. "Confucianism"@en . "1847"^^ . . "--01-21"^^ . . . . . . . . "Phan \u0110\u00ECnh Ph\u00F9ng"@en . . "A cement statue depicting a man with a moustache holding a rifle in one hand and a stick in another, wearing traditional clothes. He stands on a polished stone pedestal."@en . "\u6F58\u5EF7\u9022"@en . "A statue of Phan \u0110\u00ECnh Ph\u00F9ng located in center of the traffic circle facing the Cho Lon General Post Office, District 5, Ho Chi Minh City."@en . . . "Imperial Censor of Emperor T\u1EF1 \u0110\u1EE9c"@en . "250"^^ . . "1"^^ . "Born into a family of mandarins from H\u00E0 T\u0129nh Province, Phan continued his ancestors' traditions by placing first in the metropolitan imperial examinations in 1877. Phan quickly rose through the ranks under Emperor T\u1EF1 \u0110\u1EE9c of the Nguy\u1EC5n Dynasty, gaining a reputation for his integrity and uncompromising stance against corruption. Phan was appointed as the Imperial Censor, a position that allowed him to criticise his fellow mandarins and even the emperor. As the head of the censorate, Phan's investigations led to the removal of many incompetent or corrupt mandarins."@en . . "Phan \u0110\u00ECnh Ph\u00F9ng"@en . "\u0110\u00F4ng Th\u00E1i, \u0110\u1EE9c Th\u1ECD District, H\u00E0 T\u0129nh Province, Vietnam"@en . . . . "Born into a family of mandarins from H\u00E0 T\u0129nh Province, Phan continued his ancestors' traditions by placing first in the metropolitan imperial examinations in 1877. Phan quickly rose through the ranks under Emperor T\u1EF1 \u0110\u1EE9c of the Nguy\u1EC5n Dynasty, gaining a reputation for his integrity and uncompromising stance against corruption. Phan was appointed as the Imperial Censor, a position that allowed him to criticise his fellow mandarins and even the emperor. As the head of the censorate, Phan's investigations led to the removal of many incompetent or corrupt mandarins. Upon T\u1EF1 \u0110\u1EE9c's death, Phan almost lost his life during a power struggle in the imperial court. The regent T\u00F4n Th\u1EA5t Thuy\u1EBFt disregarded T\u1EF1 \u0110\u1EE9c's will of succession, and three emperors were deposed and killed in just over a year. Phan protested against Thuyet's activities, was stripped of his honours and briefly jailed, before being exiled to his home province. At the time, France had just conquered Vietnam and made it a part of French Indochina. Along with Thuyet, Phan organised rebel armies as part of the Can Vuong movement, which sought to expel the French and install the boy Emperor H\u00E0m Nghi at the head of an independent Vietnam. This campaign continued for three years until 1888, when the French captured H\u00E0m Nghi and exiled him to Algeria. Phan and his military assistant Cao Thang continued their guerrilla campaign, building a network of spies, bases and small weapons factories. However, Cao Thang was killed in the process in late 1893. The decade-long campaign eventually wore Phan down, and he died from dysentery as the French surrounded his forces."@en . . "Ngh\u1EC7 An, Vietnam"@en . . "Phan Dinh Phung"@en .