Bảo Đại
![Bảo Đại on throne in [[Imperial City of Huế#Thái Hòa Điện (太和殿, Hall of Thái Hòa, Throne hall)|Thái Hòa Điện]].](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0f/Emperor_B%E1%BA%A3o_%C4%90%E1%BA%A1i_on_his_throne_%28cropped%29.jpg)
The Japanese ousted the Vichy French administration in March 1945 and ruled through Bảo Đại, who proclaimed the Empire of Vietnam. Following the surrender of Japan and the subsequent August Revolution, he abdicated in August 1945 in favor of the Ho Chi Minh-led Democratic Republic of Vietnam and briefly served as an advisor in its government.
Between 1946 and 1949, Bảo Đại left Vietnam to travel across and live in China, Hong Kong and Europe. During this time, he switched his support from Hồ's communist Việt Minh to anti-communist nationalist groups before signing a series of accords with the French Fourth Republic that established the State of Vietnam (as an associated state within the French Union) in opposition to Hồ's Democratic Republic. Cochinchina returned to Vietnam. He served as its Chief of State (國長, ''Quốc trưởng'') between 1949 and 1955. In 1954, he lost his power to the communists in the North. In the South, towards the end of his term in office, Bảo Đại lost power to his Prime Minister Ngô Đình Diệm, who was supported by the United States, and was eventually ousted in a referendum in 1955. The State of Vietnam became the Republic of Vietnam. He later lived in exile in Paris, France, until his death in 1997.
Viewed as a "puppet ruler", Bảo Đại was criticized for being too closely associated with France and for his lavish lifestyle, including months-long pleasure tour in Europe that earned him the sobriquet "night-club emperor". He is currently perceived negatively by both the current Vietnamese government and the anti-communist diaspora but in moderation. Provided by Wikipedia