Ancient
Laos Civilization in the Middle Mekong Valley
A number of princely
fiefdoms based on wet rice cultivation and associated
with the pottery and bronze culture of Ban Chiang
developed in the middle Mekong Valley from the first
century A.D. These fiefdoms exercised power over their
neighbors, in circumstances of generally sparse
populations, through expanding and contracting spheres
of influence best described by the term mandala.
Commerce, marriage contracts, and warfare
served to expand a mandala.
Thus, a plurality of
power centers occupied the middle Mekong Valley in early
times. Sikhôttabong was a mandala whose
capital was located on the left bank of the Mekong at
the mouth of the Xé Bangfai and then moved westward as
a result of the expansion of Champa, an Indianized state
on the coast of Vietnam founded in 192 A.D. Cham,
descendants of Champa, were present at Champasak (Bassac)
in the fifth century. The Mon kingdom of Candapuri, the
earliest name of present-day Vientiane, (Viangchan) was
another mandala. The social structure of Sikhôttabong
and Candapuri appears to have been strongly
hierarchical, with an aristocracy, a commoner class, and
a slave class. The fact that some kings came from the
commoner class appears to indicate the presence of some
sort of consensus in effecting royal succession. At its
peak, another important regional power, Funan, had its mandala
incorporate parts of central Laos. The smaller but also
important Mon kingdom of Dvaravati (through which
Theravada Buddhism--see Glossary--reached Laos in the
seventh and eighth centuries) was centered in the lower
Menam Valley beginning in the fifth century.
In the seventh
century, a northwesterly migration of Thais from their
region of origin in northwestern Tonkin brought to the
Ta-li region in what is present-day Yunnan, China, a
successor state to the Ai Lao kingdom. This new kingdom,
Nan-chao, expanded its power by controlling major
trading routes, notably the southern Silk Road.
Culturally, this polyethnic, hierarchical, and
militarized state was to have a great influence on later
societies in Indochina, transmitting the Tantric
Buddhism of Bengal to Laos, Thailand, and the Shan
state, and possibly Cambodia, and the political ideology
of the maharaja (protector of Buddhism). Nan-chao
was organized administratively into ten prefectures
called kien. This term seems to be the origin
of place-names keng (for example, Kengtung), chiang
(for example, Chiang Mai), and xiang (for
example, Xiangkhoang). Moreover, the population and army
of Nan-chao were organized in units of 100, 1,000, and
10,000, a form later found in Indochina. Also, the title
chao (prince), appears to have been of Nan-chao
origin. Another branch of this same migration began at
the headwaters of the Nam Ou and followed it downstream
to Louangphrabang and continued on through Xaignabouri
to Chiang Mai.
As a result of the
expansion and contraction of mandala, places of
importance were known by more than one name. Muang Sua
was the name of Louangphrabang following its conquest in
698 A.D. by a Thai prince, Khun Lo, who seized his
opportunity when Nan-chao was engaged elsewhere. Khun Lo
had been awarded the town by his father, Khun Borom, who
is associated with the Lao legend of the creation of the
world, which the Lao share with the Shan 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, Nan-chao intervened frequently in
the affairs of the principalities of the middle Mekong
Valley, resulting in the occupation of Muang Sua in 709.
Nan-chao 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 under
Indravarman I (r. 877-89) and extended as far as the
territories of Sipsong Panna on the upper Mekong.
In the meantime, the
Khmers founded an outpost at Xay Fong near Vientiane,
and Champa expanded again in southern Laos, maintaining
its presence on the banks of the Mekong until 1070.
Canthaphanit, the local ruler of Xay Fong, moved north
to Muang Sua and was accepted peacefully as ruler after
the departure of the Nan-chao administrators.
Canthaphanit 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 Cuang, 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 Cuang, 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
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
Sukhodaya expelled the Khmer overlords.
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