Nguyễn Phan Long | |
Office: | 2nd Prime Minister of the State of Vietnam |
Term Start: | 20 January 1950 |
Term End: | 7 May 1950 |
Deputy: | Phan Huy Quát |
1Blankname: | Head of State |
1Namedata: | Bảo Đại |
Predecessor: | Bảo Đại |
Successor: | Trần Văn Hữu |
Office2: | Minister of Foreign Affairs of the State of Vietnam |
Term Start2: | 1 July 1949 |
Term End2: | 1 May 1950 |
Predecessor2: | Position established |
Successor2: | Trần Văn Hữu |
Birth Date: | 1888 |
Birth Place: | Saigon, Cochinchina, French Indochina |
Death Date: | 16 July 1960 (aged 72) |
Death Place: | Saigon, South Vietnam |
Party: | Constitutional Party |
Spouse: | Trần Thị Nguyên |
Alma Mater: | Lycée Albert Sarraut |
Nguyễn Phan Long (1888 – 16 July 1960)[1] was a Vietnamese journalist and politician who served as Prime Minister of the State of Vietnam from January to May in 1950. He was dismissed by the Head of State Bảo Đại under pressure from the French colonial authorities, who resented his pro-American and nationalist attitude.[2]
He was born in 1889[3] (or 1888) in North Vietnam (Hanoi or Nam Dinh) to a South Vietnamese family. He was sent to Hanoi to be educated at the Lycée Albert Sarraut, afterward, he returned to Saigon to work as a high school teacher and a journalist. In 1917 he worked for the La Tribune Indigène and in 1920, he founded the liberal newspaper L'Écho Annamite, in which he worked with the (Eurasian) Vietnamese nationalist Eugène Dejean de la Bâtie,[4] friend of André Malraux. During his time as a journalist, Long would write about spiritualism and the Vietnamese religion Caodaism.[5] [6]
In the 1920s–1930s, he was the deputy leader of the Parti Constitutionnaliste Indochinois, a nationalist party founded in 1923 and led by Bui Quang Chiêu.[7] He was elected as colonial councillor.
He was elected in 1936 as president of the Congrès Universel des Sectes Caodaïques, an attempted unified caodai movement, which eventually failed.[8]
After 1945, he was Minister of Foreign Affairs and Minister of Interior as well as editor of L'Écho du Vietnam.
He was an ardent follower of Caodaism and spoke fluent French.[9] He was married to Trần Thị Nguyên.[10] He passed away in Saigon on 16 July 1960 at the age of 71.[11]
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