“…1 Specific timeline events which mentioned in the article will be additionally referenced in bold with a letter corresponding to their position on Figure 1 (Heimbach, 1976) 1964: Hmong prophet calls for revolt in Laos (Halpern, 1964) 1957: Protests across Northwest Vietnam; Hmong, Yao and Khmu participants (Lentz, 2017) 1967: Hmong king proclamation in Dien Bien, Vietnam; rumours of king bringing airplanes and tanks (Vương, 2005) 1959-71: Peaceful movement led by Shong Lue Yang in Laos, Hmong and Khmu followers (Smalley, Vang & Yang, 1990) 1978-81: Rumours of Hmong king, Hmong migration from Vietnam to China (Tapp, 1989) 1970-90s: Violent Hmong Chao Fa insurgency in Laos and Thailand (Baird, 2013) 1980s-present: Peaceful Hmong movements in Chiangrai refugee camp, Thailand (Tapp, 2015) Late 1980s-present: Peaceful Hmong sect led by Duong Van Minh in Vietnam (Rumsby, 2018) 2003: Violent Hmong attack in Houaphanh, Laos (Baird, 2004) Secondly, uprisings have constantly occurred in 'borderlands' regions, either defined as territories claimed by multiple polities without clearly demarcated boundaries (Giersch, 2006), or in the literal sense after modern state borders were established (see Figure 2). This factor has been crucial to the ability of millenarian movements to operate transnationally, as leaders or followers regularly crossed borders to evade state armed forces or recruit more people.…”