Nan Chao (น่านเจ้า, 南诏)
Thai-Chinese name of a well-organized, quasi military polity, that
flourished during the 8th and 9th centuries, in what is now part of
southern China
and northern Southeast Asia. It was centred around present-day
Yunnan and made up of an enormous variety of ethnic
and linguistic groups, including a mixture of
Tai and
Miao-Yao
people, who inhabited the southeastern part of that region. When the
Chinese of the Han Dynasty in the 2nd century AD moved westward in
their quest to open land communication with India, they took control
over the region and absorbed it in their kingdom. They called the
bewildering assortment of people that they found there mán (蛮),
which means ‘barbarians’. The western and southwestern part of that
region was inhabited by another group of people, with a much darker
skin and who spoke a vernacular belonging to the linguistic group of
Tibeto-Burman languages. Due to their darker complexion, the latter
were referred to as wū mán (乌蛮), i.e. ‘black barbarians’, and it was
this group of people who in the 7th century formed the basis around
which the state of Nan Chao was formed. After the fall of the Han
Dynasty in the 3rd century, China became divided into the
Three Kingdoms, each headed by an
emperor who claimed legitimate succession from the Han Dynasty, and
Chinese control over the Yunnan region faded. It was not until the
first half of the 7th century, that the Chinese under the Tang
Dynasty regained control over about half of Yunnan, their rule
extending as far as the
Mekhong River, but soon after they were put
on the defensive against an expanding Tibet and abandoned their
attempts of direct rule in the region, now shifting to alliances
with local principalities. One such ally was
Pí Luō Gé (皮罗阁), in
Thai also known as Khun Borom (ขุนบรม), who in the 730s united six
small states in western Yunnan under his rule, which in 738 gained
Chinese recognition as Nan Chao, literally ‘Jurisdiction
of a
Chao’
or ‘Territory
of a Prince’.
In 739 a first capital is established at T'ai-ho or Tài Huó (大和). Though relations with China were friendly at first, they rapidly
deteriorated in the 750s, under Pí Luō Gé's son, Gé Luō Fèng (阁罗凤).
Nan Chao's growing power eventually resulted in outright rebellion
against the Tang Dynasty, who between 752 and
754 in retaliation sent up to four Chinese armies against Nan Chao, which were each
time defeated by the armies of Gé Luō Fèng. After this, Nan Chao
extended its control over the rest of Yunnan and into Burma,
northern Laos and northern Thailand, and when Chinese pressure
eased, the foundations of the new empire were firmly consolidated
and a secondary capital was established at present-day Kunming. The Nan Chao Kingdom flourished for almost 2
centuries, until it began slowly to decline towards
the end of the 9th century, due to new
developments in the region, and in 902, the Nan Chao Dynasty was
overthrown. Nan Chao is considered the cultural precursor of the
later Kingdom of
Yonok in present-day northern Thailand. Note that Nan Chao
rulers followed a patronymic linkage system of their names, in which
the first Chinese character of each ruler's name is the same as the
last character of his father's name, or in other words (and for the
names in transliteration) the last syllable of each king's name is
the same as the first syllable of the name of his son. This pattern
is common among peoples of the Tibeto-Burman language group, but
unknown among the Tai, hence suggesting that the influence of the
Tai in Nan Chao history is probably less significant than is
sometimes claimed. In the lineage of the Nan Chao Dynasty, this
pattern of patronymic linkage was only on occasion interrupted,
because the rulers in question were not an immediate or direct
foreseeable heir to the throne and became king under special
circumstances. This was the case with Yán Gé (炎阁), who was a
grandson of a former king; Shèng Luó Pí (盛逻皮), who was the younger
brother of a king and was preceded by Yán Gé; and with Shì Lóng
(世隆), who was the son of a king, who himself had succeeded two of
his brothers.
Alternatively transcribed Nanzhao and also spelled Nanchao.
See List of NAN CHAO KINGS. 回
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