Ethnic origin of Kinh in Vietnam

Introduction

The history of the Vietnamese Kinh is very similar to the Han Chinese colonization of southern China i.e. south of Yangtze River. This history can be broken up into four major waves of Han Chinese immigration for easier understanding.

First wave (214-110 BC) - Founding kingdom

The first wave of Han Chinese came when the Qin emperor conquered Lingnan (Guangdong, Guangxi, northern Vietnam) in 214 BC by sending 500,000 military troops and 30,000 Han Chinese women to help them.
Painting of Han Chinese meeting Baiyue

Northern Vietnam was under the Xiang commandery shown in the Qin dynasty map below.
Qin dynasty map

Zhao Tuo (趙佗) aka Trieu Da was the deputy Qin general who brought Vietnam under China’s control. He was an ethnic Han Chinese born in Hebei province. When the Qin dynasty collapsed, he seized the opportunity to have his own independent kingdom in 204 BC which he named Nanyue aka Nam Viet. He encouraged intermarriages between the Han Chinese soldiers and the native Tai-Kadai women.
Statue of Zhao Tuo 

In the 'Historical records of Great Viet' (Dai Viet su ky) written by royal historian Le Van Huu in 1272 AD, Nam Viet kingdom was viewed as the legitimate starting point and Trieu Da was described as the first emperor of Vietnam.

Second wave (111 BC - 938 AD) - Province of China

The second wave began when Han dynasty annexed Nanyue in 111 BC and Vietnam became Jiaozhi commandery of China. This wave was much bigger and tended to represent more of the mainstream of Han society than the first wave who were mostly military troops.

Xi Guang was the governor of Jiaozhi commandery from 1-25 AD. When Xi Guang refused to recognize Wang Mang (王莽) usurpation of the Han dynasty (from 9-23 AD), Jiaozhi commandery became a haven for Chinese refugees which included Han officials and merchants.

Wang Mang usurped the Han dynasty emperor

The Trung (征) sisters ie. Trung Trac and Trung Nhi who were ethnic Tai natives rebelled against the Han dynasty in 40 AD and managed to rule most of North Vietnam from 40-43 AD. 

Statue of Trung sisters

General Ma Yuan (馬援) was sent to quell the rebellion in 43 AD. Once the Trung sisters' rebellion was put down, Ma Yuan executed thousands of the Trungs' supporters. Many Han Chinese soldiers remained in the area to insure China's dominance over the lands around Hanoi. 
Statue of General Ma Yuan

Emperor Guangwu (光武皇帝) (25-57 AD) of Han dynasty even sent Han Chinese settlers from other parts of China to dilute the rebellious ethnic Tai in Vietnam - a tactic still used today in Tibet and Xinjiang. 

There were massive Han Chinese immigration recorded during the Tang dynasty (618-907 AD) and by the end of the Tang dynasty and after about 1100 years of immigration, the Han Chinese became the majority ethnic group along the Red River Delta in North Vietnam.
Vietnamese history book

Third wave (939 AD - 1857 AD) - Independence from China

The third wave began after the collapse of the Tang dynasty which brought many civil wars and China was broken up into many smaller kingdoms, one of which was Southern Han (917-971 AD) which controlled Guangdong, Guangxi and North Vietnam.

Ngo Quyen (吳權) who was the Southern Han (南漢) provincial governor's son-in-law decided to create his own kingdom from Southern Han dynasty (917-971 AD) and successfully fought against the Southern Han army at the Battle of Bach Dang River in 938 AD. Ngo Quyen's ancestry can be traced to Hebei (河北) province and he was actually an ethnic Han Chinese.

This situation is the same as when Triệu Đà created his own kingdom called Nam Viet from Qin dynasty (221-206 BC). In other words, this was an internal power struggle among the Han Chinese and not 'seeking independence by native Viet' as falsely reported in most media.
Battle of Bach Dang 

The ancestors of the Later Ly dynasty (1009-1225 AD) originated from Hebei (河北) province when Lý Thuần An (李淳安) traveled to Vietnam from Fujian during the 10th century. Lý Thuần An managed to escape to Fujian, which was a temporary sanctuary, from Hebei after his father Li Song (李崧) was executed along with almost all of his entire family members.

The ancestors of Tran dynasty (1225-1400 AD) originated from Fujian (福建) province when Trần Kinh (陳京) along with a large number of Han Chinese migrated to Vietnam during the 11th century. The surname Tran aka Tan (陳) is one of the eight big Han Chinese surnames in Fujian.

The Later Ly and Tran dynasties encouraged Han Chinese immigrants into North Vietnam. During the Tran dynasty, tens of thousands of Han Chinese refugees including Song dynasty soldiers escaped into Vietnam from the invading Mongols. Many Han Chinese soldiers from Fujian also escaped to neighbouring Leizhou in Guangdong province.

The military commander Prince Tran Quoc Tuan (陳國峻) led the combined forces of Song-refugee soldiers (such as Zhao Zhong and Xu Zongdao) and Vietnam's Tran soldiers against the Mongol invasions of Vietnam during 1258-1288 AD.
Tran Quoc Tuan battled the Mongols

The ancestors of Ho dynasty (1400-1407 AD) originated from Zhejiang (浙江) province when Hồ Hưng Dật (胡興逸) came during the Later Han dynasty (947-951 AD).

When Ming dynasty occupied Vietnam in 1407 AD, many ethnic Kinh from the Red River delta supported China's occupation contrary to what some modern media stated. Therefore, Nguyen Trai (阮廌) who is ethnic Kinh had no choice but to enlist the aid of the ethnic Austroasiatic Muong people to exact his revenge on the Ming dynasty for taking his father, Nguyễn Phi Khanh (阮飛卿), as a prisoner to Nanjing which was the capital of China.

It was stated in the history book 'Gia Định Thành Thông Chí'《嘉定城通志》that many Han Chinese refugees escaped to Vietnam after the Manchu invaded China in 1644 AD. The Southern Ming dynasty general Dương Ngạn Địch (楊彥迪) fled to Vietnam with his family and an army of 3000 people in 1679 AD. Their descendants became the Minh Hương (明鄉) people which is a subgroup of ethnic Kinh today.
General Duong Ngan Dich

In 1802 AD, a Vietnamese emperor Gia Long aka Nguyễn Phúc Ánh (阮福映), founder of Nguyen dynasty, wanted to change the country’s name to Nam-Viet but the Qing emperor refused to give permission and instead reversed the order to Viet-Nam so that Vietnam cannot claim to be the successor of the earlier Han Chinese kingdom.

During the 19th century, the Nguyen dynasty called the Vietnamese Kinh as Hán nhân (漢人) which is the same ethnicity as the Han Chinese; Hán Phong-tục (漢風俗) refer to the Vietnamese Kinh customs, Hán Ngữ (漢語) refer to the Vietnamese Kinh language. All these implied that during that time, the Nguyen dynasty knew they were ethnic Han Chinese born in Vietnam and not the natives.

If Vietnamese Kinh were really 'sinicised Yue', they would have renamed the country as Van Lang and named the people as Lac-Viet (aka Luo Yue) instead.
Emperor Gia Long

It was during this third wave in 1256 AD (Tran dynasty) that a new ethnicity Kinh (京) was formed which comes from an Old Chinese word 京畿 meaning capital of a country which was Hanoi.

Hanoi and the surrounding Red River Delta was the center of Han Chinese migration. So the term Kinh actually refers to the Vietnamese-born Han Chinese who lived in the capital.

Fourth wave (1858-1945 AD) - European invasion

Migration picked up again during the French colonial period (1858-1945 AD) and after the Opium War (1856-1860 AD) in China.

Many southern Chinese from Guangdong and Fujian fled China to Vietnam (and also other parts of South East Asia) due to poverty and war in China. The French encouraged these Chinese immigrants to stimulate trade and industry in Vietnam.

Opium War by French and British troops

Han Chinese immigrants to Vietnam during the late Qing dynasty (1850-1911) are called Hoa (華) instead. This group of Vietnamese still remember their Chinese roots due to their recent migration. They can speak various Chinese languages according to their Han subgroup but the lingua franca among them was Cantonese. 

Many Hoa people left Vietnam as ‘boat people’ after communist North Vietnam takeover of South Vietnam in 1975 AD and this drastically reduced the number of Hoa in Vietnam. They left mainly to France, Australia, Canada and USA.

Vietnamese Boat people

Han Chinese subgroup

The ethnic Kinh is just another subgroup of Han Chinese just like Cantonese Yue, Hokkien Min, Hakka, Wu and Gan who also migrated to southern China due to various wars in northern China and became the ethnic majority in southern China by the end of Tang dynasty. 

In other words, this phenomenon is not unique in Vietnam but also happened in other provinces of southern China in which Vietnam was part of until the end of Tang dynasty and for about 20 years during Ming dynasty.

Vietnamese Kinh are not 'sinicised natives' as is commonly thought. They celebrate Han Chinese festivals, practise Han Chinese religions & culture, have Chinese names which were actually inherited from their ancestors in China. Moreover, the ethnic Kinh spoke Annamese Chinese language in the past which is their original mother tongue.

Conclusion

The first three waves of Han Chinese immigrants over a duration of around 2000 years are called Kinh whereas the most recent Han Chinese immigrants in the 19th century are called Hoa.

Vietnamese Kinh are just like the Han Chinese in Taiwan and Singapore where they form the ethnic majority in an independent country after several waves of migration.

Unfortunately, the real origin of the Kinh has been confused with the origin of the unrelated Austroasiatic Muong people.

There are many other Vietnamese-related articles in this blog that will complete the pieces of this puzzle to questions such as 'why do they speak Austroasiatic language instead of Annamese Chinese', 'where are the real Lac Viet natives', ' difference between Kinh and other ethnic groups such as Trai'.

There is a part 2 to this article in this blog.

Related links

Ethnic origin of Kinh part 2

Origin of Vietnamese language
http://eastasiaorigin.blogspot.com/2017/07/origin-of-vietnamese-language.html

Ethnic origin of Vietnamese

Ethnic origin of Jing (Kinh) in China
http://eastasiaorigin.blogspot.com/2018/05/ethnic-origin-of-jing-in-china.html

Sources

  • Gernet (1996), p. 180 A, p. 180, at Google Books
  • Long Le (February 8, 2008). "Chinese Colonial Diasporas (207 B.C.-939 A.D.)". University of Houston Bauer The Global Viet. Retrieved 4 January 2013.
  • East Asia: A New History pg. 111
  • Genghis Khan: A Biography By Zofia Stone 
  • The Trung sisters. 2000 Years Ago, the Trung Sisters Fought for Vietnam's Freedom
  • Birth of Vietnam. Author: Keith Taylor. Pgs 48-49. 
  • A History of the Vietnamese, Keith Taylor. Pg. 132, 186
  • Ming China, 1368-1644: A Concise History of a Resilient Empire. By John W. Dardess.
  • The Ming factor and the emergence of the Viet in the 15th century. Author: Tana Li.  
  • What makes Chinese so Vietnamese. Chapter 7. http://www.vny2k.com/vny2k/Sinit...  
  • Việt Nam thời khai sinh [Vietnam at the Time of its Birth]. Author: Nguyễn Phương 1965.
  • Transnationalism in Ancient and Medieval Societies: The Role of Cross-Border. Author: Michael C. Howard Pgs.60-61.
  • Columbia Chronologies of Asian History and Culture. By John Bowman. Pg. 524. 
  • Vietnam and the Chinese Model: A Comparative Study of Vietnamese and Chinese. Alexander Woodside (1971). pg.8. 
  • https://www.fjsen.com/d/2010-10/12/content_3755527.htm
  • https://kknews.cc/history/n8342.html
  • https://kknews.cc/history/8joml.html
  • https://kknews.cc/history/bomm9o9.html
  • https://kknews.cc/history/o82az8o.html
  • https://kknews.cc/history/8blvlag.html
  • https://kknews.cc/history/k323bkv.html
Last updated: 24 June 2022
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Comments

  1. Thank you so much for your fantastic research! I appreciate your blog and work very much. As a Kinh Vietnamese I always felt this unshakeable kinship with Chinese in spite of how Vietnamese generally feel about the Chinese. I knew this was more than a feeling but I couldn't understand it or adequately explain it until now.

    This is a very sensitive topic and undoubtedly your work here will be very controversial to a great many Vietnamese but that's because they cannot put aside their personal feelings and prejudices.

    The origin of Kinh Vietnamese will forever be without consensus but your theories and research are certainly very sound and thus, in my opinion, makes this more than plausible. People need to understand that Kinh Vietnamese are the ethnic majority of Vietnam and the Vietnamese just like the Yamato Japanese of Japan, only their majority is a much greater percentage which creates the perception of a mono-ethnic nation and people.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You're right! The true origin of Vietnamese Kinh has been buried under nationalistic pride, prejudice and a complex history spanning more than 2000 thousand years.

      The common misconception that their lineage comes from the natives in Vietnam would be akin to Europeans claiming they are the natives of USA, Canada and Australia just because they are the majority ethnic group there.

      This article is just one piece of the big complex puzzle. So where are the real natives of Vietnam? Why did the Kinh speak a creole Austroasiatic language? Where is the original Annamese Chinese language? All these are answered in the other Vietnamese-related articles in this blog.

      Delete
  2. Tên tác giả ? Author's name?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Research from professional English and Chinese history books. One important book is authored by Professor Keith Taylor.

      Delete
  3. I agree with the author about the origin of the Kinh people.

    ReplyDelete
  4. This is fascinating. But why don't Kinh people speak Chinese?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Kinh people did speak a local Chinese language called Annamese Chinese which is preserved as the Sino-Vietnamese vocabulary in modern Vietnamese language. Read 'the Origin of Vietnamese language' for more details in this blog.

      Delete
  5. This is amazing. Thank you for your research!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Next time use the initials of your real name, there are too many people using the name 'Unknown'.

      Delete
  6. I think the Han Chinese did not come to Northern Vietnam during the Qin Dynasty, but the Qin Dynasty only administered the administration (although the southernmost territory of the Qin Dynasty is disputed), the wave of immigration into Vietnam was recorded as early as during the Eastern Han Dynasty when they completely quelled the rebellion of the "Trung Sisters" in 43 and continued until the Republic of China; most of the Han Chinese have become Kinh. Only some Han Chinese people keep their identity so they are considered "Chinese Vietnamese".

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I know that many Vietnamese people try to deny their Han origin even though Vietnam's independence is sacrosanct, I think your articles are very good.

      Delete
    2. 1. If you can read Chinese history books, you will know that North Vietnam was definitely under Qin dynasty's control, the map was recently added to this article as further evidence.

      2. Le Loi was a Muong is inferred from the book published by Keith Taylor's history of Vietnam and from my research and knowledge of the origins of all ethnic groups in East Asia. Almost all the Vietnamese kings after the Tang dynasty were descendants of the Han Chinese and their detailed history recorded in Chinese history books except for Le Loi's Later Le dynasty.

      One's true ethnicity can be determined by evidence of their original homeland, culture, history books, language, physical phenotype and not just any one element. Le Loi's original homeland was where the Muong people lived, his original culture was not Han Chinese, he was part of the Trai tribes. All these details and more are mentioned in Prof Keith Taylor's books.

      3. Annamese language's origin was first published by John Phan, a Vietnamese linguist who is well-versed with both Vietnamese and Chinese. The modern Vietnamese language is classified as an Austroasiatic language today but it was initially classified as a Chinese language by westerners more than 100 years ago due to many Chinese linguistic features. There are lots of other related articles in this blog so we do not want to repeat the details in this reply.

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  7. There are so much misinformation from both Vietnamese nationalists and westerners for the last few decades that convincing anyone is an uphill battle. This situation is the same as when scientists tried to convince people during the Middle Ages that it is the earth that moves around the sun and not the other way around.

    ReplyDelete

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