Tropedia

  • Before making a single edit, Tropedia EXPECTS our site policy and manual of style to be followed. Failure to do so may result in deletion of contributions and blocks of users who refuse to learn to do so. Our policies can be reviewed here.
  • All images MUST now have proper attribution, those who neglect to assign at least the "fair use" licensing to an image may have it deleted. All new pages should use the preloadable templates feature on the edit page to add the appropriate basic page markup. Pages that don't do this will be subject to deletion, with or without explanation.
  • All new trope pages will be made with the "Trope Workshop" found on the "Troper Tools" menu and worked on until they have at least three examples. The Trope workshop specific templates can then be removed and it will be regarded as a regular trope page after being moved to the Main namespace. THIS SHOULD BE WORKING NOW, REPORT ANY ISSUES TO Janna2000, SelfCloak or RRabbit42. DON'T MAKE PAGES MANUALLY UNLESS A TEMPLATE IS BROKEN, AND REPORT IT THAT IS THE CASE. PAGES WILL BE DELETED OTHERWISE IF THEY ARE MISSING BASIC MARKUP.

READ MORE

Tropedia
Register
Advertisement
WikEd fancyquotesQuotesBug-silkHeadscratchersIcons-mini-icon extensionPlaying WithUseful NotesMagnifierAnalysisPhoto linkImage LinksHaiku-wide-iconHaikuLaconic
File:Triads and tongs1 5723.jpg

Just your average gentleman's "society."


Subject of a thousand Hong Kong movies and a recurrent trope in Western Yellow Peril stories, the Triads started life as anti-Manchu resistance during the Qing Dynasty. The official myth says that they were created after the burning of the southern Shaolin temple, by five survivors of the battle. Some claim that one of them was Jee Sin, who was the master of the 5 Elders of Southern Chinese kung fu. After the fall of the Qing dyansty in the last century, the Triads now found themselves without a purpose and there was a split between the Mainland and overseas branches. The Mainland group is what we now commonly refer to as the Triads, while the overseas group became known as the Hongmen. The mainland Triads now turned to crime as they were unable to reenter normal society. After the Communist takeover, many Triad members moved to Hong Kong and Taiwan to escape new measures against organized crime. Hong Kong's Triad problems peaked in the 1970s, helped by police corruption.

The Hongmen is divided into 180 branches, and is arguably a Freemason-like organization, with an emphasis on patriotism, given the circumstances of its origin. Distinguished politicians such as Sun Yat Sen and Chiang Kai Shek were senior members. It shares traditions with the Triads, since they were one and the same not that far back. They are illegal in Hong Kong due to their relationship with the Triads, but are legal in Taiwan as a secret society. Not surprising, since President Chiang Kai Shek was a member. They exist in China as a political party, and hold the single non-communist ministerial seat. It has branches in other overseas Chinese communities, where it is referred to as Chinese Freemasonry. Its membership is rapidly aging with the change in the times.

Another group are the Tongs, modeled on the Triads, which arose in the US in response to the need for support organizations for new immigrant Chinese, as well as taking charge of protecting their members from violence from other groups. Some Tongs are fully legitimate organizations. Others, not so much. Many Triad members would join Tongs on reaching America, causing some Tongs to be strongly influenced by the Triads.

Chinese secret societies are guaranteed to exist anywhere in the world with a significant Chinese immigrant population, from Australia to L.A.

The secret societies used to be governed by strict codes of conduct and an inflexible hierarchical system, but that system has broken down in recent years, leading to behavior that many older members would consider unethical. The traditional secret societies have 36 Oaths which basically say, "don't screw over your sworn brothers, or you will get chopped up with lots of blades." (This phrase is repeated many, many times during the oaths, just to remind you). Doesn't mention anything about the morality of killing innocents. The oaths are sealed with the drinking of blood mixed with wine, and the oath-takers enter into a sworn brotherhood with the rest of the members of their organization. No problems with having more sworn brothers from elsewhere, though.

As mentioned earlier, the traditional punishment is death by a hundred cuts, or getting ambushed and hacked up which is easier and quicker. Hong Kong triads especially love their cleavers, given the difficulty of obtaining guns in Hong Kong. A machete is fine too. Overseas groups may use guns, automatic weapons and explosives, if they don't find them dishonorable. Some martial arts, especially some of the Southern Shaolin styles tend to have a reputation as being used by the Triads, especially due to their common origin myth in the Southern Shaolin temple.

The patron god of the Triads is none other than Guan Yu (of both literary and video game note). He is also the patron god of the police... and a patron god for business.

Compare and contrast with The Syndicate, Yakuza, The Mafia, The Mafiya, London Gangster.

Examples of The Triads and the Tongs include:


Anime and Manga[]


Comicbooks[]

  • In Judge Dredd, the judicial system of Hong Tong (the future Hong Kong) has been largely infiltrated and taken over by Triads, much as the Hondo-Cit (Japan) Judges were overtaken by the Yakuza.
  • The Triads play a prominent role in the Corto Maltese book Corto Maltese in Siberia (Corte sconta detta Arcana), as well as in the Animated Adaptation based on the book, Corto Maltese: La Cour secrète des Arcanes.
  • New York's Chinatown Tongs are a major force in DMZ, especially due to their cunning leader Wilson.
  • Sin City mentions Tongs being present in the town but they have yet to appear in the series.


Films — Live-Action[]

  • Infernal Affairs and its sequels. The first film was remade into The Departed, with the Triads replaced with The Irish Mob.
  • Young and Dangerous, a series of films based on a comic. Blamed for glamorizing Triad life among young people.
  • The Wing Kong and Chang Sing street gangs/tongs in Big Trouble in Little China.
  • Election, and its sequel Triad Election in which the oldest HK Triad kills and maims more of its own members than the rival gang.
  • A Better Tomorrow. Mark Gor (Big Brother Mark) inspired a generation of Chinese kids to walk around in dusters and sunglasses while chewing on toothpicks. Mark Gor (and every "criminal" that Chow Yun-Fat played afterwards) is a romantic in a cynical world, who steadfastly holds onto notions of brotherhood and honor, and would gladly lay down his life to protect innocent women and children.
  • Fu Manchu often works with/controls these groups in films which feature him.
  • The 1985 film Year of the Dragon (based on the novel by Robert Daley, screenplay by Oliver Stone and director Michael Cimino) tells of the struggle between a controversial New York police captain and an ambitious young Triad member, both of whom upset the 'live and let live' status quo between the Triads and the police.
  • Push featured the triads as baddies.
  • Lao Che and his henchmen in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.
  • Shanghai Triad by Zhang Yimou.
  • Their money is stolen, kicking off the main plot of Nuns on the Run.
  • In Kung Fu Hustle, several gangs are causing trouble in Shanghai with the Axe gang being the most powerful one. In fact, the beginning starts with a small gang bullying a police station, only to get eliminated by the Axe gang.
  • Jean Claude Van Damme takes on the Triads in the movie Wake Of Death.
  • Romeo Must Die has an African American gang and a Chinese gang butting head over waterfront property.
  • The second and third Rush Hour movies deal with the Triads. Of particular note are the Parisian Triad members who don't even speak Chinese. The first movie has a Chinese gang, but they are working for an Evil Brit.
  • War involves a conflict between the Triads and the Yakuza in San Francisco.
  • Featured in From Paris with Love.


Literature[]

  • In David Wingrove's Chung Kuo series, the Triads become increasingly powerful in the lower Levels
  • The Yellow Peril variant is referenced, and averted, in John Steinbeck's East of Eden, in which Adam Trask's Chinese servant Lee tells Adam and Samuel about going for help to his "family association".
Cquote1

 Samuel: "I have heard of them."

Lee: "You mean Chinee hatchet man fightee Tong war over slave girl? It's a little different from that, really."

Cquote2
    • How different? Well, it turns out that Lee and his Tong leaders have been studying ancient Hebrew in order to analyse a single word in The Bible.
  • The Triads in Hong Kong are a persistent thorn in Dirk Struan's side in James Clavell's Tai-Pan. Unknown to him, several Chinese characters are members, including his illegitimate son.
  • Hong Kong Triads feature in Dark Heavens, led by Simon Wong.
  • Key to the plot of Michael Connelly's novel 9 Dragons.


Live-Action TV[]

  • In Deadwood, a Tong gang supported by George Hearst wrests control of Celestial Alley from the local strongman Mr. Wu, with the goal of supplying Chinese prostitutes and opium to white residents. Eventually Al Swearengen helps negotiate for Wu to retake control of Celestial Alley and slaughter the new Tongs.
  • The Doctor Who story "The Talons of Weng-Chiang" has the Tong of the Black Scorpion as Mooks serving their Physical God Weng-Chiang (who turns out to be a psychotic time-traveller from the future who bamboozled them with high-tech tricks).
  • Tongs were the focus of a couple of episodes of Kung Fu
  • A really ridiculous episode of Psych depicted a kidnapping related to two rival Triads in Santa Barbara. Yes, two Triads in Santa Barbara.
  • A tong serves as the main villain in BBC's Sherlock though it's referred to as an ancient Chinese crime syndicate rather than a Chinese-American organization a little over a century old.
  • An episode of Castle features a tong. This example is unusual in that a character mentions that most tongs are legitimate organizations.
  • In an episode of Arctic Air the police are looking for a hitman from Vancouver who is trapped in the arctic community when a snowstorm stops all traffic in and out of town. One of the older mechanics starts telling stories about how nasty and deadly Triad assassins are. His stories are mostly nonsense and the hitman is actually Caucasian and working for a biker gang rather than any Chinese crime group.
  • The mission that qualified Nikita for active duty involved the assassination of Victor Han, a member of the Department of Homeland Security in its early days. In actuality, the assassination was faked in order to remove Han, a triad member, from the intelligence community without pissing off said triad overmuch. Fast forward to the present day, and Nikita lays into a triad's New York operations only to discover Victor Han is in charge.


Tabletop Games[]

  • The Triads are one of the biggest powers in Shadowrun, and effectively have all of Hong Kong in their pockets. The Yakuza are engaged in a vicious rivalry with them in San Francisco.
  • The Triad Sourcebook, one of the few supplements for Hong Kong Action Theatre, is an invaluable resource on the Triads and their use in Hong Kong action games in general.
  • A common enemy and occasionally ally in the contemporary juncture of Feng Shui
  • The Martian Triads are one of the major inner-system crime organisations in the GURPS Transhuman Space setting. While they do the usual organised crime stuff (loansharking, smuggling, protection), the bulk of their income comes from selling restricted and illegal bioroids, and they're known to have at least one Evilutionary Biologist on staff.
    • Eclipse Phase also has Space Triads, mostly based on the Moon and on non-planetary habitats. They're notable as the only criminal organization that remained racially homogeneous after the Fall, as other groups had to merge when their ranks were decimated. They specialize in stealing and trading "forks," copies of a person's mind.
  • Killing Streets, an expansion for Kindred of the East, describes the Old World of Darkness take on the state of in-game Triads and how to turn a campaign towards involving them. That's right, Chinese Demon Vampire/Were-whatever Gangsters.


Videogames[]

  • The Triads and the Tongs have been featured in every 3D Grand Theft Auto game thus far. You only work with them in San Andreas, however, though you get to wipe them out in GTA3.
    • The DS game Chinatown Wars obviously features them far more heavily than other GTA games. The player is the nephew of a triad leader.
  • Deus Ex features them from the Hong Kong levels onward.
    • The prequel Deus Ex Human Revolution features the Harvesters, a gang in the fictional two-tiered Chinese city called Hengsha, who "harvest" mechanical augmentations from others. Their leader is Tong Si Hung, the father of Tracer Tong from the first and second games.
  • The Dark Elf mafia in The Elder Scrolls is called Camonna Tong.
    • Their (legal) assassins' guild was called Morag Tong. The name probably means something different to the Dunmer than the Chinese.
      • To Dark Elf/Dunmer, Morag means woodsman and Tong means guild.
  • Triads are mentioned in City of Heroes... as being wiped out by the Tsoo, a magically tattooed gang of ninjas and wizards. Really.
  • In True Crime: Streets of L.A. the Triad was your introductory set of mooks. In True Crime: New York City, the Shadow Tong was a more intermediate set.
  • The Bangkok mission set in Mafia Wars has the player choose to ally him or herself with the Triads or the Yakuza, affecting which missions become available.
  • The John Woo game Stranglehold, in keeping with its cinematic predecessor Hard Boiled, has Tequila going up against two of these along with a Russian crime syndicate.
  • Rubi of Wet travels to Hong Kong on several of her missions, and thus has to fight these guys several times during the course of the game.
  • The Triads play a semi-major role in the last 3rd of the plot of Mafia II.
  • The White Mountain Triad is a minor faction in Alpha Protocol, and its leader, Hong Shi, is a source of intel, missions, and resources during the first half of the Taipei mission hub.
  • The very first set of levels in Hitman: Codename 47 involve stirring turmoil between the Red Dragon and Blue Lotus Triads by killing key members during negotiation attempts as part of a plan to get close to and assassinate the Red Dragon leader, Lee Hong.
  • In Akatsuki Blitzkampf, two playable characters belong to the Triads: Dawei Yu Lue and Marilyn Sue Dajie. Both are thrown into the plot when their boss, In Fu, is murdered in suspicious circumstances. As it turns out, In Fu was a clone of the Big Bad Murakumo, killed because he was starting to develop his own plans and ambitions. And the one who killed him is Marilyn, who was told to kill her boss by Mycale, and Wei is FURIOUS when he realizes it.

Web Originals[]

  • ASH: The Onyx Eye tong are a crime syndicate and a villainous martial arts school.


Western Animation[]

  • The Legend of Korra has the Triple Threat Triad and rival gangs the Agni Kais and Red Monsoons, groups of bending criminals with a large amount of influence in the poorer areas of Republic City.
Advertisement