.
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As a strict Confucian, Minh Mang believed that Christian doctrine undermined the basic principles of Vietnamese religious and political life, especially the worship of and obedience to the emperor as a divine emissary. In the early years of his reign he induced French missionaries to move from their posts to the capital at Hue, claiming that he needed interpreters. To persuade them to relinquish their proselytizing efforts, he conferred mandarin degrees upon them. As new priests arrived and refused to give up their missions, however, Minh Mang barred the entry of additional Christian missionaries (1825) and subsequently forbade the preaching of Christian doctrine; he also had the missionaries imprisoned. In response to pleas for moderation, Minh Mang consented to allow the priests to board a ship bound for Europe, but instead the freed missionaries returned secretly to their posts.

Because of his tenuous claim to the throne, Minh Mang felt the threat of pretenders who were soliciting help from the French for his overthrow. He also doubted the loyalty of his own people; though not indifferent to the plight of the peasants, he produced little land or social reform. Rebellion broke out in Saigon in 1833, and, when its leaders requested and received help from the Christian mission, Minh Mang was enraged and began active persecution of the Christians. He ordered the execution of the Reverend François Gagelin (Oct. 17, 1833); seven European missionaries were killed in the years to come, as were great numbers of native converts. Minh Mang’s actions served as an excuse for France to invade Vietnam in 1858 so as to ensure the safety of French citizens.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.