nasxus Admin


Posts: 1866 Points: 170 Join date: 2008-03-24
 | Subject: Lao history part # 1 Sun Apr 05, 2009 6:24 pm | |
| |
|
Vajhuamsibluag Admin


Posts: 85 Points: 25 Join date: 2008-04-07
 | Subject: Re: Lao history part # 1 Sat Jun 06, 2009 6:59 pm | |
| Mloog tsis tas, tabsis zoo li Blog hais lawv Hmoob qab. Blog kuj hais txog "peb kwvtij" thiab. Cov lus no txhais tau tias lub tebchaws Blog tsis yog Blog lub. Tsuas yog Blog xub los nyob lawm xwb. |
|
nasxus Admin


Posts: 1866 Points: 170 Join date: 2008-03-24
 | Subject: Re: Lao history part # 1 Sat Jun 06, 2009 10:28 pm | |
| | Vajhuamsibluag wrote: | | Mloog tsis tas, tabsis zoo li Blog hais lawv Hmoob qab. Blog kuj hais txog "peb kwvtij" thiab. Cov lus no txhais tau tias lub tebchaws Blog tsis yog Blog lub. Tsuas yog Blog xub los nyob lawm xwb. |
Yog lawm thiab laiv, vim hai tias twb muaj Aib Lao thiab lawv hai muaj ib cov ma muaj ntsi hai txog peb thiab tiam si lawv ho tsi hai tias yog mieo cov lus keeb kawm no yog cov Lao nyob rau hauv Radio Free Asian yog cov hai. |
|
Nce Admin


Posts: 173 Points: 319 Join date: 2009-05-04
 | Subject: Re: Lao history part # 1 Sun Jun 07, 2009 10:51 am | |
| Muab xav los mus yeej yog li Vajhuamsibluag hais vim nplog yog cov xub nqes pem suav teb los nyob raws tus niam dej nab khoom. | Quote: | Lao History Early History to Independence
The Laotians are descendants of Thai tribes that were pushed southward from Yunnan, China, in the 13th cent. and gradually infiltrated the territory of the Khmer Empire. In the mid-14th cent. a powerful kingdom called Lan Xang was founded in Laos by Fa Ngoun (1353–73), who is also credited with the introduction of Theravada Buddhism and much of Khmer civilization into Laos. Lan Xang waged intermittent wars with the Khmer, Burmese, Vietnamese, and Thai, and by the 17th cent. it held sway over sections of Yunnan, China, of S Myanmar, of the Vietnamese and Cambodian plateaus, and large stretches of N Thailand. In 1707, however, internal dissensions brought about a split of Lan Xang into two kingdoms: Luang Phabang in upper (northern) Laos and Vientiane in lower (southern) Laos. During the next century the two states, constantly quarreling, were overrun by the armies of neighboring countries.
In the early 19th cent. Siam was dominant over the two Laotian kingdoms, although Siamese claims were disputed by Annam. After French explorations in the late 19th cent. Siam was forced (1893) to recognize a French protectorate over Laos, which was incorporated into the union of Indochina. During World War II, Laos was gradually occupied by the Japanese, who in 1945 persuaded the king of Luang Phabang to declare the country's independence.
In 1946 the French reestablished dominion over Laos, recognizing the king as constitutional monarch of the entire country. The French granted an increasing measure of self-government, and in 1949 Laos became a semiautonomous state within the French Union. In 1951, a Communist Laotian nationalist movement, the Pathet Lao, was formed by Prince Souphanouvong in North Vietnam. In 1953, Pathet Lao guerrillas accompanied a Viet Minh invasion of Laos from Vietnam and established a government at Samneua in N Laos. That year Laos attained full sovereignty; admission into the United Nations came in 1955. |
|
|