Nguyen Truong To (born 1828, Nghe An province, Vietnam—died 1871) was an early advocate of modernization and political reform in Vietnam who was among the first Vietnamese to travel abroad and to realize the adjustments his country needed in order to survive.
A convert to Roman Catholicism, Nguyen Truong To traveled with French priests to Italy and France; upon his return to Vietnam in the 1860s, he was received by Emperor Tu Duc, to whom he advocated modernization. In 1866 Tu Duc sent him back to Europe as an official emissary to purchase equipment and to engage Western specialists for the introduction of modern technology into Vietnam. The project, however, was never realized because the French conquest of southern Vietnam in 1867 persuaded the emperor, on the advice of his mandarins, to pursue a policy of isolation from the West.
Nguyen Truong To advocated stringent political and economic reforms, fighting the conservative elements at court. He urged a reduction in the number of officials and an increase in their responsibilities and salaries in order to fight corruption. He also advocated political cooperation with all foreign powers on the basis of equality to prevent any single power from gaining ascendancy. His other suggestions included governmental, social, and educational reforms, the use of Western technological knowledge and scientific equipment in order to exploit the natural resources of the country, and the elimination of Chinese characters in Vietnamese writing. Nguyen Truong To’s repeated demands brought severe reprisals from the court. Vietnam’s leaders refused to listen to his reasoning and tried in vain to keep the modern world out of the country.