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Nguyẽ̂n, Phan Long, 1889-1960

LC control no.no2020116252
Descriptive conventionsrda
LC classificationPQ3979.N38
Personal name headingNguyẽ̂n, Phan Long, 1889-1960
    Browse this term in  LC Authorities  or the  LC Catalog
Variant(s)Nguyẽ̂n Phan Long, 1889-1960
Other standard no.Q902692
Associated countryVietnam (Associated State)
Vietnam (Republic)
Birth date1889
Death date1960-07-16
Place of birthHanoi (Vietnam)
Place of deathSaigon (Vietnam)
Field of activityFiction
Journalism
Vietnam (Associated State)--Politics and government
AffiliationĐảng lập hiến Đông Dương
Profession or occupationAuthors
Journalists
Newspaper editors
Cabinet officers
Special noteURIs added to this record for the PCC URI MARC Pilot. Please do not remove or edit the URIs
Found inCannibales par persuasion, 1932: title page (Nguyen Phan Long)
Historical dictionary of Ho Chi Minh City, 2014 (Nguyen Phan Long (Nguyẽ̂n Phan Long) (1888-1960); prime minister of the State of Vietnam from 21 January until 26 April 1950; born in 1889 in Hanoi, into a family of landowners in Saigon; he went to Hanoi to study at Lycée Albert Sarraut and then returned to Saigon, where he worked as a high school teacher and became active in politics, working from 1917 as a journalist at La Tribune Indigène; in 1920 he founded the newspaper L'Echo Annamite; active in the Constitutionalist Party, he was elected to the Colonial Council; he then became editor of L'Echo du Vietnam; in 1949 was appointed minister of foreign affairs and minister of the interior in the State of Vietnam and then became prime minister; then returned to teaching, and also free-lance writing; living modestly in Saigon, he died on 16 July 1960)
Historical dictionary of Vietnam, 2006 (Nguyẽ̂n Phan Long (1889-1960). Reformist political figure in early 20th-century Vietnam. Born in Hanoi in 1889, he returned to his father's home region of Cochin China and, after taking employment as a customs official, became a journalist, founding his own newspaper, L'Echo Annamite, in 1920. For several years, he cooperated with Bùi Quang Chiêu in the moderate reformist Constitutionalist Party, based in Saigon. In 1925, he presented a famous list of demands for reform (Cahier des Voeux Annamites) to Governor-General Alexander Varenne. By the 1930s, the two had parted political company because Long disagreed with Chiêu's close relationship with the French. In 1949, he was named foreign minister in the first government of the State of Vietnam under Chief of State Bảo ⁹[*MARC+01]ị. Becoming prime minister in January 1950, he was forced out by the French two months later, after attempting to obtain direct economic assistance from the United States)
BnF data, October 5, 2020 (Nguyẽ̂n Phan Long (1889-1960); country: Viet Nam; language: Vietnamese; sex: male; birth: 1889; death: 1960; other forms of name: Nguyẽ̂n Phan Long (1889-1960); Phan Long Nguyẽ̂n (1889-1960); works: Luật Lao Động gồm tất cả nhũńg công văn mà nguò́í làm công và chủ cân phải biết (1936) avec Nguyẽ̂n Phan Long (1889-1960) comme Préfacier; Cannibales par persuasion (1932); Khảo cưú vê ̀tơ ̀giao ươć nhượng quyêǹ vận tải lúa gạo cám và băṕ trong thương khâủ Saigon-Cholon (1924); Le Roman de mademoiselle Lys (1921))
   <https://data.bnf.fr/fr/12408584/>
BnF catalogue général, October 5, 2020 (Nguyẽ̂n Phan Long (1889-1960); variant form: Nguyẽ̂n, Phan Long (1889-1960))
   <https://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb124085849>
Wikipedia, October 5, 2020 (Nguyẽ̂n Phan Long (1889 - 16 July 1960); served as Prime Minister of the State of Vietnam in January 1950. He was dismissed in May 1950 by the Emperor Bảo Đại under pressure from the French colonial authorities, who resented his pro-American and nationalist attitude. Journalist at La Tribune Indigène, he founded in 1920 the liberal newspaper L'Écho Annamite; he was in the 1920s-1930s the deputy leader of the Parti Constitutionnaliste Indochinois, a nationalist party founded in 1923 and led by Bui Quang Chiêu. He was elected as colonial councillor. He wrote abundantly about spiritism in his newspaper and was also a fervent adept of Caodaism. He was elected in 1936 as president of the Congrès Universel des Sectes Caodaïques, an attempted unified caodai movement, which eventually failed. After 1945, he was Minister of Foreign Affairs and Minister of Interior as well as editor of L'Écho du Vietnam)
Associated languagefre
vie