CHIC INDOCHINE TRAVELER · MARCH 2026
The Forgotten King: Discovering the ‘Hidden Gem’ Tomb of Three Nguyen Kings
A short walk from the crowds, between silent pines, lies the resting place of a prince who fathered three emperors — and the most exquisite porcelain mosaics in Hue.
By The Chic Indochine Traveler · 12 min read
The stone dragons and twin stele pavilions of Kien Thai Vuong’s tomb — hidden on Cu Si Mountain, Hue
Everyone goes to the Royal Tombs. The grand names: Minh Mang, Tu Duc, Khai Dinh. They are magnificent, deservedly famous. But on a hillside in Thuy Xuan, wrapped in pine silence, there is a tomb that almost nobody talks about. It belongs to a man who never wore the crown, yet whose bloodline placed three sons on the dragon throne. His name was Nguyen Phuc Hong Cai, posthumously titled Kien Thai Vuong. His story is an echo of filial piety, unfinished ambition, and the most intimate art of the Nguyen dynasty. This is a journey to Hue’s truest hidden gem.
✧ For first‑time visitors to Hue ✧
This tomb lies right beside the tomb of King Dong Khanh (Tự Lăng). From the center, take a Grab Bike or taxi to “lăng vua Đồng Khánh” and walk 50m south. The site is freely open, but bring small cash for the caretaker (optional). After restoration in 2023, the paths are clear. Combine with a visit to Tu Duc or a peaceful coffee at a nearby garden.
✨ Key Highlights for Your Journey
The Site’s Uniqueness Two identical stele pavilions (bi đình) with walls depicting the “Twenty‑four Filial Exemplars” in porcelain mosaic—a layout and level of intimate detail found nowhere else in Hue.
Essential Logistics Located just 50 meters from King Dong Khanh’s tomb (Tự Lăng) in Thủy Xuân. Best time: early morning (7‑9 AM) for quiet light. Entry is free; donations appreciated.
Nearby Pairing Perfect slow morning: combine with Dong Khanh Tomb, then a short trip to Tu Duc Tomb and its garden cafés for a complete, crowd‑free Hue experience.
Filial Art Treasure The 24 mosaic scenes are a private message from three kings to their father. Bring a zoom lens or binoculars to appreciate the tiny ceramic fragments.
The Prince Who Never Reigned
Nguyen Phuc Hong Cai was born in 1845, the 26th son of King Thieu Tri. At 31, he died — too young, and never a king. But three of his sons became emperors: Kien Phuc, Ham Nghi, and Dong Khanh. Through them, his blood flowed to Khai Dinh and Bao Dai. A quiet prince, he rests today in a tomb that feels like a garden.
When Dong Khanh ascended the throne, he began building a magnificent temple (Truy Tu) near his father’s grave, intending to move the spirit tablet there. But the king died unexpectedly in 1889. The temple became his own — now known as Ngu Hy Dien, the heart of Dong Khanh’s tomb. Father and son face each other across a shallow valley, separated by death, united by pine wind.
Arrival: The Gate and the Pines
You approach through a gate decorated with cloisonné enamel (pháp lam) — a technique reserved for the court. Flanking it, two ceramic nghê (sacred dogs) guard the way. The path curves gently, and suddenly the twin stele pavilions appear, their walls shimmering with broken porcelain. A French researcher in the 1920s wrote: “The artisans knew how to draw from the color combination of porcelain pieces a wonderful beauty.” He was right.
The Twin Stele Pavilions
Nowhere else in Hue will you find two identical bia đình facing each other like this. Inside, stone steles record the virtues of Kien Thai Vuong and the reverence of his royal sons. But the real treasure is the outer walls: twenty‑four scenes from the Chinese classic “The Twenty‑four Filial Exemplars”, rendered in tiny ceramic shards. A son warms his parents’ bed with his body. A child carries water for his elderly mother. Each scene is a lesson in gratitude, a message from three kings to their father.
I spent an hour here, tracing the fragments with my fingers. Blue and white from Bat Trang, green shards, broken bowls reborn as art. Under the afternoon light, they glow softly.
Filial art: The mosaics echo the style of Khai Dinh’s tomb, but here they feel more intimate — not a display of wealth, but a private conversation between sons and their father.
Stone Dragons & The Tomb
Beyond the pavilions, two Thanh stone dragons lead the way. They are smaller than those at imperial tombs, but carved with the same devotion. The tomb itself is a two‑tiered rectangle, modest, with a stone altar in front and a screen behind. No grand palace, no ceremonial courtyard. Just the quietness of a prince who became a king’s father.
I sat on the steps for a long time. Cicadas hummed. A breeze moved through the pines. Somewhere below, tourist buses idled at Dong Khanh’s tomb. Up here, there was only stillness.
What Lies Beneath the Surface
✧ The hidden details most visitors miss ✧
- The two identical bi đình: A layout found nowhere else — symbolizing the dual reign of filial piety and history.
- The 24 filial scenes: Each one is a different story. Bring binoculars or zoom lens; the details are tiny and exquisite.
- The unfinished Truy Tu temple: Walk toward the back of the compound and you’ll see traces of the original construction — stones that never became a shrine.
- The dragon’s whiskers: Look closely at the stone dragons; their whiskers curl in a style unique to the late Nguyen dynasty.
- Nghê of the gate: They are not lions, but nghê — a hybrid creature that guards sacred spaces in Hue.
- Pháp lam gate: One of the few places where you can see original cloisonné enamel on a gate surface.
Weaving the Visit into a Hue Day
This tomb is tiny — you need an hour, maybe two. But its proximity to Dong Khanh’s tomb makes it a perfect addition. Here’s a suggested slow morning:
7:30 — Start at Dong Khanh’s tomb (Tu Lang). Explore the hybrid East‑West architecture and the lacquered interiors of Ngu Hy Dien.
9:00 — Walk the 50 meters to Kien Thai Vuong’s tomb. Sit with the mosaics. Let the quiet settle.
10:30 — Take a short drive (or a 20‑minute walk) to Tu Duc’s tomb. Have a coffee at the nearby Tinh Gia Vien, a garden café overlooking the lotus pond.
Afternoon — Continue to Minh Mang or Khai Dinh, or return to the city for a bowl of Bún Bò at a local market.
Why it stays with you
I came because of the story — a father of three kings, a forgotten prince. But I stayed because of the silence. In Hue, where every other monument echoes with guided tours and shutter clicks, this place breathes differently. The mosaics are not just decoration; they are a son’s message across time. The twin pavilions are not redundancy; they are symmetry of love. When I finally walked back down the hill, I felt I had witnessed something private — a family memory, preserved in porcelain and stone, waiting for anyone who cares to look.
The Northwest Loop taught me that the road less traveled holds the deepest stories. Hue taught me that even among the famous, there are hidden gems. Kien Thai Vuong’s tomb is one of them.
— The Chic Indochine Traveler
CHIC INDOCHINE TRAVELER · THE ART OF SLOW DISCOVERY · MARCH 2026