Introduction Hue-Tam Ho Tai (bio) In keeping with the mission of Cross-Currents, I have selected four articles for this issue whose common trait is their focus on the border between China and Vietnam. I am deliberately eschewing the term “borderland” to describe the area they cover, as one article, by Robert J. Antony, concerns life on the water and piracy. The other articles, however, fit neatly into the category of borderland studies. Ever since what had been the Protectorate of Annam split from the dying Tang Empire in the tenth century, the border between China and Đại Việt has been a contested area, subject to conflict and negotiation. While Chinese armies repeatedly crossed the border to invade Đại Việt, Vietnamese occasionally staged preemptive strikes against Chinese garrisons. The most famous attack took place in 1075, when Lý Thường Kiệt led one hundred thousand men into a battle near Nanning that lasted forty days. However, the Chinese invasions, whether successful or not, often resulted in the cession of Vietnamese territory. Following his victory over the Qing invading army in 1789, Nguyễn Huệ is said to have contemplated demanding [End Page 315] the return of previously ceded areas in Guangdong and Guangxi. His death in 1792 brought to an end whatever plans he may have had. The modern border between China and Vietnam was established by the treaties of 1887 and 1895 between China and France, which ceded more Vietnamese territory to China. Thus, the Tụ Long mine, which figures prominently in the account of the Nông Văn Vân uprising of 1833–1835 by Vũ Đường Luân, now belongs to Yunnan. In the fishing village of Wanwei in Guangxi, Jing (ethnic Vietnamese) people have a saying: “We used to live in Vietnam; because of the French bandits, we had to become Chinese.” The land border was renegotiated in 1999, giving rise to further Vietnam-ese laments that more territory had been ceded to China. Meanwhile, the maritime border between the two countries continues to be hotly contested. Whether on land or at sea, border areas are not just sites of conflict. For the ethnically diverse communities who live at the margins of empires or nations, border crossing is a facet of everyday life. It may involve trade and smuggling, pillaging raids, flight from fighting or from the state, human trafficking, marriage, or family visits. These historical events and trends are often narrated within the confines of national histories. Yet they highlight the fuzziness of national boundaries and the importance of forms of social organization that cut across borders and unite individuals and communities that nations seek to separate and distinguish. Not only does the study of bor-der areas and border crossings “rescue history from the nation,” to borrow from Prasenjit Duara (1995), but it also points out that the highly local can be transnational, and that apparently remote places can be linked to global currents of people, ideas, and commodities. Yang Yandi, the subject of Robert J. Antony’s article, appears in both Chinese and Vietnamese histories, but as two distinct personae. In Chinese history—and, as Antony points out, in local legend—he figures as a pirate, the scourge of fishermen and maritime traders in the South China Sea in the late seventeenth century, as well as a heroic, larger-than-life figure. In Viet-namese history, he figures mostly as the founder of a Mekong Delta town and as leader of one of the first groups of so-called Ming loyalists (minh huong). This study of his early career should prompt a reexamination of the meaning of this label, not only for Yang Yandi but also for the several thousand other Chinese who arrived in Vietnam in the 1680s in the wake of the Manchu conquest of China. [End Page 316] Vũ Đường Luân’s article on the politics of mining on the China-Viet-nam border highlights the role of both local populations (who are now called ethnic minorities) and Chinese miners and traders in the economy of the northern uplands of Vietnam. When an uprising led by the tribal chieftain Nông Văn V...
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