Minh Hðáng ( or ) refers to descendants of Ming dynasty immigrants who settled in southern Vietnam during the 16th and 18th centuries. They were among the first wave of ethnic Han who came to southern Vietnam.
Ming refugees of Han ethnicity numbering 3,000 came to Vietnam at the end of the Ming dynasty. They opposed the Qing dynasty and were fiercely loyal to the Ming dynasty. Vietnamese women married these Han refugees since most of them were soldiers and single men. Their descendants became known as Minh Hðáng and they strongly identified as Han despite influence from Vietnamese mothers. They did not wear the Manchu hairstyle unlike later Han migrants to Vietnam during the Qing dynasty.
After the Qing conquest of China proper, many Han people who refused to submit themselves to the Qing fled abroad. Ethnic Han leaders such as Mạc Cá»Âu, Trần Thðợng Xuyên and Dðáng Ngạn ÃÂá»Âch arrived in the Mekong Delta where they established their own polities in HàTiên, Biên Hòa and Mỹ Tho. They later submitted to the Nguyá» n lords, who provided them with noble titles and the offer of protection against Khmer and Siam threats. Many Minh Hðáng such as Trá»Ânh Hoài ÃÂức and Ngô Nhân Tá»Ânh became Nguyen ministers and played important roles in the Vietnamese exploration and settlement of Mekong Delta.
Originally, the Chinese characters used to refer to them was ("those who worship Ming dynasty ancestrals"). It was changed to ("of Ming dynasty origins") in 1827 as ordered by the Minh Mạng Emperor of Nguyá» n dynasty. In official records of Nguyá» n dynasty, they were called Minh nhân (æÂÂ人) or Minh Hðáng to distinguish with those ethnic Han (Thanh nhân 渠人) from Qing China.
Minh Hðáng often married with local Viet (Kinh) people. Since 1829, the Minh Hðáng were treated as Vietnamese instead of Han. They were not allowed to go to China, and also not allowed to wear the Manchu queue.
In the present day, most of the Minh Hðáng have adopted Vietnamese culture. Unlike later waves of Han Chinese immigration, they are regarded as Kinh people instead of Hoa people by the Vietnamese government. In addition, they overwhelmingly self-identify solely as Kinh people.