Setthathirath II

Phra Chao Sai Ong Hue
ພຣະເຈົ້າໄຊອົງເວ້
Setthathirath II
King of Lan Xang
Reign1700–1707
PredecessorNan Tharat
SuccessorAs First King of Kingdom of Vientiane
King of Vientiane
Reign1707–1735
PredecessorAs Last King of Kingdom of Lan Xang
SuccessorOng Long
Born1685
Hội Nguyên District, Đàng Ngoài, Đại Việt
(present day Con Cuông District, Nghệ An, Vietnam)
Died1735
Vientiane
IssueOng Long
Ong Bun
Khuang-Na
Phra Chao Sarasak
Names
Setthathirath II

Setthathirath II (died 1735), also called Ong Lo[citation needed] and Sai Ong Hue (also spelled Xai Ong Ve; Lao: ໄຊອົງເວ້), grandson of the great ruler Suliyavongsa, was the king of the Lao Kingdom of Lān Xāng. In Vietnamese records, he was called Triều Phúc (朝福).

He spent most of his early years as a prince of the royal house in exile at Huế (now in Vietnam). His father Prince Som Phou fled to Vietnam upon the placement by the nobles of his younger brother (Setthathirath II's uncle) Suliyavongsa was king of Lan Xang. Upon the 1694 death of King Suliyavongsa, a noble named Tian Thala ascended to the throne. Within six months, Tian Thala was deposed.

In 1698 Setthathirath II attacked Vientiane, the capital of Lan Xang. In 1699, Nan Tharat became ruler and with the aid of Vietnamese forces, Setthathirath II ousted King Nan Tharat and secured the city. In 1700 he declared himself king under the name Sethathirat II, and in 1705 he moved the Prabang Buddha, the sacred religious statue and symbol of royalty, from Luang Prabang to Vientiane.

Setthathirath II then sent his brother to take the northern city of Loung Prabang from his cousin Prince Kitsarat (or Kitsarath), a grandson of King Suliyavongsa, who refused to recognize his authority. Kitsarat asks for assistance from the Siamese King and was granted independence from Lan Xang, creating the Kingdom of Luang Phrabang and converting Lan Xang into the Kingdom of Vientiane.

In 1713, another grandson of Suliyavongsa, Prince Nokasat Song or Nokasad, saw the opportunity to break away from Lan Xang to the South, and was also granted independence from Siam to form the Kingdom of Champasak, which further divided the Lao Kingdom.