The Domain of the Crown (; Chữ Hán: çÂÂæÂÂçÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ; ; Modern Vietnamese: ÃÂất cá»§a vua) was originally the Nguyá» n dynasty's geopolitical concept for its protectorates and principalities where the ethnic Kinh did not make up the majority, later it became a type of administrative unit of the State of Vietnam. It was officially established on 15 April 1950. In the areas of the Domain of the Crown, the Chief of State Bảo ÃÂại was still officially (and legally) titled as the "Emperor of the Nguyá» n dynasty".
The Domain of the Crown was established to preserve French interests in French Indochina and to limit Vietnamese immigration into predominantly minority areas, halting Vietnamese influence in these regions while preserving the influences of both French colonists and indigenous rulers.
After the 1954 Geneva Conference, the Domain of the Crown lost considerable amounts of territory, as the entirety of Bắc phần was ceded to the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, reducing it only to Tây Nguyên. On 11 March 1955 Prime Minister Ngô ÃÂình Diá»Âm dissolved the Domain of the Crown (officially 24 March) reducing both the power of the Chief of State Bảo ÃÂại and the French directly annexing these areas into the State of Vietnam as the crown regions still in South Vietnam would later become Cao nguyên Trung phần in the Republic of Vietnam.
During the Nguyá» n dynasty period (1802âÂÂ1945) ethnic minorities retained a level of autonomy and their tribal societies and principalities were a part of what was considered to be the "Domain of the Crown" as an informal division.
This Domain included the Montagnard territories of Central Vietnam. The Champa Kingdom and the Chams in the lowlands of Central Vietnam were traditional suzerains whom the Montagnards in the highlands acknowledged as their lords, while autonomy was held by the Montagnards. After 1945, concept of "Nam tiến" (the southward expansion of Vietnam) was celebrated by Vietnamese scholars. The Pays Montagnard du Sud-Indochinois (or "Montagnard country of South Indochina") was the name of the Central Highlands from 1946 under French Indochina. Up until French rule, the Central Highlands was almost never entered by the Vietnamese since they viewed it as a savage (Má»Âi) populated area with fierce animals like tigers, "poisoned water" and "evil malevolent spirits." The Vietnamese expressed interest in the land after the French transformed it into a profitable plantation area to grow crops on, in addition to the natural resources from the forests, minerals and rich earth and realisation of its crucial geographical importance.
Furthermore, the Domain would include areas in Northern Vietnam populated by various ethnic minorities, primarily Tai peoples. Even though the upland Tai had stronger ethnic and cultural ties to Laos, Sip Song Chau Tai was incorporated into the French protectorate of TonkinâÂÂand therefore French IndochinaâÂÂafter the year 1888. This was arranged by the French explorer and colonial representative Auguste Pavie who signed a treaty with ÃÂèo VÃÂn Trá»Â, the White Tai lord of Muang Lay (Lai Châu) on 7 April 1889. Thereby the Sip Song Chau Tai accepted the French overlordship, while the colonial power promised to respect the positions of the Tai lords and their autonomy in internal affairs.
Following the abolition of the Nguyá» n dynasty and the subsequent Proclamation of Independence of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam in 1945 the French sought to regain the pre-war status quo in French Indochina after the surrender of Japan and tried reinstalling Bảo ÃÂại. After months of negotiations with French President Vincent Auriol, he finally signed the ÃÂlysée Accords on 9 March 1949, which led to the establishment of the State of Vietnam with Bảo ÃÂại as Chief of State. However, the country was still only partially autonomous, with France initially retaining effective control of the army and foreign relations. Bảo ÃÂại himself stated in 1950: "What they call a Bảo ÃÂại solution turned out to be just a French solution... the situation in Indochina is getting worse every day".
The Central Highland tribes were conquered by Franco-Vietnamese forces from 1887 to 1902. In order to meet the demand of the rubber market during the First World War, under industrial brokerage pressures to open up the Central Highlands, the French colonial government permitted establishment of colonial rubber plantations in 1916. By 1941, 42,000 Kinh and 5,100 French colonists had made the area their residence. There was some serious Montagnard revolts against French colonialists. Colonialism in Central Highlands nevertheless was halted during the Second World War, when the fascist Petain regime and its Decoux administration of Indochina attempted to boast the native Montagnards' warrior culture and recruit indigenous loyalism, first to reject Vietnamese nationalist claim to the region, second to circumvent indigenous liberation, third to prevent Japanese access. After the Second World War, worries about rising nationalist movements in Cambodia and Vietnam and Vietminh potential takeover of the highlands prompted France to negotiate and establish several autonomous entities assigned to indigenous minority peoples to retain direct French control under the camouflage of granting independence.
On 30 May 1949, the French delegated the authority to manage the Central Highlands from the Montagnard country of South Indochina to the Provisional Central Government of Vietnam. Chief of State Bảo ÃÂại separated the Central Highlands from the central government and established a special administrative system called the Domain of the Crown within the State of Vietnam as crownlands of Bảo ÃÂại through Dụ sá» 6/QT/TG on 15 April 1950. The Montagnard country of South Indochina was renamed to the "Crown Domain of the Southern Higlander Country" (Domaine de la couronne du pays montagnards du Sud) or PMS. In the crown areas, Bảo ÃÂại held both the titles of "Chief of State" (Ã¥ÂÂé·, Quá»Âc trðá»Âng) and "Emperor" (çÂÂå¸Â, Hoàng ÃÂế). In Central Vietnam (Trung phần) the Domain of the Crown was assigned 5 provinces and in Northern Vietnam (Bắc phần) it received 11.
The leader of the Domain of the Crown was entitled the Khâm mạng Hoàng triá»Âu and the first Khâm mạng Hoàng triá»Âu was Nguyá» n ÃÂá»Â, who was previously general manager for the Chief of State. Despite this, all actual decisions regarding the administration of Cao nguyên were made by the Commissioner of Annam (Khâm sứ Trung Kỳ, Resident-Superior of Annam).
According to the agreement between French President Vincent Auriol and the State of Vietnam, after the French ceded control over the Montagnard country of South Indochina to the Vietnamese, the autonomous status of the ethnic minorities would be subject to separate regulations and would continue to fall under special protection (statut particulier) from the French Government. Therefore, when promulgating a law, the government of the State of Vietnam must have an agreement from France in order to pass it. The crown domains in the central highlands area continued to be administered through a French special delegate and not a representative of the State of Vietnam.
According to a letter written by the French President Vincent Auriol the areas populated by the ethnic minorities should be seen as "the private property of the Emperor of Annam" rather than belonging to the Vietnamese state. According to the book Cá»±u hoàng Bảo ÃÂại written by Hoàng Trá»Âng Miên the Domain of the Crown was created by Bảo ÃÂại in response to a lament uttered by his mother Empress Dowager Từ Cung, where he stated: "Well, at some point, my mother and daughter will have no land to dwell in this country!". In his own memoires Bảo ÃÂại wrote that the creation of the Domain of the Crown was suggested to him by Léon Pignon in Paris who argued that the lands of ethnic minorities were never directly administered by the imperial court of the Nguyá» n dynasty and could be assigned to the Chief of State in order to help the unification of Vietnam. Bảo ÃÂại claimed that he accepted the proposal because he believed that he could help in the ethnic minority tribes in their development and enjoy the serene environment of the territories.
Dụ sá» 6/QT/TG also specified ÃÂàLạt as the capital city of the Domain of the Crown. ÃÂàLạt was created as special resort city and the French hoped to develop it into "a European-style city in the Orient" that would ease the homesickness of the French colonists. ÃÂàLạt was ambitiously built with many large architectural projects in the hopes of making it the capital city of French Indochina by the 1940s. The return of Bảo ÃÂại made ÃÂàLạt change its face as the capital city of Domain of the Crown. On 10 November 1950 Bảo ÃÂại issued Dụ sá» 4/QT-TG which separated the administration of the city from Lâm Viên Province giving it the status of "independent township" (Thành thá» xã ÃÂá»Âc láºÂp) where the mayor would be directly appointed by the Chief of State of Vietnam. Only two mayors were appointed during the Domain of the Crown period, namely Trần ÃÂình Quế and Cao Minh Hiá»Âu. ÃÂàLạt was also the headquarters of the Service de documentation extérieure et de contre-espionnage (SDECE) as well as British and American intelligence services such as the CIA during this period and Bảo ÃÂại had to report to the SDECE.
On 21 May 1951, Chief of State Bảo ÃÂại issued Quy chế 16 which was written to promulgate the creation of a âÂÂspecial regulationâ designed to provide more Montagnard participation in local affairs in these provinces, all the while these regulations reaffirmed the "eminent rights" of the State of Vietnam. Quy chế 16 contained the following regulations related to highland areas of the Domain of the Crown:
These regulations were heavily criticised by the Vietnamese for giving too much power to the French, especially after an economic council was established that was heavily influenced by French planters working to preserve their interests. Furthermore, the Domain of the Crown was criticised for limiting Kinh immigration and maintaining the French colonial structures and administrators, as the French President Vincent Auriol retained a lot of powers in the domain. In the provinces of Kontum, Pleiku, and Darlac the old French colonial administrators remained in power. In fact, in the central highlands the Khâm mạng was Colonel Pierre Didelot, the husband of Agnès Nguyá» n Hữu Hào making him the brother-in-law of empress consort Nam Phðáng.
After enacting Quy chế 16, Bảo ÃÂại and High Commissioner Léon Pignon attended a ceremony in Buôn Mê Thuá»Ât, ÃÂắk Lắk Province, to receive the symbol of the lands of the "Domain of the Crown" and took the oath of the chiefs of the Southern Montagnards. In his book "The Dragon of Vietnam" (Con rá»Âng Viá»Ât Nam) written by Bảo ÃÂại as his memoirs, he recorded: "Personally, I am worshiped by them, for the Emperor is the king of the gods who protects their forests and plains".
In the Domain of the Crown all aspects of society were strictly managed. All activities from building houses to the felling trees required a government license to be carried out.
According to records from June 1953 the imperial government of the Domain of the Crown sought to develop the societies of the ethnic minorities into a more modernised state and increase their population through development. While the central government of the State of Vietnam hoped to use the more sparsely populated crown lands to settle people from the overpopulated areas of Central and Northern Vietnam from.
The headquarters of the Chief of State Bảo ÃÂại was situated in a building entitled "Palace I" (Dinh I), this is a palace of 60 hectares created in 1940 using French money and was designed and constructed by Robert Clément Bougery, following its acquisition by Bảo ÃÂại it was renovated.
The effects of this period of history on the Montagnard people was profound. While the central highland Montagnards had to navigate at least one French colonial and two Vietnamese national projects during 9 years of war, this period saw rapid developments in their areas. Both the French colonial authorities and the State of Vietnam promoted efforts to create an educated anti-Viá»Ât Minh elite in the central highlands region. During this period hundreds of young Montagnard men from across the region met each other in the classrooms of the Collège Sabbatier in the city of Ban Mê Thuá»Ât, ÃÂắk Lắk Province, and these young men studied what became a common upland language, the Rade language. The educated Montagnards from this period would accept administrative positions outside of their native tribal areas, which would develop long-lasting and often unprecedented relationships extending across the region, among which marriages across clan were common.
On 10 August 1954, the special status of the Domain of the Crown within the State of Vietnam was abolished. On 11 March 1955 Prime Minister Ngô ÃÂình Diá»Âm signed Dụ sá» 21 formally abolishing the Domain of the Crown as a separate entity altogether. Chief of State Bảo ÃÂại accepted the signed Dụ sá» 21 into law and the leftover areas of the Domain of the Crown were formally annexed into Trung phần.
On 24 March 1955 a ceremony was held in front of Kontum Administrative Court, with the presence of thousands of ethnic minorities where the Chief of State Bảo ÃÂại read the declaration which formally ended the 4 year and 11-month existence of the Domain of the Crown.
After the end of the abolition of the Crown, Ngô ÃÂình Diá»Âm enacted new policies that allowed Kinh people to settle in the region and to freely conduct business there. Furthermore, Ngô abolished many specific regulations dating to the French and Nguyá» n dynasty period that limited Kinh interests in Cao nguyên.
The Domain of the Crown contained the following five provinces which were established from the former Montagnard country of South Indochina:
In Bắc Viá»Ât, later Bắc phần, it contained the following provinces: