The Man Who Was Briefly King

Arriving in the remote and jungled highlands of Annam, a swindling Frenchman was able to establish himself as the region’s self-appointed ruler. 

Marie-Charles David de Mayréna, King Marie I of the Sedang, from Le Journal Illustré, 1889.
Marie-Charles David de Mayréna, King Marie I of the Sedang, from Le Journal Illustré, 1889. Courtesy of the Kingsley Collection of Self-Proclaimed Monarchies.

The high noon of colonialism in the late 19th century created opportunities for European-born adventurers to set themselves up as potentates on the periphery of empire. Some were highly successful in their aims; others have been lost to obscurity. One of the best known is James Brooke, who in 1841 became Rajah of Sarawak in north Borneo, founding a dynasty that ruled until Sarawak was ceded to Britain in 1946.

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