阮福景
出典: フリー百科事典『ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 (2023/11/19 14:48 UTC 版)
阮福景(グエン・フック・カイン、ベトナム語: Nguyễn Phúc Cảnh、1780年4月6日 - 1801年)は、ベトナム王子阮福暎(後の嘉隆帝)の長子。皇子景(ベトナム語: Hoàng tử Cảnh)とも。7歳のとき、フランス王国のカトリック宣教師ピニョー・ド・ベーヌとともにフランスへ向かい、ヴェルサイユ条約の締結にこぎつけたことで知られる。父より先に死去したためベトナム王位を継ぐことはなく、嘉隆帝が阮福膽を後継者に指名した以降も、阮福景の子孫が王位を継ぐことはなかった。
- ^ A History of Vietnam by Oscar Chapuis, p.175
- ^ Dragon Ascending by Henry Kamm p.86
- ^ a b Mantienne, p.84, p.200
- ^ Mantienne, p.92
- ^ Mantienne, p.93
- ^ Mantienne, p.97
- ^ Viet Nam by Nhung Tuyet Tran, Anthony Reid, p.293
- ^ "He dazzled the Louis XVI court at Versailles with Nguyen Canh, ... dressed in red and gold brocade, to play with the Dauphin, the heir apparent." in The Asian Mystique: Dragon Ladies, Geisha Girls, and Our Fantasies by Sheridan Prasso, p.40
- ^ "The Dauphin, about his age, played with him." French Policy and Developments in Indochina - Page 27 by Thomas Edson Ennis
- ^ Mantienne, p.18
- ^ "He had not converted Gia Long to Christianity, but had succeeded in making Prince Canh a Catholic zealot, universally condemned for having told his mother to throw feces on Buddhist images" A History of Vietnam by Oscar Chapuis, p.179 [1]
- ^ Mantienne, p.200
- ^ Mantienne, p.122
- ^ Mantienne, p.109-110
- ^ Mantienne, p.110
- ^ A Vietnamese Royal Exile in Japan by My-Van Tran, Tran My-Van, p.15 [2]
- ^ A Vietnamese Royal Exile in Japan by My-Van Tran, Tran My-Van, p.15-16 [3]
- ^ A Vietnamese Royal Exile in Japan by My-Van Tran, Tran My-Van
- ^ a b Mantienne, p.135
- ^ Mantienne, p.222-223. Original French translation: "Hélas! Nous étions liés depuis de nombreuses années, et continuellement nous vivions au milieu de la guerre et des troubles (...) Vous consacrant dès lors à redresser la fortune de l'Annam, vous élaborâtes en stratège consommé votre plan de défaite de l'énemi. Les usages de nos deux pays ont beau être différents, nos coeurs ne l'étaient pas, unis qu'ils étaient par la plus solide amitié."
- ^ A Vietnamese Royal Exile in Japan by My-Van Tran, Tran My-Van, p.16
- ^ A Vietnamese Royal Exile in Japan by My-Van Tran, Tran My-Van, p.16 [4]
- ^ a b Viêt Nam Exposé By Gisèle Luce Bousquet, Pierre Brocheux, p.204
- ^ "Prince Canh is said to have died from the measles at the age of twenty-one. However, French missionaries reported that he had been poisoned." Colonialism by Philip Wolny, p.45 [5]
- ^ a b c A Vietnamese Royal Exile in Japan by My-Van Tran, Tran My-Van My Duong p.22 [6]
- ^ McLeod, p.30
- 阮福景のページへのリンク