Revolutionary Party of Young Annam
The Revolutionary Party of Young Annam (Vietnamese: Tan-Viet-Cach- Manh-Bung) was a political party in the colony of Annam of French Indochina in Vietnam.
History
It was founded in 1925, and was based amongst the petty bourgeoisie in northern Annam. It had its roots in a group of former political prisoners, that had been jailed in connection with the 1908 uprising.
The group began having contacts with revolutionary groups in China and Siam after the First World War.[1]
Within the party there were both nationalist and communist tendencies. Internal factional conflict weakened the party. In 1929 the communists broke away. The party was dissolved in 1930, after a police crackdown banned it.[1]
References
- ^ a b Kratoska, Paul H. (ed.). South East Asia, Colonial History - Volume IV - Imperial Decline: Nationalism and the Japanese Challenge (1920s-1940s). London/New York City: Taylor & Francis, 2001. p. 106
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Historical |
- Communist League of Indochina
- Communist Party of Annam
- Communist Party of Indochina
- Đại Việt National Socialist Party
- Đại Việt Populist Revolutionary Party
- Democratic Socialist Party
- Indochinese Communist Party
- International Communist League
- National Social Democratic Front
- Nationalist Party of Greater Vietnam
- New Vietnam Revolutionary Party
- People's Revolutionary Party
- Personalist Labor Revolutionary Party
- Revolutionary Party of Young Annam
- South Seas Communist Party
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