Hào dynasty
Hào dynasty 嚎朝 Nhà Hào (Tuhaoese) Gao tzo (Namorese) | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1613–1921 | |||||||||||
Flag | |||||||||||
Territories under Hào administration in 1750 | |||||||||||
Capital | Namo | ||||||||||
Common languages | Tuhaoese Namorese | ||||||||||
Religion | Txoism | ||||||||||
Government | Monarchy | ||||||||||
Emperor | |||||||||||
• 1613 - 1635 | Liguka Emperor (first) | ||||||||||
• 1910 - 1921 | Veinan Empress (last) | ||||||||||
Prime Minister | |||||||||||
• 1911 - 1915 | Jacob Cho | ||||||||||
Legislature | Imperial Diet | ||||||||||
History | |||||||||||
• Established | 1613 | ||||||||||
1910 | |||||||||||
• Disestablished | 1921 | ||||||||||
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Today part of | Ainin Katranjiev Luziyca Namor Template:Country data Riro |
The Hào dynasty, also known as the Great Hào Empire or the Tuhaoese dynasty, was the last imperial dynasty of Namor.
Ruled by Tuhaoese, the Hào began as the House of Nguyen based in present-day Tuhao. Following a series of wars with the neighboring Akka dynasty, Nguyen Tuhao captured Namo, marking the formal beginning of the Hào dynasty. Despite continued resistance from Akka loyalists, the Hào expanded westward and annexed Ainin, becoming the largest dynasty in Namorese history by area.
While the Hào initially emphasized the uniqueness of the Tuhaoese race and segregated Tuhaoese from other ethnicities, such a policy eventually turned into a liability for the Hào as it brought more people under its rule, a majority of whom were Kannei Namorese. During the reign of Kaisang, the Hào accommodated more Kannei Namorese; as a result, the presence of Kannei people in the imperial government, local governments and the military grew.
Many factors, including but not limited to endemic corruption, natural disasters, and demographic shifts, hastened the decline of the Hào dynasty. The Great Wave of 1794 devastated the empire's eastern coast. The wave was among the catalysts of the Aininian Revolution which resulted in Ainin's independence. Domestically, the Hào never fully recovered from the Great Wave, as food shortages and homelessness continued to plague the empire. Rebellions against the Hào authorities became frequent; the peasant rebellion led by Chen Minko, the founder of Kansism, spread to every province in Namor and caused the deaths of over 20 million people. Although the rebellion was ultimately put down, it greatly weakened the Hào dynasty from within.
After losing to Luziyca in the First Namo-Luziycan War, Hào Namor tried to reform by modernizing its military and giving more power to the provincial governments. However, this did not prevent the rise of republicanism and other schools of political thought that challenged the legitimacy of the Hào dynasty. In 1910, the Namorese Democratic Brotherhood, along with defectors from the Hào government, laid siege to Namo, forcing the Rungchi Emperor to abdicate. To maintain national stability, the monarchists and republicans agreed to retain the monarchy with Rungchi's sister, Veinan, as its new ruler, while setting up constitutional restraints to the monarch's power. The compromise lasted for five years until monarchists staged a coup that restored the absolute monarchy, sparking a civil war that ended with a republican victory. The Hào dynasty was officially disestablished in 1921.
Emperors
Portrait | Reign name | Personal Name | Birth | Death | Ruled from | Ruled until |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Liguka Lập Quốc 立國 |
Nguyen Quang Công 阮光公 |
1561 | 1635 | 1613 | 1635 | |
Menvang Mạnh Vua 孟𤤰 |
Nguyen Ngải 阮戤 |
1617 | 1668 | 1635 | 1668 | |
Kante Quan Đức 觀德 |
Nguyen Công Bảo 阮公寶 |
1644 | 1695 | 1668 | 1695 | |
File:Kaisang.jpg | Kaisang Soi Sáng 擂𤎜 |
Nguyen Lành An 阮令安 |
1660 | 1724 | 1695 | 1724 |
Risang Nắng Sáng 曩𪱆𤎜 |
Nguyen Bình 阮平 |
1703 | 1782 | 1724 | 1782 | |
Shentin Thịnh Trời 盛𡗶 |
Nguyen Quý 阮貴 |
1746 | 1800 | 1782 | 1800 | |
Minsin Danh Sao 名𣋀 |
Nguyen Xuân 阮春 |
1762 | 1828 | 1800 | 1828 | |
Honggan Đỏ Quyền 𣠶權 |
Nguyen Dân Có 阮民固 |
1787 | 1847 | 1828 | 1847 | |
Tedo Đức Đấu 德鬥 |
Nguyen Phi 阮飛 |
1829 | 1860 | 1847 | 1860 | |
Kochan Cao Trang 高庄 |
Nguyen Dũng 阮湧 |
1835 | 1892 | 1860 | 1892 | |
Rungchi Rồng Chí 龍志 |
Nguyen Viện 阮援 |
1873 | 1936 | 1892 | 1910 | |
Veinan Vệ Nam 衛南 |
Nguyen Lan 阮蘭 |
1880 | 1953 | 1910 | 1921 |
1 Although Nguyen Quang Công proclaimed himself Emperor of the Hào in 1613, he had been the ruler of the Tuhaoese since 1599 after sister Nguyen Linh Tú died in battle.