Wen Dan Explained

Conventional Long Name:Wen Dan
(Chinese: 文單)
Era:7th-8th century
Year Start:7th century
Year End:8th century
Capital:Kantharawichai
Religion:Buddhism

Wén Dān (Chinese: 文單; Thai: เหวินตัน) was a group of ancient Mon political entities that existed around the 7th–8th centuries CE in the interior of mainland Southeast Asia scattered around the central Mekong Valley in the present-day northeast Thailand. It was mentioned in the Chinese annals of the Tang period (618-907 AD) as a dependency on the trans-Mekong trade route from the ancient city of Chiaochih (jiāo zhǐ 交趾; Giao chỉ; near the present-day Vinh of Vietnam) to India.[1] Wen Dan sent representatives to China in 656 – 661, 717, 753, 771, and 798.[1]

Initially, Wen Dan was believed to be either Vientiane,[1] or the capital of the Land Chenla (Po-Lou),[2] but according to the location given in the annals as well as archaeological evidence, it is supposed to be in Chi River basin,[1] [3] centered in Kantharawichai, with Mueang Fa Daet Song Yang as outer center and Champasri (Thai: จัมปาศรี; in present Na Dun district) as the vassal.[1] Several historical evidences supports the connection between Wen Dan and Si Thep in central Thailand.

According to the Dvaravati Buddhist boundary stones (Bai sema) dated the 8th century found on Mt. Kulen, Woodward (2003) proposes that Wen Dan once controlled the Angkor region before Jayavarman II proclaimed the independence of the Kambujadesa from Java in 802.[4] Jayavarman II probably either defeated Wen Dan and then moved the capital from Indrapura to Yaśodharapura in the north,[4] or formed ally with the communities in Mun and Chi watersheds to against Si Thep in the west.[4]

Records

After the Tang dynasty was defeated by Nanzhao in the trade routes conflicts in 753 and 755, the King of Wen Dan sent his son and 26 generals to China to help the fight.[1] [5]

In 766, a Tang army of 70,000, led by General Li Mi from Sichuan, invaded Nanzhao. Vietnamese Governor "He Lu Guang" joined Wen Tan in attacking the south, but Ko-lo-Feng, the Nanzhao king, captured General Li and won. Wendan's army returned home. In 771, the prince of Wen Dan went to China and was titled "Special Highest Local Commander," equal to the King of Nanzhao, and was even higher than the Chinese governors in Vietnam and Guangzhou.[1] [5]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Wen Dan and its neighbours: the central Mekong Valley in the seventh and eighth centuries. 2002. Silkworm Books. Tatsuo Hoshino. Chiang Mai. Mayoury Ngaosrivathana. Kennon Breazeale. Breaking new ground in Lao history: essays on the seventh to twentieth centuries. https://web.archive.org/web/20240409134245/https://pennds.org/archaeobib/items/show/24325. 9 April 2024.
  2. Web site: Linguistic evidence of the trans-peninsular trade route from North Vietnam to the Gulf of Thailand (3rd-8th centuries). Mon-Khmer Studies, Michel FERLUS . Michel. Ferlus. Michel Ferlus. 20 March 2021 . 2012 . 10 January 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200110011502/http://sealang.net/archives/mksj/pdf/MKSJ-41.10.pdf.
  3. Book: Ancient Southeast Asia. 2017. John N. Miksic. Goh Geok Yian. 9780415735544. 654. Routledge .
  4. Web site: Dvaravati, Si Thep, and Wendan. Hiram Woodward. 2023. 15 October 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20221015221937/https://journals.lib.washington.edu/index.php/BIPPA/article/download/10808/10668.
  5. The Nan-chao Kingdom and T'ang China's Southwestern Frontier. Charles Backus. The Journal of Asian Studies. 1983. 43. 1. 130–132. 10.2307/2054621. 2054621 .