Cao Xuân Dục

{{Short description|Vietnamese scholar, historian, and court adviser (1843–1923)}}

File:Cao Xuan Duc2.jpg

File:Duytan cabinet.jpg) (left).]]

File:Cao-xuan-duc.jpg

Cao Xuân Dục ({{lang-vi-hantu|高春育}}; 1843–1923) was a scholar, historian-mandarin, and court adviser in the Nguyễn dynasty, Vietnam.Bradley Camp Davis, States of banditry: The Nguyen government, bandit rule, and the culture of power in the post-Taiping China-Vietnam borderlands University of Washington 2008 - Page 104 "Cao Xuân Dục"

History

Cao Xuân Dục was born in Thịnh Mỹ, Diễn Châu, Nghệ An. In 1876, he entered Vietnamese Imperial examination and was awarded the degree of provincial graduate (舉人 - cử nhân), in the same class with the famous anti-French patriot Phan Đình Phùng from Hà Tĩnh.

He served under the Nguyễn Emperors Đồng Khánh and Thành Thái and held several important government posts including Governor-General of Hưng Yên (1889) and minister of education (1907).{{cite web|url= https://vnexpress.net/trieu-dai-phong-kien-duy-nhat-co-bo-hoc-3509342.html|title= Triều đại phong kiến duy nhất có Bộ Học.|date=6 December 2016|accessdate=22 June 2022|author= Võ Thạnh|publisher= VnExpress|language=vi}} He was one of the four top advisers to the Emperor during the Vietnam-France conflict in the early 20th century.

When Trương Như Cương (張如岡), a pro-French collaborator, coerced his colleagues to sign a petition to the Thành Thái Emperor to demote him to the position of viceroy (副王, Phó vương), Cao Xuân Dục refused to sign - instead he wrote a quick poem on the petition.

class="wikitable"
Classical ChineseVietnamese transliteration

!Vietnamese

English
天無二日{{br}}國無兩王{{br}}臣高春育{{br}}不可記Thiên vô nhị nhật{{br}}Quốc vô lưỡng vương{{br}}Thần Cao Xuân Dục{{br}}Bất khả ký

|Trời không có hai mặt trời{{br}}Nước không có hai vua{{br}}Thần Cao Xuân Dục{{br}}Không thể ký

| The sky cannot have two suns.{{br}}A nation cannot have two kings.{{br}}Your servant Cao Xuân Dục,{{br}}cannot sign.

Because of that, he was demoted to be the prefect and district magistrate of Quốc Oai district, Hoàng Xá prefecture outside of Hanoi.

A relief of Cao Xuân Dục was sculptured on a wall in a cave in this local region to commemorate his righteousness.[http://www.caoxuan.com/article.php?Fl=docs/20100326002454 Relief of Cao Xuân Dục in a cave in Hoàng Xá]

Cao Xuân Dục retired in 1913 to concentrate on building his library, Long Cương Bảo Tàng Thư Viện (named after his pseudonym), collecting and maintaining Vietnamese literature.

A street in Ho Chi Minh City was named after Cao Xuân Dục[http://maps.google.com.au/maps?q=Cao+Xu%C3%A2n+D%E1%BB%A5c,+Ho+Chi+Minh+City,+District+8,+Vietnam&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&ie=UTF8&hl=en&cd=1&geocode=FQj0owAduXlbBg&split=0&sll=-25.335448,135.745076&sspn=38.161973,47.373047&hq=&hnear=Cao+Xu%C3%A2n+D%E1%BB%A5c,+District+8,+Vietnam&z=17 map of Cao Xuan Duc street Ho Chi Minh City]

Writings

Cao Xuân Dục made significant contribution in maintaining Vietnamese culture and literature in 19th and 20th century.[http://www.caoxuan.com/docs/Cao%20Xu%C3%A2n%20D%E1%BB%A5c%20-%20Ch%C6%B0%C6%A1ng%20Th%C3%A2u.pdf Cao xuân Dục - Nhà văn hoá lớn cận đại] - A/Prof. Chương Thâu (history) He spent many years writing, collecting, copying, re-writing and preserving valuable books including:

See also

Notes