Nguyen Tri Phuong (born 1806, near Saigon [now Ho Chi Minh City], Vietnam—died Nov. 20, 1873, Hanoi) was a general dedicated to protecting Vietnam from European influence and military conquest by France. He was a conservative and a close adviser to the emperor Tu Duc (reigned 1847–83).
The son of a provincial administrator, Nguyen Tri Phuong entered the military service and distinguished himself by repelling the Siamese invasion of Chau Doc, on the Cambodian border, and recapturing Ha Tien. At the death of General Truong Minh Giang in 1841, Nguyen Tri Phuong was named as his successor and became viceroy of lower Cochinchina (modern southern Vietnam).
Nguyen Tri Phuong linked himself to the monarchy by arranging the marriage of one of his daughters to Tu Duc, becoming one of the most powerful ministers at the court of Hue. Together, he and Tu Duc kept Vietnam closed to the West but, in refusing to adopt Western technology, left the country backward and vulnerable to conquest by the French.
Nguyen Tri Phuong delayed French conquest by his defense against Admiral Charles Rigault de Genouilly at Tourane (now Da Nang) in 1859, but he was decisively beaten in 1861 by Admiral Léonard Charner at Chi Hoa, near Saigon (now Ho Chi Minh City), and France was ceded several southern provinces. His final defeat in 1873 occurred in the defense of the Hanoi citadel. Taken prisoner, he availed himself of a traditional Vietnamese means of political and moral protest by tearing at his bandages and starving himself to death.