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Muang Sua



 
 
Muang Sua was the name of Luang Phrabang following its conquest in 698 by a Tai
Tai peoples

"Thai peoples" redirects here. For the subgroup of the Tai, see Thai peopleThe 'Tai' ethnicity refers collectively to the ethnic groups of southern China and Southeast Asia, stretching from Hainan to eastern India and from southern Sichuan to Laos, Thailand, and parts of Vietnam, which speak languages in the Tai languages family and share s...
 prince, Khun Lo
Khun Lo

Khun Lo was the eldest of the sons of Khun Borom and first of the Lao kings. The royal families of Laos trace their lineage to him.He died in 780 and was succeeded by Khun Sung....
, who seized his opportunity when the king of Nanzhao
Nanzhao

Nanzhao, alternate spellings Nanchao and Nan Chao was a Bai kingdom that flourished in southern China and Southeast Asia during the 8th and 9th centuries....
 was engaged elsewhere. Khun Lo had been awarded the town by his father, Khun Borom
Khun Borom

Khun Borom Rachathirath is the legendary progenitor of the Tai peoples-speaking peoples, considered by the Lao people and others to be the father of their race....
, who is associated with the Lao
Lao

Lao or Laotian may refer to:* Something of, from, or related to Laos, a country in Southeast Asia.* Lao people . For more information, see Demographics of Laos and Culture of Laos....
 legend of the creation of the world, which the Lao share with the Shan
Shan

The Shan are a Tai peoples ethnic group of Southeast Asia. The Shan live primarily in the Shan State of Myanmar, but also inhabit parts of Mandalay Division, Kachin State, and Kayin State, and in adjacent regions of China and Thailand....
 and other peoples of the region. Khun Lo established a dynasty whose fifteen rulers reigned over an independent Muang Sua for the better part of a century.

In the second half of the eighth century, Nanzhao intervened frequently in the affairs of the principalities of the middle Mekong Valley, resulting in the occupation of Muang Sua in 709.






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Muang Sua was the name of Luang Phrabang following its conquest in 698 by a Tai
Tai peoples

"Thai peoples" redirects here. For the subgroup of the Tai, see Thai peopleThe 'Tai' ethnicity refers collectively to the ethnic groups of southern China and Southeast Asia, stretching from Hainan to eastern India and from southern Sichuan to Laos, Thailand, and parts of Vietnam, which speak languages in the Tai languages family and share s...
 prince, Khun Lo
Khun Lo

Khun Lo was the eldest of the sons of Khun Borom and first of the Lao kings. The royal families of Laos trace their lineage to him.He died in 780 and was succeeded by Khun Sung....
, who seized his opportunity when the king of Nanzhao
Nanzhao

Nanzhao, alternate spellings Nanchao and Nan Chao was a Bai kingdom that flourished in southern China and Southeast Asia during the 8th and 9th centuries....
 was engaged elsewhere. Khun Lo had been awarded the town by his father, Khun Borom
Khun Borom

Khun Borom Rachathirath is the legendary progenitor of the Tai peoples-speaking peoples, considered by the Lao people and others to be the father of their race....
, who is associated with the Lao
Lao

Lao or Laotian may refer to:* Something of, from, or related to Laos, a country in Southeast Asia.* Lao people . For more information, see Demographics of Laos and Culture of Laos....
 legend of the creation of the world, which the Lao share with the Shan
Shan

The Shan are a Tai peoples ethnic group of Southeast Asia. The Shan live primarily in the Shan State of Myanmar, but also inhabit parts of Mandalay Division, Kachin State, and Kayin State, and in adjacent regions of China and Thailand....
 and other peoples of the region. Khun Lo established a dynasty whose fifteen rulers reigned over an independent Muang Sua for the better part of a century.

In the second half of the eighth century, Nanzhao intervened frequently in the affairs of the principalities of the middle Mekong Valley, resulting in the occupation of Muang Sua in 709. Nanzhao princes or administrators replaced the aristocracy of Thai overlords. Dates of the occupation are not known, but it probably ended well before the northward expansion of the Khmer Empire
Khmer Empire

The Khmer Empire was the largest empire of South East Asia based in what is now Cambodia. The empire, which seceded from the kingdom of Chenla, at times ruled over and/or vassalised parts of modern-day Laos, Thailand,Vietnam, Myanmar, and Malaysia....
 under Indravarman I
Indravarman I

Indravarman I was a king of Angkor who ruled from 877 to 890 during the glorious days of the ancient Khmer Empire.Indravarman I ruled his kingdom from Hariharalaya, where it was established by Jayavarman II....
 (reigned 877-889) and extended as far as the territories of Sipsong Panna on the upper Mekong.

In the meantime, the Khmers founded an outpost at Sayfong near Vientiane
Vientiane

Vientiane is the capital city of Laos, situated in the Mekong Valley. It is also Laos's largest city. The estimated population of the city is 200,000 while the number of people living in the Vientiane metropolitan area is believed to be over 730,000....
, and Champa
Champa

File:Shiva Dong Duong Style.jpgFile:VietnamChampa1.gifThe kingdom of Champa was an Indianized kingdom of Malayo-Polynesian origins and controlled what is now southern and central Vietnam from approximately the 7th century through to 1832....
 expanded again in southern Laos, maintaining its presence on the banks of the Mekong until 1070. Chanthaphanit, the local ruler of Sayfong, moved north to Muang Sua and was accepted peacefully as ruler after the departure of the Nanzhao administrators. Chanthaphanit and his son had long reigns, during which the town became known by the Thai name Xieng Dong Xieng Thong. The dynasty eventually became involved in the squabbles of a number of principalities. Khun Chuang, a warlike ruler who may have been a Kammu (alternate spellings include Khamu and Khmu) tribesman, extended his territory as a result of the warring of these principalities and probably ruled from 1128 to 1169. Under Khun Chuang, a single family ruled over a far-flung territory and reinstituted the Siamese administrative system of the seventh century. Muang Sua next became the Kingdom of Sri Sattanak, a name connected with the legend of the naga (mythical snake or water dragon) who was said to have dug the Mekong riverbed. At this time, Theravada Buddhism was subsumed by Mahayana Buddhism.

Muang Sua experienced a brief period of Khmer suzerainty under Jayavarman VII
Jayavarman VII

Jayavarman VII was a king of the Khmer Empire in present day Siem Reap. Cambodia. He was the son of King Dharanindravarman II and Queen Sri Jayarajacudamani....
 from 1185 to 1191. By 1180 the Sipsong Panna had regained their independence from the Khmers, however, and in 1238 an internal uprising in the Khmer outpost of Sukhothai
Sukhothai

Sukhothai may mean:* Sukhothai , the historic city* Sukhothai historical park* Sukhothai Kingdom, the historic Thai kingdom* Sukhothai Province...
 expelled the Khmer overlords.

Recent historical research has shown that the Mongols, who destroyed Nanzhao in 1253 and made the area a province of their empire -- naming it Yunnan --exercised a decisive political influence in the middle Mekong Valley for the better part of a century. In 1271 Panya Lang, founder of a new dynasty headed by rulers bearing the title panya (lord), began his rule over a fully sovereign Muang Sua. In 1286 Panya Lang's son, Panya Khamphong, was involved in a coup d'état that was probably instigated by the Mongols and that exiled his father. Upon his father's death in 1316, Panya Khamphong assumed his throne.

Ramkhamhaeng, an early ruler of the new Thai dynasty in Sukhothai, made himself the agent of Mongol interests, and in 1282-84 eliminated the vestiges of Khmer and Cham power in central Laos. Ramkhamhaeng obtained the allegiance of Muang Sua and the mountainous country to the northeast. Between 1286 and 1297, Panya Khamphong's lieutenants, acting for Ramkhamhaeng and the Mongols, pacified vast territories. From 1297 to 1301, Lao troops under Mongol command invaded Dai Viet but were repulsed by the Vietnamese. Troops from Muang Sua conquered Muang Phuan in 1292-97. In 1308 Panya Khamphong seized the ruler of Muang Phuan, and by 1312 this principality was a vassal state of Muang Sua.

Mongol overlordship was unpopular in Muang Sua. Internal conflicts among members of the new dynasty over Mongol intervention in their affairs resulted in continuing family upheavals. Panya Khamphong exiled his son Fa Phi Fa and most likely intended to leave the throne to his younger grandson, Fa Ngieo. Fa Ngieo, involved in various coups and coup attempts, in 1330 sent his two sons to a Buddhist monastery outside the Mongol realm for safety. The brothers were kidnapped in 1335 and taken to Angkor, where they were entrusted to King Jayavarman Paramesvara, whose kingdom had acknowledged Mongol suzerainty since 1285.

The younger brother, Fa Ngum, married one of the king's daughters and in 1349 set out from Angkor
Angkor

Angkor is a name conventionally applied to the region of Cambodia serving as the seat of the Khmer empire that flourished from approximately the ninth century to the fifteenth century A.D....
 at the head of a 10,000-man army. His conquest of the territories to the north of Angkor over the next six years reopened Mongol communications with that place, which had been cut off. Fa Ngum organized the conquered principalities into provinces, and reclaimed Muang Sua from his father and elder brother. Fa Ngum was crowned king of Lan Xang at Vientiane
Vientiane

Vientiane is the capital city of Laos, situated in the Mekong Valley. It is also Laos's largest city. The estimated population of the city is 200,000 while the number of people living in the Vientiane metropolitan area is believed to be over 730,000....
, the site of one of his victories, in June 1354. Lan Xang extended from the border of China to Sambor below the Mekong rapids at Khong Island
Khong Island

Khong Island or Don Khong is an island of the Champasak Province Province of southern Laos, located on the Mekong river, in the Si Phan Don area....
 and from the Vietnamese border to the western escarpment of the Khorat Plateau
Khorat Plateau

The Khorat Plateau also Korat Plateau, is a plateau in the northeastern region of Thailand, also called Isan. It is named after the biggest city in the area, Nakhon Ratchasima, which is often called shortly Khorat....
.