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Đại Việt

Đại Việt (大越, IPA: [ɗâjˀ vìət]; literally Great Việt), often known as Annam (Vietnamese: An Nam, Chữ Hán: 安南), was a monarchy in eastern Mainland Southeast Asia from the 10th century AD to the early 19th century, centered around the region of present-day Hanoi, Northern Vietnam. Its early name, Đại Cồ Việt,[note 1] was established in 968 by Vietnamese ruler Đinh Bộ Lĩnh after he ended the Anarchy of the 12 Warlords, until the beginning of the reign of Lý Thánh Tông (r. 1054–1072), the third emperor of the Lý dynasty. Đại Việt lasted until the reign of Gia Long (r. 1802–1820), the first emperor of the Nguyễn dynasty, when the name was changed to Việt Nam.[6][7]

Đại Cồ Việt (968–1054)
Đại Việt (1054–1804)
Đại Cồ Việt Quốc (大瞿越國)
Đại Việt Quốc (大越國)
968–1400
1428–1804
Kingdom of the Đại Việt (blue) in c. 1000.
CapitalHoa Lư (968–1010)
Thăng Long (1010–1398, 1428–1789)
Phú Xuân (1789–1804)
Official languagesVietnamese
Văn ngôn (official script since 1174)[1]
Common languagesViet–Muong (Northern Vietic) languages
Kra–Dai languages
Other Southeast Asian Languages
Religion
Buddhism (State religion from 968 to 1400)
Confucianism
Taoism
Đạo Lương
Hinduism
Islam
Catholicism
GovernmentAbsolute monarchy
(968-1533, 1788-1804)
Monarchy and military dictatorship
(1533-1788)
Emperor 
• 968–979
Đinh Bộ Lĩnh
• 1802–1804
Gia Long
Military dictators 
• 1533–1545 (first)
Nguyễn Kim
• 1545–1786
Trịnh lords
• 1786–1788 (last)
Nguyễn Huệ
Historical eraPostclassical era to Late modern period
905
• Established.[2]
968
• Lý Thánh Tông shortened his empire's name from Đại Cồ Việt to Đại Việt
1054
• Đại Ngu Kingdom under Hồ Quý Ly
1400–1407
• Ming rule
1407–1427
• Le Thanh Tong's reign and expansions
1460–97
• Fragmentation[3]
16th century–1802
• Emperor Gia Long changed Đại Việt to Việt Nam
1804
Population
• 1200
1,200,000[4]
• 1400
1,600,000[5]
• 1539
5,625,000[5]
CurrencyVietnamese văn, banknote
Today part of

Đại Việt's history is divided into the rule of eight dynasties: Đinh (968–980), Early Lê (980–1009), (1009–1226), Trần (1226–1400), Hồ (1400–1407), and Later Lê (1428–1789); the Mạc dynasty (1527–1677); and the brief Tây Sơn dynasty (1778–1802). It was briefly interrupted by the Hồ dynasty (1400–1407), who changed the country's name briefly to Đại Ngu,[note 2] and the Fourth Era of Northern Domination (1407–1427), when the region was administered as Jiaozhi by the Ming dynasty.[8]: 181  Đại Việt's history can also be divided into two periods: the unified empire, which lasted from the 960s to 1533, and the fragmented empire, which lasted from 1533 to 1802, when there were more than one dynasty and several noble clans simultaneously ruling from their own domains. From the 13th to the 18th century, Đại Việt's borders expanded to encompass territory that resembled modern-day Vietnam, which lies along the South China Sea from the Gulf of Tonkin to the Gulf of Thailand.

Early Đại Việt emerged in the 960s as a hereditary monarchy with Mahayana Buddhism as its state religion and lasted for six centuries. From the 16th century on, Đại Việt gradually weakened and decentralized into multiple sub-kingdoms and domains, ruled by either the Lê, Mạc, Trịnh, or Nguyễn families simultaneously. It was briefly unified by the Tây Sơn brothers in 1786, who divided among themselves in 1787. After the Trịnh-Nguyễn War,which ended in Nguyễn victory and the destruction of the Tây Sơn, Đại Việt was reunified, ending 300 years of fragmentation. From 968 to 1804, Đại Việt flourished and acquired significant power in the region. The state slowly annexed Champa and Cambodia's territories, expanding Vietnamese territories to the south and west. The Empire of Đại Việt was the primary precursor to the country of Vietnam and the basis for its national historic and cultural identity.

Etymology

The term "Việt" (Yue) (Chinese: ; pinyin: Yuè; Cantonese Yale: Yuht; Wade–Giles: Yüeh4; Vietnamese: Việt) in Early Middle Chinese was first written using the logograph "戉" for an axe (a homophone) in oracle bone and bronze inscriptions of the late Shang dynasty (c. 1200 BC), and later as "越".[9] At the time, it referred to a people or chieftain to the northwest of the Shang.[10][11] In the early 8th century BC, a tribe on the middle Yangtze was called the Yangyue, a term later used for people further south.[10] Between the 7th and 4th centuries BC, Yue/Việt referred to the state of Yue in the lower Yangtze basin and its people.[9][10]

From the 3rd century BC on, the term was used for the non-Han Chinese populations of south and southwest China and northern Vietnam, with particular ethnic groups called Minyue, Ouyue, Luoyue (Vietnamese: Lạc Việt), etc., collectively called the Baiyue (Bách Việt, Chinese: 百越; pinyin: Bǎiyuè; Cantonese Yale: Baak Yuet; Vietnamese: Bách Việt; "Hundred Yue/Việt").[9][10] The term "Baiyue" (or "Bách Việt") first appeared in the book Lüshi Chunqiu compiled around 239 BC.[12] According to Ye Wenxian (1990), and Wan (2013), the ethnonym of the Yuefang in northwest China is not associated with that of the Baiyue in southeastern China.[13]

At first, Yue referred to all peoples of the south that practiced un-Chinese slash-and-burn cultivation and lived in stilted houses, but this definition does not suggest that all Yue were the same and spoke the same language. They were loosely connected or independent tribal societies belonging to a diverse ethnolinguistic complex.[14] As Chinese imperial power expanded toward the south, Chinese sources generalized the tribes of northern Vietnam at the time as Yue, or the Luoyue and the Ouyue (Lạc Việt and Au Viet in Vietnamese). Over time, the term "Yue" morphed and became a geopolitical designation rather than a term for a group of people, and it became more of a historical and political term than one tied to connotations of barbarism.[14] During the period of Chinese rule, many states and rebellions in the former region of Yue (Southern China and Northern Vietnam) used the name Yue as an old geopolitical name rather than as an ethnonym.[15]

When the word Yue (Middle Chinese: ɦʉɐt̚) was borrowed into Vietnamese language during the late Tang dynasty (618–907) by the Austroasiatic Viet-Muong speaking peoples who were the ancestors of modern-day Vietnamese Kinh, the exonym was gradually localized to become an endonym of the Vietnamese.[16] That endonym might have manifested in different forms depending on how neighboring peoples who interact with, referred to the Vietnamese back then. For instance, until modern-day, the Cham have been calling the Vietnamese Yuen (Yvan) from the reign of Harivarman IV (1074–1080) to the present unchanged.[17] It is evident that Vietnamese elites tried to tie their ethnic identity to the ancient Yue through constructed traditions during the late medieval period.[18] However, all endonyms and exonyms referring to the Vietnamese, such as Viet, Kinh, or Kra-Dai Keeu, are related to political structures or have common origins in ancient Chinese geographical imagination. Most of the time, the Austroasiatic-speaking ancestors of the modern Kinh under one single ruler might have assumed for themselves a similar or identical self-designation inherent in the modern Vietnamese first-person pronoun ta (us, we, I) to differentiate themselves from other groups. In the older colloquial usage, ta corresponded to "ours" as opposed to "theirs," and during colonial times they were "nước ta" (our country) and "tiếng ta" (our language) in contrast to "nước tây" (western countries) and "tiếng tây" (western languages).[19]

Historically, Đại Việt, (Đại) Cồ Việt, or Cự Việt was the country's official name and not a dynastic name. "Đại Việt Quốc" (the Great Viet State) was first mentioned in several brick inscriptions from Hoa Lu, the first capital of the polity, from the 10th century AD.[20] According to Momoki (2014), the name (Đại) Cồ Việt is from the 15th-century chronicle Đại Việt sử ký toàn thư and likely originated from Cự Việt in 12th-century Ly dynasty inscriptions rather than being the name for the kingdom during the late 10th century.[20]

History

Origins

For a thousand years, the area of what is now Northern Vietnam was ruled by a succession of Chinese dynasties as Nanyue, Giao Chỉ (交趾, Jiaozhi), Giao Châu (交州, Jiaozhou), Annan, and Jinghai Circuit.[21]

Ancient Northern Vietnam and particularly the Red River Delta were inhabited by various different ethnolinguistic groups that constituted modern-day Hmong–Mien, Tibeto–Burman, Kra–Dai, Austroasiatic speaking peoples. Early societies had emerged and existed there for a while before the Han conquest in 111 BC, such as the Phùng Nguyên and Dong Son cultures. Both practiced metallurgy and sophisticated bronze-casting techniques. They were together called the Yue and barbarians by the Chinese and collectively understood as non-Chinese. Ancient Chinese texts do not give any distinction for each tribe, and not precisely indicate which languages of tribes that they interacted with in Northern Vietnam.[22] All peoples living under the administration of the Empire were usually referred to as either “people” (ren 人) or “subjects” (min 民). There was absolutely no classification or distinction for "Vietnamese" and it is implausible to identify people accurate as such or implying modern ethnicity to the ancient.[22] It is highly likely that these intermingled multilinguistic communities might have evolved into the present-day without modern ethnic consciousness until ethnic classification efforts carried out by the colonial government and successive governments of the Republic of Vietnam, Democratic Republic of Vietnam, and Socialist Republic of Vietnam, while retaining their intangible ethnic identity such as culture. There was no persisting "ethnic Vietnamese" identity during this period.[23]

Official Vietnamese history textbooks usually assume that the people of Northern Vietnam during Chinese rules were Việt/Yue.[24] The Yue were broad groups of non-Chinese peoples of the south which included many different ethnolinguistic groups who shared some certain customs.[14] After the disappearance of the Baiyue and the Lac Viet from Chinese records around the first century AD, new indigenous tribal groups might have emerged in the region under the name of Li-Lao. The Li-Lao people were also known for their great drum casting tradition. However, the culture produced Heger Type II drums, while the previous Dong Son culture of the Lac Viet produced Heger Type I drums.[25]

The Li Lao culture flourished from approximately 200 to 750 AD in present-day Southern China and Northern Vietnam. These Li tribes were recorded in Chinese sources as (俚) "bandits" inhabiting the coastal areas between the Pearl River and Red River. Li political structures were distributed in numerous autonomous settlements/chiefdoms (dong 洞) located in riverine valleys. The Book of Sui notes that Li noblemen who possess bronze drum in each dong were called dulao (都老), which Churchman argues bears some resemblance and cultural connection to the previous local ruling class of the Red River Delta.[26] The Li tribes were described as ferocious raiding bandits who refused to accept imperial authority,[27] leading to Jiaozhou, the heartland of the Red River Delta, whence the Chinese deemed a lone, isolated borderlands with difficult, limited administration.[28] Because the Li-Lao people managed to keep themselves away from Chinese sphere of cultural influence, the landscape of Northern Vietnam during Han-Tang period experienced a perfect equilibrium between Sinification and localization.[29] From the sixth to the seventh century, Chinese dynasties attempted to militarily subdue the Li dong, gradually causing the Li Lao culture to decline.[30][31]

The important effects of ten centuries of Chinese rules over Northern Vietnam arguably in terms of complex cultural and linguistics are still clear observable. Some native languages of the regions for a long time had employed Sinitic script and Sinitic-derived writing systems to represent their languages, such as Vietnamese, Tày, and Nùng.[32]

James Chamberlain believes that the traditional Vietic realm was north central Vietnam/northern Laos and not the Red River Delta. Based on his interpretation of Keith Weller Taylor's examination of Chinese texts (Jiu Tangshu, Xin Tangshu, Suishu, Taiping Huanyu Ji, Tongdian), Chamberlain suggests that Việt-Mường peoples began emigrating from Central Vietnam (Jiuzhen, Rinan) to the Red River Delta in the seventh century, during the Tang dynasty,[33] possibly due to pressure from the Khmers in the south or the Chinese in the north. Chamberlain speculates that during the rebellion led by Mai Thúc Loan, the son of a salt-producing family in Hoan province (today Hà Tĩnh Province, North-Central Vietnam), which lasted from 722 to 723, a large number of Sinicized lowland Vietic people or the Kinh moved north. The Jiu Tangshu[34][35] records that Mai Thúc Loan, also known as Mai Huyền Thành, styled himself as the Black Emperor (possibly after his swarthy complexion), and that he had 400,000 followers from 23 provinces across Annam and other kingdoms, including Champa and Chenla.[36]

However, archaeogenetics demonstrate that before the Đông Sơn period, the Red River Delta's inhabitants were predominantly Austroasiatic: genetic data from Phùng Nguyên culture's Mán Bạc burial site (dated 1,800 BC) have close proximity to modern Austroasiatic speakers;[37][38] meanwhile, "mixed genetics" from Đông Sơn culture's Núi Nấp site showed affinity to "Dai from China, Tai-Kadai speakers from Thailand, and Austroasiatic speakers from Vietnam, including the Kinh";[39] therefore, "[t]he likely spread of Vietic was southward from the RRD, not northward. Accounting for southern diversity will require alternative explanations."[40] Michael Churchman states that "the absence of records of large-scale population shifts indicates that there was a fairly stable group of people in Jiaozhi throughout the Han–Tang period who spoke Austroasiatic languages ancestral to modern Vietnamese".[41] On a Buddhist inscription dated to the 8th century from Thanh Mai village, Hà Nội, 100 out of 136 women mentioned in the epigraphy could be identified as ethnic Vietnamese females.[42] Linguist John Phan proposes that a local dialect of Middle Chinese called Annamese Middle Chinese developed and was spoken in the Red River Delta by descendants of Chinese immigrants, and later was absorbed into the co-existing Việt-Mường languages by the ninth century.[43] Phan identifies three layers of Chinese loanwords into Vietnamese: the earliest layer of borrowing dates to the Han dynasty (ca. 1st century CE) and Jin dynasty (ca. 4th century CE); the late layer of borrowing dates to the post-Tang period, and the recent layer of borrowing dates to the Ming & Qing dynasties.[44]

National historiography

Study of Northern Vietnam and the Red River Delta during the first millennium AD is highly problematic. This region is widely associated with the foundation of the modern country and nation-state of Vietnam. It has been given exceptional treatment and academic scrutiny compared to other regions. This unique academic focus has resulted in critical misinterpretations.[45] Some notable academic works have echoed the established frameworks of colonial and postcolonial Vietnamese nationalist historiography in order to associate the entire history of the early Red River Delta with the Vietnamese, i.e. the Kinh, and the modern country of Vietnam. The rewriting of Vietnamese history in the 20th century considered pushing several nationalistic themed theories. One notable theory, the Continuity, is defined as a belief that the peoples of Red River Delta during Han-Tang period had always retained their unique "Vietnamese identity" and "Vietnamese spirit", which was arguably rooted in the highly sophisticated Van Lang kingdoms under the Hung kings, which were largely legends transformed into "historical facts" under the scholarship of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam. This was despite relentless Chinese acculturation, making them "different" from other groups in Southern China who "eventually lost their separate identities through assimilation to Chinese culture."[46] The Continuity theory reconstructs the emergence of the Đại Việt kingdom in the 10th century as the awakening and resurrection of "Vietnamese sovereignty," and these traditions of Vietnamese exceptionalism continued into modern Vietnam.[47] For example, Keith Taylor took up some aspects of Vietnamese nationalist historiography in his 1983 monograph, The Birth of Vietnam, and falsely asserted that "Vietnam's independence resulted from a thousand-year struggle to throw off Chinese rule by a group of people who held a conviction 'that they were not and did not want to become Chinese.'"[48] Later, Taylor retreated from Vietnamese nationalist historiography.[49]

No evidence of "ethnic Vietnamese" resembling what would be considered the modern Vietnamese exists during the Han-Tang period.[48] Instead, ancient Northern Vietnam as well as today was very diverse and complex in terms of ethnolinguistic and cultural origins. The Continuity theory can be easily discredited by linguistic examinations. By the 9th-11th centuries, the northern portion of the Viet-Muong portion of Vietic speakers had just supposedly diverged, and one dialect cluster thereby evolved into Vietnamese.[50] Other theories advocated by John Phan presents evidence of Vietnamese being developed from a creolized language which resulted from a local linguistic shift from Middle Chinese to proto-Vietnamese after Sinitic rule.[51]

Beside anachronisms, Vietnamese nationalist scholarship also inserted a Vietnamese resistance myth into history by labeling any rebellious local group in Northern Vietnam during the Han-Tang period as collectively "Vietnamese" who 'were in constant struggles against the Chinese yokes,'[52] in contrast to "corrupt invading Chinese colonizers", generic modern nationalities and ethnicities.[51] The context was heavily entangled with modern perceptions about Vietnam during decolonization and the Cold War.[48][53] Historians such as Catherine Churchman have criticized attempts of characterizing the past through the lens of modern national boundaries and projecting a "wish for the restoration of long-lost national independence" onto localized dynasties.[24]

Founding

 
The Tĩnh Hải quân (Jinghai cirtuit) of the Khuc clan in 907 at the bottom of the map

Prior to independence in the late 9th century, the area that became Đại Việt in northern Vietnam was ruled by the Tang dynasty as Annan. The hill dwellers on the western frontier of Annan and powerful chieftains such as Lý Do Độc allied with the state of Nanzhao in Yunnan and rebelled against the Tang dynasty in the 860s. They captured Annan in three years, forcing the lowlanders to scatter to asylums around the delta. The Tang dynasty turned back and defeated the Nanzhao-indigenous alliance in 866 and renamed the area Jinghai Circuit. A military mutiny forced Tang authorities to withdraw in 880 while loyalist troops left for home on their own initiative.[54]

A regional regime led by the Khuc family formed on the Red River Delta in the early 10th century. From 907 to 917, Khúc Hạo and then Khúc Thừa Mỹ was appointed by Chinese dynasties as jiedushi, tributary governors. The Khúc did not try to create any kind of a de jure independent polity.[55] In 930, the neighboring Southern Han state invaded Annam and removed the Khúc from power. In 931, Dương Đình Nghệ, a local chief from Aizhou, revolted and quickly ousted the Southern Han.[56] In 937 he was assassinated by Kiều Công Tiễn, leader of the revanchist faction allied with the Southern Han. In 938, emperor Liu Gong of Southern Han led an invasion fleet to Annam to assist Kiều Công Tiễn. Dương Đình Nghệ's son-in-law Ngô Quyền, also was from the south, marched north and killed Kiều Công Tiễn. He then led the people to fight and destroyed the Southern Han fleet on the Bạch Đằng River.[57][58]

After defeating the Southern Han invasion, Ngô Quyền proclaimed himself king and established a new dynasty in Cổ Loa citadel over the Principality. Cổ Loa's sphere of influence probably did not reach the other local nobility. In 944, after his death, Ngô Quyền's brother-in-law Dương Tam Kha (son of Dương Đình Nghệ) took power.[59] The Dương clan increased factional segregation by bringing more southern men into the court. As a result, the principality broke apart during the reign of Tam Kha. Ngô Quyền's sons Ngô Xương Văn and Ngô Xương Ngập deposed their maternal uncle and became dual kings in 950. In 954, Ngô Xương Ngập died. The younger Ngô Xương Văn ruled as the sole king, and nine years later he was killed by warlords.[60] Chaos unleashed across the Red River Delta.[61]

Early Đại Việt

 
Sculpture of Đinh Bộ Lĩnh in Hoa Lư temple (c. 17th cent).
 
A Thái Bình Hưng Bảo coin (~970s).

A new leader of prowess named Đinh Bộ Lĩnh emerged. From Hoa Lư, he and his son Đinh Liễn spent two years in political and military struggle and managed to subdue all warlords and oppositions. Around 967 or 968, Đinh Bộ Lĩnh established the kingdom of Đại Cồ Việt (大瞿越) (meaning "The Great Gau(tama)'s Việt"[62][63]), and moved the court to Hoa Lư.[64] He (r. 968–979) became king of Đại Cồ Việt and titled himself emperor, while Prince Đinh Liễn became the great prince. In 973 and 975, Đinh Bộ Lĩnh sent two embassies to the Song dynasty and established relationships. Buddhist clergy were put in charge of important positions. Coins were minted. The territories of the early Việt state comprised the lowland Red River Basin to the Nghệ An region.[65] According to a Hoa Lư inscription (c. 979), in that year Đinh Liễn murdered his brother Đinh Hạng Lang who had been promoted to crown prince by his father.[66] In late 979, both Đinh Bộ Lĩnh and Đinh Liễn were assassinated. Hearing the news, Ngô Nhật Khánh, a prince of the old royal family in exile-and king Paramesvaravarman I of Champa launched a naval attack on Hoa Lư, but much of the fleet was capsized by a late-season typhoon.[67]

Queen Dương Vân Nga placed her partner, general Lê Hoàn, as chief of the state. Lê Hoàn's rivals then attacked him but were defeated. The queen of the Dương family decided to replace the Đinh family with the Lê family of Lê Hoàn, and brought the crown from her six-year-old son Đinh Toàn (r. 979–980) to her mate Lê Hoàn (r. 980–1005) in 980.[68] Disturbances in Đại Cồ Việt attracted attention from the Song dynasty. In 981, the Song Emperor launched an invasion of Đại Cồ Việt, but was repulsed by Lê Hoàn. In 982 he attacked Champa, killed the Cham king Paramesvaravarman I, and destroyed a Cham city.[69] A Khmer inscription (c. 987) mentioned that in that year, some Vietnamese merchants or envoys arrived in Cambodia through the Mekong.[70]

After Lê Hoàn died in 1005, civil war broke out between crown princes Lê Long Việt, Lê Long Đĩnh, Lê Long Tích, and Lê Long Kính. Long Việt (r. 1005) was murdered by Long Đĩnh while after ruling for three days. As the Lê brothers fought each other, the Lý family-a member of the court's cadet, led by Lý Công Uẩn, quickly rose to power. Long Đĩnh (r. 1005–1009) ruled as a tyrant king and developed hemorrhoids. He died in November 1009. Lý Công Uẩn ascended the throne two days later, with support from the monks, as Lý Thái Tổ.[71]

Flourishing period

 
Statue of Ly Cong Uan (974–1028) in Bac Ninh.

Emperor Lý Thái Tổ (r. 1009–1028) moved the court to the abandoned city of Đại La, which had previously been a seat of power under the Tang dynasty, and renamed it to Thăng Long in 1010. The city became what is now present-day Hà Nội.[72] To control and maintain the nation's wealth, in 1013 he created a taxation system per product.[73] His reign was relatively peaceful, though he campaigned against the Han communities in Hà Giang massif and subdued them in 1014.[74] He furthermore laid the basis of the stability Vietnamese state and his dynasty would rule the kingdom for the next 200 years.

Lý Thái Tổ's son and grandson Lý Thái Tông (r. 1028–1053) and Lý Thánh Tông (r. 1054–1071) continued to strengthen the Viet state. Starting during the reign of Lê Hoàn, the Việt expansion extended Việt territories from the Red River Delta in all directions. The Vietnamese destroyed the Cham northern capital Inprapura in 982, raided and plundered Southern Chinese port cities in 995, 1028, 1036, 1059, and 1060;[75] subdued the Nùng people in 1039; raided Laos in 1045; invaded Champa and pillaged Cham cities in 1044 and 1069,[76] and subjugated three northern Cham provinces of Địa Lý, Ma Linh, and Bố Chính.[77] Contact between the Song dynasty of China and the Việt state increased through raids and tributary mission, which resulted in Chinese cultural influences on Vietnamese culture,[78] the first civil examination based on the Chinese model was staged in 1075, Chinese script was declared the official script of the court in 1174,[1] and the emergence of Vietnamese demotic script (Chữ Nôm) occurred in the 12th century.[79]

In 1054 Lý Thánh Tông changed his kingdom's name to Đại Việt and declared himself an emperor.[80] He married an ordinary girl named Lady Ỷ Lan and she gave birth to the crown prince Lý Càn Đức. In 1072 the infant Lý Càn Đức became Emperor Lý Nhân Tông (r. 1072–1127), the longest-ruling monarch in Vietnamese history. During the early years of Lý Nhân Tông, his father's military leader Lý Thường Kiệt, uncle Lý Đạo Thành, and Queen Ỷ Lan became court regents.[81] From the 1070s, border tensions between the Song Empire, local Tai principalities, and the Việt kingdom arose into open violence. In winter 1075, Lý Thường Kiệt led a naval invasion of southern China. Việt troops wreaked havoc on Chinese border towns, then laid siege to Nanning and captured it one month later. The Song emperor sent a large counter-invasion of Đại Việt in late 1076, but Lý Thường Kiệt was able to fend off and defeat the Song advance at the Battle of the Cầu River, where half of Song forces perished in combats and diseases.[82] Lý Nhân Tông then offered peace with the Song, and later all hostilities were ended in 1084; the Song recognized the Việt polity as a sovereign kingdom.[83] According to a fourteenth-century chronicle, the Đại Việt sử lược, the Khmer Empire sent three embassies to Đại Việt in 1086, 1088 and 1095.[84] The matured Lý Nhân Tông came to rule in 1085. He defeated the Cham ruler Jaya Indravarman II in 1103,[85] built the Dạm pagoda in Bắc Ninh in 1086,[86] and constructed a Buddhist temple for his mother called Long Đọi pagoda in 1121.[87][88] He died in 1127. One of his nephews, Lý Dương Hoán, succeeded him and became known as Emperor Lý Thần Tông (r. 1128–1138). This marked the downfall of Lý family's authority within the court.[89]

 
The inscription of Dạm Pagoda (built by king Lý Nhân Tông around c. early 12th cent).
 
Luqīn (Annam/Đại Việt) and Sanf (Champa) are shown in the bottom right of the Tabula Rogeriana, drawn by al-Idrisi for Roger II of Sicily in 1154.

Lý Thần Tông was crowned under the supervision of Lê Bá Ngọc, a powerful eunuch. Lê Bá Ngọc adopted a son of the emperor's mother named Đỗ Anh Vũ. During the reign of Lý Thần Tông, Suryavarman II of the Khmer Empire launched an attack on Đại Việt's southern territories in 1128. In 1132 he allied with Cham king Jaya Indravarman III and briefly seized Nghệ An and pillaged Thanh Hoá. In 1135 Duke Đỗ Anh Vũ raised an army and repelled the Khmer invaders. After the Chams refused to support in 1137, Suryavarman II abandoned his incursions on Đại Việt and launched the invasion of Champa.[90] At the same time, Lý Thần Tông began suffering a fatal illness, according to an inscription, and he died in the next year, leaving the infant Lý Thiên Tộ who became Emperor Lý Anh Tông (r. 1138–1175) under Đỗ Anh Vũ's patronage.[91] After Đõ Anh Vũ died in 1159, another powerful figure named Tô Hiến Thành stepped into the role of guarding the dynasty until 1179.[92] In 1149, Javanese and Siamese ships arrived Vân Đồn to trade.[93] The sixth son of Lý Anh Tông, Prince Lý Long Trát was crowned in 1175 as Lý Cao Tông (r. 1175–1210).[94]

By the 1190s, more outsider clans were able to penetrate and infiltrate the royal family, weakening further the Lý authority. Three powerful aristocratic families–Đoàn, Nguyễn, and Trần (descendants of Trần Emperors, a Chinese emigre from Fujian) emerged in the court and contested on behalf of the royals. In 1210, Lý Cao Tông's eldest son Lý Sảm became Emperor Lý Huệ Tông (r. 1210–1224) of Đại Việt. In 1224, Lý Sảm appointed his second princess Lý Phật Kim (Empress Lý Chiêu Hoàng) as successor while he abdicated and became a monk. Finally, in 1225 the Trần leader Trần Thủ Độ sponsored a marriage between his eight-year-old nephew Trần Cảnh with Lý Chiêu Hoàng, that means the Ly would give up power to the Trần, and Trần Cảnh became Emperor Trần Thái Tông of the new dynasty of Đại Việt.[95]

The young Trần Thái Tông centralized the monarchy, organized the civil examination on the Chinese model, built Royal Academy and Confucian Temple, constructed and repaired the delta dikes during his reign.[96] In 1257, the Mongol Empire under Möngke Khan who was waging a war to conquer the Song Empire, sent envoys to Trần Thái Tông, demanded the Emperor of Đại Việt to present himself to the Mongol Khan in Peking. The envoys were imprisoned and the demand was rejected, about 25,000 Mongol–Dali troops led by general Uriyangqadaï to invade Đại Việt from Yunnan, and then to attack the Song from Đại Việt. Unprepared, Trần Thái Tông's army was overwhelmed at battle of Bình Lệ Nguyên on 17 January 1258. Five days later they captured and sacked Thăng Long.[97] The Mongols retreated to Yunnan fourteen days later, as Trần Thái Tông had submitted and sent tribute to Möngke.[98]

Trần Thái Tông's successors Trần Thánh Tông (r. 1258–1278) and Trần Nhân Tông (r. 1278–1293) continued to send tribute to the new Mongol-led Yuan dynasty. In 1283, Yuan emperor Kublai Khan launched the invasion of Champa. In early 1285 he commissioned prince Toghon to led the second invasion of Đại Việt to punish the Vietnamese Emperor Trần Nhân Tông for not helping the Yuan campaign in Champa and refusing to send tribute. Kublai also appointed Trần Ích Tắc, a Trần prince dissent as the puppet Emperor of Đại Việt.[99] Yuan forces though initially captured Thăng Long, however, were defeated by Cham–Vietnamese alliance in June.[100] In 1288 they decided to launch the third and also the largest invasion of Đại Việt but were repelled. Prince Trần Hưng Đạo ended the Mongol yokes through a decisive naval victory in the battle of Bạch Đằng River in April 1288.[101][102] Đại Việt continued to flourish under the reigns of Trẩn Nhân Tông and Trần Anh Tông (r. 1293–1314).[103]

Crisis of the Fourteenth century

By the 14th century, Đại Việt kingdom began experiencing a long decline. The transitional decade (1326–36) from the end of the Medieval Warm Period to the Mini-ice age period affected the climate of the Red River Delta into extremes.[104] Weather phenomena such as drought, violent flooding, storms frequently occurred, weakened the irrigation system that damaged agriculture production, generating famines, together with widespread non-bubonic plagues, impoverished the peasantry, unleashing robbery and chaos.[105] The estimated population could have been grown from 1.2 million in 1200 to perhaps 2.4 million in 1340.[106]

Trần Anh Tông seized northern Champa in 1307, intervening in Champa's politics through the marriage of Cham king Jaya Simhavarman III with Trần Anh Tông's sister Queen Paramecvariin. Trần Minh Tông (r. 1314–1329) went into conflict with Tai peoples in Laos and Sukhothai from the 1320s to 1330s.[107] During the reign of the weak king Trần Dụ Tông (r. 1341–1369), internal rebellions led by serfs and peasants from the 1340s and 1360s weakened the royal power.[108] In 1369, due to Trần Dụ Tông's lack of an heir to success, Dương Nhật Lễ, a man from the Dương clan, seized power. A short bloody civil war led by the royal Tran family against the Dương clan broke out in 1369–1370 that created turmoil. The Trần reclaimed the crown, enthroning Trần Nghệ Tông (r. 1370–1372) while Dương Nhật Lễ was deposed and executed. Duong's queen mother went into exile in Champa and begged Cham king Po Binasuor to help her get revenge.

Took advantage, Champa Empire under Po Binasuor (Chế Bồng Nga) invaded Đại Việt and ransacked Thăng Long in 1371. Six years later, the Đại Việt army suffered a great defeat at Battle of Vijaya, and Trần Duệ Tông (r. 1373–1377) was killed. The Chams then continued to advance north, besieging, pillaging, and looting Hanoi four times, from 1378 to 1383.[109] War with Champa ended in 1390 after the Cham king Che Bong Nga was killed during his northward offensive by Vietnamese forces led by prince Trần Khát Chân, who used firearms in battle.[110]

Ming conquest and occupation

 
Tây Đô citadel, built by Hồ Quý Ly, c. 1397.

Hồ Quý Ly (1336–1407)-the minister of the Trần court who has desperately fought off the Cham invasions, now became the most powerful figure in the kingdom. He conducted a series of reforms, including replacing copper coins with banknotes, despite the kingdom still recovering after the devastating war.[111] Time by time, he slowly eliminated the Trần dynasty and aristocracy.[112] In 1400 he deposed the last Trần Emperor and became ruler of Đại Việt.[113] Hồ Quý Ly became emperor, moved the capital to Tây Đô and briefly changed the kingdom's name to Đại Ngu (Great Joy/Peace) (大虞).[114] In 1401 he stepped down and established his second son Hồ Hán Thương (r. 1401–1407) who had Trần blood as king.[113] In 1406, Emperor Yongle of the Ming dynasty, in the name of restoring the Trần dynasty, invaded Đại Ngu. The ill-prepared Vietnamese resistance of Hồ Quý Ly, who failed to get support from his people, especially from the Thăng Long literati,[115] was crumbled and defeated by a Chinese army of 215,000, armed with the newest technology at the time. Đại Ngu kingdom became the thirteenth province of the Ming empire.[116][117]

The short-lived Ming colonial rule had traumatic impacts on the kingdom and the Vietnamese. In pursuit of their mission civilisatrice (sinicization), the Ming built and opened Confucian schools and shines,[118] prohibited old Vietnamese traditions such as tattooing, sent several thousand Vietnamese scholars to China where they were re-educated in Neo-Confucian classics. Some of these literati would dramatically change the Vietnamese state under the new Lê dynasty when they returned in the 1430s and served the new court, triggering a seismic shift from Mahayana Buddhism to Confucianism. Remains of pre-1400s Hanoi, Buddhist sanctuary and temples, were systematically demolished and reduced to ruins or nothing.[119]

Revival

Lê Lợi-son of a peasant from Thanh Hoá region, led an uprising against the Chinese occupation in spring 1418. He led a war of independence against Ming colonial rule that lasted for 9 years.[120] Assisted by Nguyễn Trãi–a prominent anti-Ming scholar–and other Thanh Hoá families–the Trịnh and the Nguyễn, his rebel forces managed to capture and defeat several major Ming strongholds and counterattacks, eventually drove the Chinese back to the north in 1427. In April 1428, Lê Lợi was proclaimed as Emperor of a new Đại Việt.[113] He established Hanoi as Đông Kinh or the eastern capital, while the dynasty's estate Lam Son became Tây Kinh or the western capital.

Through his proclamation, Lê Lợi called upon educated men of ability to come forward to serve the new monarchy.[121] The old Buddhist aristocrats were stripped during the Ming occupation and gave rise to the new emerging literati class. For the first time, a centralized authority based on proper laws was instituted. Literary examination now became crucial for the Việt state, scholars like Nguyễn Trãi played a large role in the court.

Lê Lợi shifted his main affair focus to the Tai people and the Laotian Lan Xang kingdom in the west, due to their betrayal and becoming allies with the Ming during his rebellion in the 1420s. In 1431 and 1433, the Việt launched several campaigns on various Tai polities, subdued them, and incorporated the northwest region into Đại Việt.

Resurgent kingdom

Succession crisis

 
Blue-line white dish decorates elephant surrounded by clouds, 15th century. Metropolitan Museum of Art.
 
Kneeling royal scribe, 15th century. Asian Civilisations Museum.

Lê Lợi died in 1433. He chose the younger prince Lê Nguyên Long (Lê Thái Tông, r. 1433–1442) as heir instead of the eldest Lê Tư Tề. Later Lê Tư Tề was expelled from the royal family and degraded status to a commoner.[122] Lê Thái Tông was only ten years old when he was crowned in 1433. Lê Lợi's former comrades now fought politically with each other to control the court. Lê Sát used his power as the young emperor's regent to purge opposition factions. When Lê Thái Tông found out about Le Sat's abuses of power, he allied with Lê Sát's rival, Trịnh Khả. In 1437, Lê Sát was arrested and given a death sentence.[123]

In 1439 Lê Thái Tông launched a campaign against rebelling Tai vassals in the west and Chinese settlers in Đại Việt. He ordered the Chinese to cut their hair short and wear clothes of the Kinh people.[124] One of his sisters raised in China was forced to commit suicide, being accused of endless conspiracies. Later he had four princes: The eldest son Lê Nghi Dân, the second Lê Khắc Xương, the third Lê Bang Cơ, and the youngest Lê Hạo. In 1442 the emperor died in suspicion after a visit to Nguyễn Trãi's family. Nguyễn Trãi and his clan, relatives were innocently condemned to death.

One-year-old Lê Bang Cơ (Lê Nhân Tông, r. 1442–1459) assumed the throne a few days after his father's death. The emperor was too young and most political power of the court fell Lê Lợi's former comrades Trịnh Khả and Lê Thụ, who allied with the queen mother Nguyễn Thị Anh. During the dry season of 1445–1446, Trịnh Khả, Lê Thụ, and Trịnh Khắc Phục attacked Champa and took Vijaya, where the king of Champa Maha Vijaya (r. 1441–1446) was captured. Trịnh Khả installed Maha Kali (r. 1446–1449) as a puppet king, however, three years later Kali's elder brother murdered him and became king. Relations between the two kingdoms downfall into hostility.[125] In 1451, amidst chaotic political struggles, Queen Nguyễn Thị Anh ordered Trịnh Khả to be executed for an accusation of conspiracy against the royal throne. Only two of Lê Lợi's former comrades, Nguyễn Xí and Đinh Liệt were still alive.[126]

During a night in late 1459, Prince Lê Nghi Dân and followers stormed into the palace, stabbed his half-brother and the mother. Four days later he was proclaimed as emperor. Nghi Dân ruled the kingdom for 8 months, then the two former-Nguyễn Xí and Đinh Liệt carried a coup against him. Two days after Nghi Dân's death, the youngest prince Lê Hạo was crowned, known as Emperor Lê Thánh Tông the Overflowing Virtue[127] (r. 1460–1479).[128]

Lê Thánh Tông's reforms

 
Temple of Literature, Hanoi, served as royal school during 11th–18th century

In the 1460s, Lê Thánh Tông carried out a series of reforms, from centralizing government, built the first extensive bureaucracy and strong fiscal system, institutionalizing education, trade, and laws. He greatly reduced the power of the traditional Buddhist aristocracy with a scholar-literati class, ushered a brief golden age. Classical scholarly, literature (in nom script), science, music, and culture flourished. Hanoi emerged as the centre of learning of Southeast Asia in the 15th century. Lê Thánh Tông's reforms helped heightened the power of the king and the bureaucratic system, allowing him to mobilize a more massive army and resources that overawed the local nobility and capable to expand the Việt territories.[129]

To expand the kingdom, Lê Thánh Tông launched an invasion of Champa in early 1471 that brought destruction to the Cham civilization and made the rump state Panduranga a vassal of Đại Việt. Respond to disputes with Laos over Muang Phuan and the mistreatment of the Laotian envoy, Lê Thánh Tông led a strong army that invaded Laos in 1479, sacked Luang Phabang, occupied it for five years, and advanced far away as Upper Burma.[130][131] Vietnamese products, particularly porcelains, were sold throughout Southeast Asia, China, and also in modern-day East African coast, Japan, Iran and Turkey.[132]

Decline and disintegration

 
1653 French map represents political divisions of the Đại Việt kingdom during 17th century: northern part (Tonkin) was ruled by the Trịnh family, while southern part (Cochinchina) was controlled by Nguyễn dynasty.
 
Painting depicts the funeral of lord Trịnh Tùng, who ruled northern Đại Việt from 1572 to 1623 as military dictator.

In the next few decades after Lê Thánh Tông's death in 1497, Đại Việt once again fell to civil unrest. Agricultural failures, rapid population growth, corruption, and factionalism all compounded to stress the kingdom, leading to a rapid decline. Eight weak Lê kings briefly held power. During the reign Lê Uy Mục–known as the "devil king" (r. 1505–1509), bloody fighting ignited between the two rival Thanh Hoá families in the cadet branch, the Trịnh and the Nguyễn on behalf of the ruling dynasty.[133] Lê Tương Dực (r. 1509–1514) tried to restore stability, but chaotic political struggles and rebellions returned years later. In 1516 a Buddhist-peasant rebellion led by Trần Cảo stormed the capital, killed the emperor, plundered, and destroyed the royal palace along with its library.[134] The Trịnh and Nguyễn clans briefly ceased hostility for a short time, suppressed Trần Cảo, and installed a young prince as Lê Chiêu Tông (r. 1517–1522), then they quickly turned against each other and forced the king to flee.[135]

The chaos prompted Mạc Đăng Dung, a military officer and well-educated in Confucian classics, to rise up and try to restore order. By 1522, he effectively subjugated the two warring clans and put down the rebellions while establishing his clan and supporters to the government. In 1527 he enforced the young Lê king to abdicate and proclaimed himself emperor and began the rule of the Mạc dynasty.[136] Six years later, Nguyễn Kim–a Nguyễn noble and Lê loyalist-rebelled against the Mạc, enthroned Lê Duy Ninh–a descendant of Lê Lợi and began the monarchy-in-exile in Laos. In 1542 they reemerged from the south, known as the southern court, laid claim to the Vietnamese crown, and opposed the Mạc (the northern court). The Việt kingdom now fell into a long period of depressions, decentralization, chaos, and civil wars that lasted for three centuries.[137]

The Lê (assisted by Nguyễn Kim) and the Mạc loyalists fought on behalf of reclaiming the legitimate Vietnamese crown. When Nguyễn Kim died in 1545, the power of the Lê dynasty swiftly fell into the dictate of the lord Trịnh Kiểm of the Trịnh family. One of Nguyễn Kim's sons, Nguyễn Hoàng, was appointed as ruler of the southern part of the kingdom, thus began the Nguyễn family rule over Đàng Trong.[138]

 
Annam (安南国) delegates in Beijing in 1761. 万国来朝图

The Lê-Trịnh loyalists expelled the Mạc from Hanoi in 1592, forcing them to flee into the mountainous hinterland, where their reign lasted until 1677.[139]

The Trịnh-controlled northern Đại Việt was known as Đàng Ngoài (Outer Realm), while the Nguyễn-controlled south became Đàng Trong (Inner Realm). They fought a fifty-year civil war (1627–1673), which ended inconclusively and the two lords signed a peace treaty. This stable division would last until 1771 when three Tây Sơn brothers Nguyễn Nhạc, Nguyễn Huệ and Nguyễn Lữ led a peasant revolution that would overrun and topple the Nguyễn, the Trịnh lords, and the Le dynasty. In 1789, the Tây Sơn defeated a Qing intervention that sought to restore the Lê dynasty. Nguyễn Nhạc established a monarchy in 1778 (Thái Đức), followed by his brother Nguyễn Huệ (Emperor Quang Trung, r. 1789–1792) and nephew Nguyễn Quang Toản (Emperor Cảnh Thịnh, r. 1792–1802), while a descendant of the Nguyễn lords, Nguyễn Ánh returned to the Mekong Delta, after several years exiled in Thailand and France. Ten years later Nguyễn loyalists defeated the Tây Sơn and conquered the whole kingdom. Nguyễn Anh became the emperor of the new unified Vietnamese state.

Political structure

Pre-1200s

In the early Đại Việt period (pre-1200), the Viet monarchy existed as a form of what historians describe as a "charter state"[140] or a "mandala state."[141][142][143] In 1973, Minoru Katakura used the term "centralized feudal system" to describe the Lý dynasty's Viet state. Yumio Sakurai reconstructed the Lý dynasty as a local dynasty, that the dynasty was only able to control several inner areas, while outer areas (phu) were autonomously governed by local clans of various ethnolinguistic backgrounds, who aligned to the royal clan through Buddhist alliances, such as temples.[144] The Viet king "man of prowess" was the center of the mandala structure that has influences beyond the Red River Delta via Buddhist alliance with local lords, while a bureaucracy was still practically nonexistent. For examples, an inscription dating from 1107 in Hà Giang records the religious-political connection between the Nùng Hà clan with the dynasty, or another inscription dated 1100 commemorates Lý Thường Kiệt as the lord of Thanh Hoá.[145] As a mandala realm, according to F. K. Lehman, its direct territories could not exceed more than 150 miles in diameter, however, the Đại Việt kingdom was able to maintain a large influence sphere due to active coastal trade and maritime activities with other Southeast Asian states.[146]

Trần-Hồ period

During the 13th and 14th century as the Trần dynasty ruled the kingdom, the Trần first move was preventing matrilineality clans to take over the royal family, by adopting the king–retired king relation, which the emperor usually abdicated in favor of his eldest son while retaining power behind the scenes, and practicing consanguine marriage. To prevent maternal families’ influences, Trần kings took only queens from their dynastic lineage. The state had been more centralized, taxes and bureaucracy appeared, chronicles were written down. Most power is concentrated in the hands of the emperor and the royal families. In the lowland, the Trần removed all non-Trần, autonomous aristocratic clans from the power, appointed Trần princes to rule these lands, tightened up relations between the state and locals. Working in Trần princely lands were serfs-poor peasants that own no land and slaves. Large hydraulic projects that mobilized more labors such as Red River Delta’s dyke system were constructed-one that maintained and increased its particularly wet-rice-based agricultural economy and its population by diverting rivers to aid in irrigation.[147] Confucianism was ensured by the Trần monarchs as the second belief, gave rise to the literati class, which later became rivals to the established Buddhist clergies.

The Việt monarchy during this period faced a series of massive Yuan and Cham invasions, political unrest, famines, disasters, and diseases, and was led to a nearly collapse in the late 1300s. Hồ Quý Ly as the minister had tried to fix the troubles by eliminating the Trần aristocrats, limiting monks, and promote Chinese classic learning, however, resulted in political catastrophe.[148]

Early modern period

 
Painting depicts emperor Lê Hy Tông (r. 1675–1705) giving an audience, c. 1685.
 
Steles inscribe names of graduated scholars in Quốc Tử Giám of Hanoi

From Lê Thánh Tông's 1463 reforms onward, the Vietnamese state's structure was modeled after the Ming dynasty of China. He established six Ministries and six Courts. The government had been centralized. By 1471, Đại Việt was divided into 12 provinces and one capital city (Thăng Long), each governed by a provincial government consisted of military commanders, civil administrators, and judicial officers.[149] Lê Thánh Tông employed 5,300 officials into the bureaucracy. A new legal code called the Lê Code was published in 1462 and was practiced until 1803.[150]

As a Confucian king, Le Thanh Tong generally disliked cosmopolitanism and foreign trade. He banned slavery, which had been popular during previous centuries, limited trade and commercial. During his reign, power was based on institutional obligations that enforced loyalty to court and merits, rather a religious relationship between aristocracy and the royal court. Self-sufficient agriculture and state-monopolized crafting were encouraged.[151]

The social hierarchy of 15th century Đại Việt comprised:[152]

Non-royal nobility:

 
Đại Việt or Annam during mid-18th-century, politically divided near the 18th parallel north between the Trinh and Nguyen domains.

After the death of Le Thanh Tong in 1497, the social-political orders he had built gradually fell apart as Đại Việt was entering its chaotic disintegration period under the reigns of his weak successors.[153] Social upheavals, ecological crisis, corruption, irreparable failing system, political rivalry, rebellions pushed the kingdom to a climatic burst of civil war between rival clans.[154] The last Le king was overthrown by general Mạc Đăng Dung in 1527, who promised to restore "Le Thanh Tong's golden era and stability." For the next six decades, from 1533 to 1592, the raging civil war between the Le loyalists and the Mạc had ruined much of the polity. The Trịnh and Nguyễn clans both assisted the Le loyalists in their struggle against the Mạc.

After the Le-Mac war ended in 1592 with the Mạc ousted from the Red River Delta, the two clans of Trịnh and Nguyễn who revived the Le dynasty emerged as the strongest powers, and resumed their own infighting, from 1627 to 1672. The northern Trịnh clan had installed themselves as regency for the Le dynasty by 1545, but in reality, they hold most power of the royal court and de facto rulers of the northern half of Đại Việt, and began using the title Chúa (lord), which is outside of the classical hierarchy of nobility.[155] The Le king was reduced to a figurehead, he ruled in earnest, while the Trịnh lord had total power to select and enthrone or remove any king the lord favors. The southern Nguyễn leader also began to proclaim as Chúa lord in 1558. Initially, they were considered subjects of the Le court, which was controlled by the Trịnh lord. But later, by the early 1600s, they ruled southern Đại Việt like an independent kingdom and became the main rival to the Trịnh domain. Le Thanh Tong's legacy such as his 1463 Code and bureaucratic institutions, was revived in the north and somehow continued to persist and lasted until French Indochina period.[156]

Before and after the war, the two Thanh Hoá clans divided the kingdom into two simultaneously coexist but rival regimes: the northern Đàng Ngoài or Tonkin ruled by the Trịnh family while the southern Đàng Trong or Cochinchina ruled by the Nguyễn family; their natural border is the city of Đồng Hới (18th parallel north).[157] Each polity had its own independent court, however, the Nguyễn lord still sought to subordinate himself with the Lê dynasty, which also stayed under Trịnh supervision,[158] trying to pretend an imaginary unity. Paying homage and respect to the Le king remained a source of both lords' legitimacy and of adherence to the idea of a unified Vietnamese state, even if such a thing no longer existed or was loosely emptied.

The Tay Son rebellion of the late 18th century Đại Việt was an extraordinary movement of Đại Việt's chaotic period when the three Tay Son brothers divided the kingdom into three subordinating but independently realms ruled by them who all declared kings: Nguyen Hue controlled the north, Nguyen Nhac controlled the central, and Nguyen Lu controlled the Mekong Delta.

Economy

 
A 15th-century Vietnamese blue-white ceramic dish. National Museum of Vietnamese History

Fan Chengda (1126–1193), a Chinese statesman and geographer, wrote an account in 1176 that described the medieval Vietnamese economy:

...Local [Annamite] products include such things as gold and silver, bronze, cinnabar, pearls, cowry [shells], rhinoceros [horn], elephant, kingfisher feathers, giant clams, and various aromatics, as well as salt, lacquer, and kapok...[159]

...Travelers to the Southern Counties [Southern China] entice people there to serve [in Annam] as female slaves and male bearers. But when they reach the [Man] counties and settlements, they are tied up and sold off. One slave can fetch two taels of gold. The counties and settlements then turn around and sell them in Jiaozhi [Hanoi], where they fetch three taels of gold. Each year no fewer than 100,000 people [are sold off as slaves]. For those with skills, the price in gold doubles...[160]

Unlike southern neighbor Champa, medieval (900-1500 AD) Đại Việt was mostly an agricultural kingdom, centered around the Red River Delta. Most stelae epigraphs discussing the economy from this period concerned land reclamation, maintaining irrigation system of the Red River, culminating fields, harvesting, and the king's land donation to Buddhist clergies. Trade was not primarily important in Đại Việt, although Đại Việt's ceramic exports blossomed for several decades during the 15th century.[161] Le Thanh Tong-the greatest king of the 15th century who had conquered Champa, once said "Do not cast aside the roots (agriculture) and pursue the insignificant trade/(commerce)", showcasing his unfavorable views toward trade and merchandising.[162]

Đại Việt's only single port located at the mouth of the Red River–a town called Van Don[163]–near Ha Long Bay, was considered too far away from the main sea route. Similarly, Marco Polo also made his description of Đại Việt where he did not visit but gathered information from the Mongols: "They find in this country a good deal of gold, and they also have a great abundance of spices. But they are such a long way from the sea that the products are of little value, and thus their price is low." Most Southeast Asian and Indian merchant ships sailing along the Vietnamese coast of the South China Sea often stopped at Champa's port-cities, then bypassed Đại Việt and the Gulf of Tonkin, and headed on to southeast China.[citation needed]

Compared to a more well-known Champa, Đại Việt was little known to the faraway world until the 16th century with the arrival of Spanish and Portuguese explorers. Medieval sources such as Ibn al-Nadim's The Book Catalogue (c. 988 AD) mention that the king of Luqin or Lukin (Đại Việt) invaded the state of Sanf (Champa) in 982.[164] Đại Việt was included in the Arab geographer Muhammad al-Idrisi's world atlas–the Tabula Rogeriana. In the early 1300s, Đại Việt was briefly chronicled by Persian historian Rashid al-Din in his Ilkhanid annals as Kafje-Guh, which was the rendition of a Mongol/Chinese toponym for Đại Việt, Jiaozhiquo.[165]

Art and religion

 
Steeple of the Keo temple, timber, c. 1630.

Buddhism had penetrated to modern-day Vietnam around the first century AD, during the Han occupation.[166] By the 8th century, Mahayana Buddhism had become the dominant faith of the Red River Delta Region. The development of Mahayana faiths in the area gave rise for several Buddhist dynasties that would rule Đại Việt. The epigraphy of Thanh Mai inscription (c. 798) indicates that a Chinese-influenced Buddhist sect was widely practiced among the Red River dwellers during the Tang period. Buddhist scriptures claim that in 580, an Indian monk named Vinītaruci arrived in northern Vietnam and founded the Thiền patriarch (Vietnamese Zen Buddhism).[167] In 820, a Chinese monk named Wu Yantong arrived in northern Vietnam and found the second Thiền sect,[168] which lasted to the 13th century. In 1293, Trần Nhân Tông personally opened a new Thiền patriarch called Trúc Lâm,[169] which is still operating today.

Vietnamese Buddhism gained an apex during the medieval period. The king, the court, and society were deeply Buddhist. According to Đinh Liễn's Ratnaketu Dhāraṇī inscriptions (c. 973), Mahayana Buddhism and some elements of Tantric Buddhism were promoted by the emperor and the royals, who were devoutly Buddhists. Mahayana sutras were inscribed along with the Prince's speech on these pillars.[170] The inscription of Lê Đại Hành (c. 995) however mentioned Thiền Buddhism as the royal religion. By the early 11th century, Mahayana, Hinduism, folk beliefs, and spiritual worship was fused and formed into a new religion by Ly royals, who frequently performed Buddhist rituals, blood oaths, and prayed for spiritual deities. This syncretic religion, dubbed as "Ly dynasty religion" by Taylor, embraces the amalgamating worship of Buddhism, Indian Buddhist deities Indra and Brahma, and Cham folk legend Lady Po Nagar.[171][172] The Lý dynasty religion later was absorbed into Vietnamese folk religion. The emperors built temples and statues delicate for Indra and Brahma in 1016, 1057, and 1134,[173] along with temples for Vietnamese legends. At the funeral, the emperor's body was put on a pyre to be burned, according to Buddhist tradition. The main characteristics of Vietnamese Buddhists were largely influenced by Chinese Chan Buddhists.[174] A temple inscription dated from 1226 in Hanoi describes a Vietnamese Buddhist altar: "the Buddha statue was flanked by an Apsara, one of the Hindu water and cloud nymphs, and a Bodhisattva with a clenched fist. Before the altar stood statues of a Guardian of the Dharma flanked by Mỹ Âm, king of the Gandharvas, mythical musician husbands of the Apsaras, and Kauṇḍinya, the Buddha's leading early disciple."[175]

The Buddhist sangha sponsored by the royals, owned the majority of farmlands and the kingdom's wealth. A stele erected in 1209 records that the royal family had donated 126 acres of land to a pagoda.[176] A Vietnamese Buddhist temple often consists of a temple built by timber, and pagoda/stupas made of bricks or granite rocks. Việt Buddhist art notably shares similarities with Cham art, especially at sculptures.[177] The dragon bodhi leaf sculpture symbolizes the emperor, while the phoenix bodhi leaf stands for the queen.[178] Buddhism shaped the society and the laws during the Ly dynasty Đại Việt. Princes and royals were raised in Buddhist monasteries and monkhood. A Buddhist Arhat Assembly was instituted to legislate monastic and temple affairs generated relatively tolerant laws.[179]

Vietnamese Buddhism declined in the 15th century due to the Ming Chinese Neo-Confucianism anti-Buddhist agenda and later Le monarchs downplaying of Buddhism, but was revived in the 16th–18th century when the royal family's efforts to restore Buddhism's role in society, which resulted in today Vietnam's majority Buddhist country.[180] In the south, thanked the effort of Chinese monk Shilian Dashan in 1694–1695, the whole Nguyễn family converted themselves from secularism to Buddhism. The Nguyễn also incorporated local Cham deities into Southern Vietnamese Buddhism.[181] The Đình–village temples–persisted from the 15th century are the centre of village administration and prohibited Buddhist-based cults and local deities.[182]

Maps

Timeline (dynasties)

Started in 968 and ended in 1804.

                Ming domination       Nam–Bắc triều * Bắc HàNam Hà     French Indochina  
Chinese domination Ngô   Đinh Early Lê Trần Hồ Later Trần   Mạc Revival Lê Tây Sơn Nguyễn Modern time
                                 
                          Trịnh lords        
                          Nguyễn lords        
939       1009 1225 1400     1427 1527 1592 1788 1858 1945


History of Vietnam
(by names of Vietnam)
 
2879–2524 BC Xích Quỷ (legend)
2524–258 BC Văn Lang (legend)
257–179 BC Âu Lạc
204–111 BC Nam Việt
111 BC – 40 AD Giao Chỉ
40–43 Lĩnh Nam
43–299 Giao Chỉ
299–544 Giao Châu
544–602 Vạn Xuân
602–679 Giao Châu
679–757 An Nam
757–766 Trấn Nam
766–866 An Nam
866–967 Tĩnh Hải quân
968–1054 Đại Cồ Việt
1054–1400 Đại Việt
1400–1407 Đại Ngu
1407–1427 Giao Chỉ
1428–1804 Đại Việt
1804–1839 Việt Nam
1839–1945 Đại Nam
1887–1954 Đông Dương
from 1945 Việt Nam
Main template
History of Vietnam

Notes

  1. ^ (Hán tự: 大瞿越)
  2. ^ (Hán tự: 大虞)

See also

References

Citations

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Further reading

  • Bridgman, Elijah Coleman (1840). Chronology of Tonkinese Kings. Harvard University. pp. 205–212. ISBN 9781377644080.
  • Aymonier, Etienne (1893). The Imperial and Asiatic Quarterly Review and Oriental and Colonial Record. Oriental University Institute. ISBN 978-1149974148.
  • Cordier, Henri; Yule, Henry, eds. (1993). The Travels of Marco Polo: The Complete Yule-Cordier Edition : Including the Unabridged Third Edition (1903) of Henry Yule's Annotated Translation, as Revised by Henri Cordier, Together with Cordier's Later Volume of Notes and Addenda (1920). Courier Corporation. ISBN 9780486275871.
  • Harris, Peter (2008). The Travels of Marco Polo, the Venetian. Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0307269133.
  • Wade, Geoff. tr. (2005). Southeast Asia in the Ming Shi-lu: an open access resource. Singapore: Asia Research Institute and the Singapore E-Press, National University of Singapore.
  • Pires, Tomé; Rodrigues, Francisco (1990). The Suma oriental of Tome Pires, books 1–5. Asian Educational Services. ISBN 9788120605350.
  • Relazione de’ felici successi della santa fede predicata dai Padri della Compagnia di Giesu nel regno di Tunchino (Rome, 1650)
  • Tunchinesis historiae libri duo, quorum altero status temporalis hujus regni, altero mirabiles evangelicae predicationis progressus referuntur: Coepta per Patres Societatis Iesu, ab anno 1627, ad annum 1646 (Lyon, 1652)
    • Histoire du Royaume de Tunquin, et des grands progrès que la prédication de L’Évangile y a faits en la conversion des infidèles Depuis l’année 1627, jusques à l’année 1646 (Lyon, 1651), translated by Henri Albi
  • Divers voyages et missions du P. Alexandre de Rhodes en la Chine et autres royaumes de l'Orient (Paris, 1653), translated into English as Rhodes of Viet Nam: The Travels and Missions of Father Alexandre de Rhodes in China and Other Kingdoms of the Orient (1666)
  • La glorieuse mort d'André, Catéchiste (The Glorious Death of Andrew, Catechist) (pub. 1653)
  • Royal Geographical Society, The Journal of the Royal Geographical Society: Volume 7 (1837)

External links

  • "Dai Viet – Historical Kingdom, Vietnam". Encyclopedia Britannica. Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc. 2019.


Coordinates: 21°01′N 105°51′E / 21.017°N 105.850°E / 21.017; 105.850

Đại, việt, this, article, require, copy, editing, grammar, style, cohesion, tone, spelling, assist, editing, april, 2023, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, political, party, nationalist, party, greater, vietnam, chinese, kingdom, initially, called,. This article may require copy editing for grammar style cohesion tone or spelling You can assist by editing it April 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message For the political party see Nationalist Party of Greater Vietnam For the Chinese kingdom initially called Great Yue Việt see Southern Han Đại Việt 大越 IPA ɗajˀ viet literally Great Việt often known as Annam Vietnamese An Nam Chữ Han 安南 was a monarchy in eastern Mainland Southeast Asia from the 10th century AD to the early 19th century centered around the region of present day Hanoi Northern Vietnam Its early name Đại Cồ Việt note 1 was established in 968 by Vietnamese ruler Đinh Bộ Lĩnh after he ended the Anarchy of the 12 Warlords until the beginning of the reign of Ly Thanh Tong r 1054 1072 the third emperor of the Ly dynasty Đại Việt lasted until the reign of Gia Long r 1802 1820 the first emperor of the Nguyễn dynasty when the name was changed to Việt Nam 6 7 Đại Cồ Việt 968 1054 Đại Việt 1054 1804 Đại Cồ Việt Quốc 大瞿越國 Đại Việt Quốc 大越國 968 14001428 1804Kingdom of the Đại Việt blue in c 1000 CapitalHoa Lư 968 1010 Thăng Long 1010 1398 1428 1789 Phu Xuan 1789 1804 Official languagesVietnamese Văn ngon official script since 1174 1 Common languagesViet Muong Northern Vietic languages Kra Dai languages Other Southeast Asian LanguagesReligionBuddhism State religion from 968 to 1400 ConfucianismTaoismĐạo LươngHinduismIslamCatholicismGovernmentAbsolute monarchy 968 1533 1788 1804 Monarchy and military dictatorship 1533 1788 Emperor 968 979Đinh Bộ Lĩnh 1802 1804Gia LongMilitary dictators 1533 1545 first Nguyễn Kim 1545 1786Trịnh lords 1786 1788 last Nguyễn HuệHistorical eraPostclassical era to Late modern period End of Third Chinese domination of Vietnam905 Established 2 968 Ly Thanh Tong shortened his empire s name from Đại Cồ Việt to Đại Việt1054 Đại Ngu Kingdom under Hồ Quy Ly1400 1407 Ming rule1407 1427 Le Thanh Tong s reign and expansions1460 97 Fragmentation 3 16th century 1802 Emperor Gia Long changed Đại Việt to Việt Nam1804Population 12001 200 000 4 14001 600 000 5 15395 625 000 5 CurrencyVietnamese văn banknotePreceded by Succeeded byTĩnh Hải quan Việt Nam under the Nguyễn dynastyToday part ofVietnam China Laos CambodiaĐại Việt s history is divided into the rule of eight dynasties Đinh 968 980 Early Le 980 1009 Ly 1009 1226 Trần 1226 1400 Hồ 1400 1407 and Later Le 1428 1789 the Mạc dynasty 1527 1677 and the brief Tay Sơn dynasty 1778 1802 It was briefly interrupted by the Hồ dynasty 1400 1407 who changed the country s name briefly to Đại Ngu note 2 and the Fourth Era of Northern Domination 1407 1427 when the region was administered as Jiaozhi by the Ming dynasty 8 181 Đại Việt s history can also be divided into two periods the unified empire which lasted from the 960s to 1533 and the fragmented empire which lasted from 1533 to 1802 when there were more than one dynasty and several noble clans simultaneously ruling from their own domains From the 13th to the 18th century Đại Việt s borders expanded to encompass territory that resembled modern day Vietnam which lies along the South China Sea from the Gulf of Tonkin to the Gulf of Thailand Early Đại Việt emerged in the 960s as a hereditary monarchy with Mahayana Buddhism as its state religion and lasted for six centuries From the 16th century on Đại Việt gradually weakened and decentralized into multiple sub kingdoms and domains ruled by either the Le Mạc Trịnh or Nguyễn families simultaneously It was briefly unified by the Tay Sơn brothers in 1786 who divided among themselves in 1787 After the Trịnh Nguyễn War which ended in Nguyễn victory and the destruction of the Tay Sơn Đại Việt was reunified ending 300 years of fragmentation From 968 to 1804 Đại Việt flourished and acquired significant power in the region The state slowly annexed Champa and Cambodia s territories expanding Vietnamese territories to the south and west The Empire of Đại Việt was the primary precursor to the country of Vietnam and the basis for its national historic and cultural identity Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Origins 2 1 1 National historiography 2 2 Founding 2 3 Early Đại Việt 2 4 Flourishing period 2 5 Crisis of the Fourteenth century 2 6 Ming conquest and occupation 2 7 Revival 2 8 Resurgent kingdom 2 8 1 Succession crisis 2 8 2 Le Thanh Tong s reforms 2 9 Decline and disintegration 3 Political structure 3 1 Pre 1200s 3 2 Trần Hồ period 3 3 Early modern period 3 4 Economy 4 Art and religion 5 Maps 6 Timeline dynasties 7 Notes 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksEtymology EditFurther information Names of Vietnam The term Việt Yue Chinese 越 pinyin Yue Cantonese Yale Yuht Wade Giles Yueh4 Vietnamese Việt in Early Middle Chinese was first written using the logograph 戉 for an axe a homophone in oracle bone and bronze inscriptions of the late Shang dynasty c 1200 BC and later as 越 9 At the time it referred to a people or chieftain to the northwest of the Shang 10 11 In the early 8th century BC a tribe on the middle Yangtze was called the Yangyue a term later used for people further south 10 Between the 7th and 4th centuries BC Yue Việt referred to the state of Yue in the lower Yangtze basin and its people 9 10 From the 3rd century BC on the term was used for the non Han Chinese populations of south and southwest China and northern Vietnam with particular ethnic groups called Minyue Ouyue Luoyue Vietnamese Lạc Việt etc collectively called the Baiyue Bach Việt Chinese 百越 pinyin Bǎiyue Cantonese Yale Baak Yuet Vietnamese Bach Việt Hundred Yue Việt 9 10 The term Baiyue or Bach Việt first appeared in the book Lushi Chunqiu compiled around 239 BC 12 According to Ye Wenxian 1990 and Wan 2013 the ethnonym of the Yuefang in northwest China is not associated with that of the Baiyue in southeastern China 13 At first Yue referred to all peoples of the south that practiced un Chinese slash and burn cultivation and lived in stilted houses but this definition does not suggest that all Yue were the same and spoke the same language They were loosely connected or independent tribal societies belonging to a diverse ethnolinguistic complex 14 As Chinese imperial power expanded toward the south Chinese sources generalized the tribes of northern Vietnam at the time as Yue or the Luoyue and the Ouyue Lạc Việt and Au Viet in Vietnamese Over time the term Yue morphed and became a geopolitical designation rather than a term for a group of people and it became more of a historical and political term than one tied to connotations of barbarism 14 During the period of Chinese rule many states and rebellions in the former region of Yue Southern China and Northern Vietnam used the name Yue as an old geopolitical name rather than as an ethnonym 15 When the word Yue Middle Chinese ɦʉɐt was borrowed into Vietnamese language during the late Tang dynasty 618 907 by the Austroasiatic Viet Muong speaking peoples who were the ancestors of modern day Vietnamese Kinh the exonym was gradually localized to become an endonym of the Vietnamese 16 That endonym might have manifested in different forms depending on how neighboring peoples who interact with referred to the Vietnamese back then For instance until modern day the Cham have been calling the Vietnamese Yuen Yvan from the reign of Harivarman IV 1074 1080 to the present unchanged 17 It is evident that Vietnamese elites tried to tie their ethnic identity to the ancient Yue through constructed traditions during the late medieval period 18 However all endonyms and exonyms referring to the Vietnamese such as Viet Kinh or Kra Dai Keeu are related to political structures or have common origins in ancient Chinese geographical imagination Most of the time the Austroasiatic speaking ancestors of the modern Kinh under one single ruler might have assumed for themselves a similar or identical self designation inherent in the modern Vietnamese first person pronoun ta us we I to differentiate themselves from other groups In the older colloquial usage ta corresponded to ours as opposed to theirs and during colonial times they were nước ta our country and tiếng ta our language in contrast to nước tay western countries and tiếng tay western languages 19 Historically Đại Việt Đại Cồ Việt or Cự Việt was the country s official name and not a dynastic name Đại Việt Quốc the Great Viet State was first mentioned in several brick inscriptions from Hoa Lu the first capital of the polity from the 10th century AD 20 According to Momoki 2014 the name Đại Cồ Việt is from the 15th century chronicle Đại Việt sử ky toan thư and likely originated from Cự Việt in 12th century Ly dynasty inscriptions rather than being the name for the kingdom during the late 10th century 20 History EditOrigins Edit Main articles Vietnam under Chinese rule Timeline of Vietnam under Chinese rule Jiaozhou region and Jiaozhi For a thousand years the area of what is now Northern Vietnam was ruled by a succession of Chinese dynasties as Nanyue Giao Chỉ 交趾 Jiaozhi Giao Chau 交州 Jiaozhou Annan and Jinghai Circuit 21 Ancient Northern Vietnam and particularly the Red River Delta were inhabited by various different ethnolinguistic groups that constituted modern day Hmong Mien Tibeto Burman Kra Dai Austroasiatic speaking peoples Early societies had emerged and existed there for a while before the Han conquest in 111 BC such as the Phung Nguyen and Dong Son cultures Both practiced metallurgy and sophisticated bronze casting techniques They were together called the Yue and barbarians by the Chinese and collectively understood as non Chinese Ancient Chinese texts do not give any distinction for each tribe and not precisely indicate which languages of tribes that they interacted with in Northern Vietnam 22 All peoples living under the administration of the Empire were usually referred to as either people ren 人 or subjects min 民 There was absolutely no classification or distinction for Vietnamese and it is implausible to identify people accurate as such or implying modern ethnicity to the ancient 22 It is highly likely that these intermingled multilinguistic communities might have evolved into the present day without modern ethnic consciousness until ethnic classification efforts carried out by the colonial government and successive governments of the Republic of Vietnam Democratic Republic of Vietnam and Socialist Republic of Vietnam while retaining their intangible ethnic identity such as culture There was no persisting ethnic Vietnamese identity during this period 23 Official Vietnamese history textbooks usually assume that the people of Northern Vietnam during Chinese rules were Việt Yue 24 The Yue were broad groups of non Chinese peoples of the south which included many different ethnolinguistic groups who shared some certain customs 14 After the disappearance of the Baiyue and the Lac Viet from Chinese records around the first century AD new indigenous tribal groups might have emerged in the region under the name of Li Lao The Li Lao people were also known for their great drum casting tradition However the culture produced Heger Type II drums while the previous Dong Son culture of the Lac Viet produced Heger Type I drums 25 The Li Lao culture flourished from approximately 200 to 750 AD in present day Southern China and Northern Vietnam These Li tribes were recorded in Chinese sources as Lǐ 俚 bandits inhabiting the coastal areas between the Pearl River and Red River Li political structures were distributed in numerous autonomous settlements chiefdoms dong 洞 located in riverine valleys The Book of Sui notes that Li noblemen who possess bronze drum in each dong were called dulao 都老 which Churchman argues bears some resemblance and cultural connection to the previous local ruling class of the Red River Delta 26 The Li tribes were described as ferocious raiding bandits who refused to accept imperial authority 27 leading to Jiaozhou the heartland of the Red River Delta whence the Chinese deemed a lone isolated borderlands with difficult limited administration 28 Because the Li Lao people managed to keep themselves away from Chinese sphere of cultural influence the landscape of Northern Vietnam during Han Tang period experienced a perfect equilibrium between Sinification and localization 29 From the sixth to the seventh century Chinese dynasties attempted to militarily subdue the Li dong gradually causing the Li Lao culture to decline 30 31 The important effects of ten centuries of Chinese rules over Northern Vietnam arguably in terms of complex cultural and linguistics are still clear observable Some native languages of the regions for a long time had employed Sinitic script and Sinitic derived writing systems to represent their languages such as Vietnamese Tay and Nung 32 James Chamberlain believes that the traditional Vietic realm was north central Vietnam northern Laos and not the Red River Delta Based on his interpretation of Keith Weller Taylor s examination of Chinese texts Jiu Tangshu Xin Tangshu Suishu Taiping Huanyu Ji Tongdian Chamberlain suggests that Việt Mường peoples began emigrating from Central Vietnam Jiuzhen Rinan to the Red River Delta in the seventh century during the Tang dynasty 33 possibly due to pressure from the Khmers in the south or the Chinese in the north Chamberlain speculates that during the rebellion led by Mai Thuc Loan the son of a salt producing family in Hoan province today Ha Tĩnh Province North Central Vietnam which lasted from 722 to 723 a large number of Sinicized lowland Vietic people or the Kinh moved north The Jiu Tangshu 34 35 records that Mai Thuc Loan also known as Mai Huyền Thanh styled himself as the Black Emperor possibly after his swarthy complexion and that he had 400 000 followers from 23 provinces across Annam and other kingdoms including Champa and Chenla 36 However archaeogenetics demonstrate that before the Đong Sơn period the Red River Delta s inhabitants were predominantly Austroasiatic genetic data from Phung Nguyen culture s Man Bạc burial site dated 1 800 BC have close proximity to modern Austroasiatic speakers 37 38 meanwhile mixed genetics from Đong Sơn culture s Nui Nấp site showed affinity to Dai from China Tai Kadai speakers from Thailand and Austroasiatic speakers from Vietnam including the Kinh 39 therefore t he likely spread of Vietic was southward from the RRD not northward Accounting for southern diversity will require alternative explanations 40 Michael Churchman states that the absence of records of large scale population shifts indicates that there was a fairly stable group of people in Jiaozhi throughout the Han Tang period who spoke Austroasiatic languages ancestral to modern Vietnamese 41 On a Buddhist inscription dated to the 8th century from Thanh Mai village Ha Nội 100 out of 136 women mentioned in the epigraphy could be identified as ethnic Vietnamese females 42 Linguist John Phan proposes that a local dialect of Middle Chinese called Annamese Middle Chinese developed and was spoken in the Red River Delta by descendants of Chinese immigrants and later was absorbed into the co existing Việt Mường languages by the ninth century 43 Phan identifies three layers of Chinese loanwords into Vietnamese the earliest layer of borrowing dates to the Han dynasty ca 1st century CE and Jin dynasty ca 4th century CE the late layer of borrowing dates to the post Tang period and the recent layer of borrowing dates to the Ming amp Qing dynasties 44 National historiography Edit Study of Northern Vietnam and the Red River Delta during the first millennium AD is highly problematic This region is widely associated with the foundation of the modern country and nation state of Vietnam It has been given exceptional treatment and academic scrutiny compared to other regions This unique academic focus has resulted in critical misinterpretations 45 Some notable academic works have echoed the established frameworks of colonial and postcolonial Vietnamese nationalist historiography in order to associate the entire history of the early Red River Delta with the Vietnamese i e the Kinh and the modern country of Vietnam The rewriting of Vietnamese history in the 20th century considered pushing several nationalistic themed theories One notable theory the Continuity is defined as a belief that the peoples of Red River Delta during Han Tang period had always retained their unique Vietnamese identity and Vietnamese spirit which was arguably rooted in the highly sophisticated Van Lang kingdoms under the Hung kings which were largely legends transformed into historical facts under the scholarship of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam This was despite relentless Chinese acculturation making them different from other groups in Southern China who eventually lost their separate identities through assimilation to Chinese culture 46 The Continuity theory reconstructs the emergence of the Đại Việt kingdom in the 10th century as the awakening and resurrection of Vietnamese sovereignty and these traditions of Vietnamese exceptionalism continued into modern Vietnam 47 For example Keith Taylor took up some aspects of Vietnamese nationalist historiography in his 1983 monograph The Birth of Vietnam and falsely asserted that Vietnam s independence resulted from a thousand year struggle to throw off Chinese rule by a group of people who held a conviction that they were not and did not want to become Chinese 48 Later Taylor retreated from Vietnamese nationalist historiography 49 No evidence of ethnic Vietnamese resembling what would be considered the modern Vietnamese exists during the Han Tang period 48 Instead ancient Northern Vietnam as well as today was very diverse and complex in terms of ethnolinguistic and cultural origins The Continuity theory can be easily discredited by linguistic examinations By the 9th 11th centuries the northern portion of the Viet Muong portion of Vietic speakers had just supposedly diverged and one dialect cluster thereby evolved into Vietnamese 50 Other theories advocated by John Phan presents evidence of Vietnamese being developed from a creolized language which resulted from a local linguistic shift from Middle Chinese to proto Vietnamese after Sinitic rule 51 Beside anachronisms Vietnamese nationalist scholarship also inserted a Vietnamese resistance myth into history by labeling any rebellious local group in Northern Vietnam during the Han Tang period as collectively Vietnamese who were in constant struggles against the Chinese yokes 52 in contrast to corrupt invading Chinese colonizers generic modern nationalities and ethnicities 51 The context was heavily entangled with modern perceptions about Vietnam during decolonization and the Cold War 48 53 Historians such as Catherine Churchman have criticized attempts of characterizing the past through the lens of modern national boundaries and projecting a wish for the restoration of long lost national independence onto localized dynasties 24 Founding Edit See also Khuc clan and Ngo dynasty The Tĩnh Hải quan Jinghai cirtuit of the Khuc clan in 907 at the bottom of the map Prior to independence in the late 9th century the area that became Đại Việt in northern Vietnam was ruled by the Tang dynasty as Annan The hill dwellers on the western frontier of Annan and powerful chieftains such as Ly Do Độc allied with the state of Nanzhao in Yunnan and rebelled against the Tang dynasty in the 860s They captured Annan in three years forcing the lowlanders to scatter to asylums around the delta The Tang dynasty turned back and defeated the Nanzhao indigenous alliance in 866 and renamed the area Jinghai Circuit A military mutiny forced Tang authorities to withdraw in 880 while loyalist troops left for home on their own initiative 54 A regional regime led by the Khuc family formed on the Red River Delta in the early 10th century From 907 to 917 Khuc Hạo and then Khuc Thừa Mỹ was appointed by Chinese dynasties as jiedushi tributary governors The Khuc did not try to create any kind of a de jure independent polity 55 In 930 the neighboring Southern Han state invaded Annam and removed the Khuc from power In 931 Dương Đinh Nghệ a local chief from Aizhou revolted and quickly ousted the Southern Han 56 In 937 he was assassinated by Kiều Cong Tiễn leader of the revanchist faction allied with the Southern Han In 938 emperor Liu Gong of Southern Han led an invasion fleet to Annam to assist Kiều Cong Tiễn Dương Đinh Nghệ s son in law Ngo Quyền also was from the south marched north and killed Kiều Cong Tiễn He then led the people to fight and destroyed the Southern Han fleet on the Bạch Đằng River 57 58 After defeating the Southern Han invasion Ngo Quyền proclaimed himself king and established a new dynasty in Cổ Loa citadel over the Principality Cổ Loa s sphere of influence probably did not reach the other local nobility In 944 after his death Ngo Quyền s brother in law Dương Tam Kha son of Dương Đinh Nghệ took power 59 The Dương clan increased factional segregation by bringing more southern men into the court As a result the principality broke apart during the reign of Tam Kha Ngo Quyền s sons Ngo Xương Văn and Ngo Xương Ngập deposed their maternal uncle and became dual kings in 950 In 954 Ngo Xương Ngập died The younger Ngo Xương Văn ruled as the sole king and nine years later he was killed by warlords 60 Chaos unleashed across the Red River Delta 61 Early Đại Việt Edit See also Early Le dynasty Sculpture of Đinh Bộ Lĩnh in Hoa Lư temple c 17th cent A Thai Binh Hưng Bảo coin 970s A new leader of prowess named Đinh Bộ Lĩnh emerged From Hoa Lư he and his son Đinh Liễn spent two years in political and military struggle and managed to subdue all warlords and oppositions Around 967 or 968 Đinh Bộ Lĩnh established the kingdom of Đại Cồ Việt 大瞿越 meaning The Great Gau tama s Việt 62 63 and moved the court to Hoa Lư 64 He r 968 979 became king of Đại Cồ Việt and titled himself emperor while Prince Đinh Liễn became the great prince In 973 and 975 Đinh Bộ Lĩnh sent two embassies to the Song dynasty and established relationships Buddhist clergy were put in charge of important positions Coins were minted The territories of the early Việt state comprised the lowland Red River Basin to the Nghệ An region 65 According to a Hoa Lư inscription c 979 in that year Đinh Liễn murdered his brother Đinh Hạng Lang who had been promoted to crown prince by his father 66 In late 979 both Đinh Bộ Lĩnh and Đinh Liễn were assassinated Hearing the news Ngo Nhật Khanh a prince of the old royal family in exile and king Paramesvaravarman I of Champa launched a naval attack on Hoa Lư but much of the fleet was capsized by a late season typhoon 67 Queen Dương Van Nga placed her partner general Le Hoan as chief of the state Le Hoan s rivals then attacked him but were defeated The queen of the Dương family decided to replace the Đinh family with the Le family of Le Hoan and brought the crown from her six year old son Đinh Toan r 979 980 to her mate Le Hoan r 980 1005 in 980 68 Disturbances in Đại Cồ Việt attracted attention from the Song dynasty In 981 the Song Emperor launched an invasion of Đại Cồ Việt but was repulsed by Le Hoan In 982 he attacked Champa killed the Cham king Paramesvaravarman I and destroyed a Cham city 69 A Khmer inscription c 987 mentioned that in that year some Vietnamese merchants or envoys arrived in Cambodia through the Mekong 70 After Le Hoan died in 1005 civil war broke out between crown princes Le Long Việt Le Long Đĩnh Le Long Tich and Le Long Kinh Long Việt r 1005 was murdered by Long Đĩnh while after ruling for three days As the Le brothers fought each other the Ly family a member of the court s cadet led by Ly Cong Uẩn quickly rose to power Long Đĩnh r 1005 1009 ruled as a tyrant king and developed hemorrhoids He died in November 1009 Ly Cong Uẩn ascended the throne two days later with support from the monks as Ly Thai Tổ 71 Flourishing period Edit See also Ly dynasty and Trần dynasty Statue of Ly Cong Uan 974 1028 in Bac Ninh Emperor Ly Thai Tổ r 1009 1028 moved the court to the abandoned city of Đại La which had previously been a seat of power under the Tang dynasty and renamed it to Thăng Long in 1010 The city became what is now present day Ha Nội 72 To control and maintain the nation s wealth in 1013 he created a taxation system per product 73 His reign was relatively peaceful though he campaigned against the Han communities in Ha Giang massif and subdued them in 1014 74 He furthermore laid the basis of the stability Vietnamese state and his dynasty would rule the kingdom for the next 200 years Ly Thai Tổ s son and grandson Ly Thai Tong r 1028 1053 and Ly Thanh Tong r 1054 1071 continued to strengthen the Viet state Starting during the reign of Le Hoan the Việt expansion extended Việt territories from the Red River Delta in all directions The Vietnamese destroyed the Cham northern capital Inprapura in 982 raided and plundered Southern Chinese port cities in 995 1028 1036 1059 and 1060 75 subdued the Nung people in 1039 raided Laos in 1045 invaded Champa and pillaged Cham cities in 1044 and 1069 76 and subjugated three northern Cham provinces of Địa Ly Ma Linh and Bố Chinh 77 Contact between the Song dynasty of China and the Việt state increased through raids and tributary mission which resulted in Chinese cultural influences on Vietnamese culture 78 the first civil examination based on the Chinese model was staged in 1075 Chinese script was declared the official script of the court in 1174 1 and the emergence of Vietnamese demotic script Chữ Nom occurred in the 12th century 79 In 1054 Ly Thanh Tong changed his kingdom s name to Đại Việt and declared himself an emperor 80 He married an ordinary girl named Lady Ỷ Lan and she gave birth to the crown prince Ly Can Đức In 1072 the infant Ly Can Đức became Emperor Ly Nhan Tong r 1072 1127 the longest ruling monarch in Vietnamese history During the early years of Ly Nhan Tong his father s military leader Ly Thường Kiệt uncle Ly Đạo Thanh and Queen Ỷ Lan became court regents 81 From the 1070s border tensions between the Song Empire local Tai principalities and the Việt kingdom arose into open violence In winter 1075 Ly Thường Kiệt led a naval invasion of southern China Việt troops wreaked havoc on Chinese border towns then laid siege to Nanning and captured it one month later The Song emperor sent a large counter invasion of Đại Việt in late 1076 but Ly Thường Kiệt was able to fend off and defeat the Song advance at the Battle of the Cầu River where half of Song forces perished in combats and diseases 82 Ly Nhan Tong then offered peace with the Song and later all hostilities were ended in 1084 the Song recognized the Việt polity as a sovereign kingdom 83 According to a fourteenth century chronicle the Đại Việt sử lược the Khmer Empire sent three embassies to Đại Việt in 1086 1088 and 1095 84 The matured Ly Nhan Tong came to rule in 1085 He defeated the Cham ruler Jaya Indravarman II in 1103 85 built the Dạm pagoda in Bắc Ninh in 1086 86 and constructed a Buddhist temple for his mother called Long Đọi pagoda in 1121 87 88 He died in 1127 One of his nephews Ly Dương Hoan succeeded him and became known as Emperor Ly Thần Tong r 1128 1138 This marked the downfall of Ly family s authority within the court 89 The inscription of Dạm Pagoda built by king Ly Nhan Tong around c early 12th cent Luqin Annam Đại Việt and Sanf Champa are shown in the bottom right of the Tabula Rogeriana drawn by al Idrisi for Roger II of Sicily in 1154 Ly Thần Tong was crowned under the supervision of Le Ba Ngọc a powerful eunuch Le Ba Ngọc adopted a son of the emperor s mother named Đỗ Anh Vũ During the reign of Ly Thần Tong Suryavarman II of the Khmer Empire launched an attack on Đại Việt s southern territories in 1128 In 1132 he allied with Cham king Jaya Indravarman III and briefly seized Nghệ An and pillaged Thanh Hoa In 1135 Duke Đỗ Anh Vũ raised an army and repelled the Khmer invaders After the Chams refused to support in 1137 Suryavarman II abandoned his incursions on Đại Việt and launched the invasion of Champa 90 At the same time Ly Thần Tong began suffering a fatal illness according to an inscription and he died in the next year leaving the infant Ly Thien Tộ who became Emperor Ly Anh Tong r 1138 1175 under Đỗ Anh Vũ s patronage 91 After Đo Anh Vũ died in 1159 another powerful figure named To Hiến Thanh stepped into the role of guarding the dynasty until 1179 92 In 1149 Javanese and Siamese ships arrived Van Đồn to trade 93 The sixth son of Ly Anh Tong Prince Ly Long Trat was crowned in 1175 as Ly Cao Tong r 1175 1210 94 By the 1190s more outsider clans were able to penetrate and infiltrate the royal family weakening further the Ly authority Three powerful aristocratic families Đoan Nguyễn and Trần descendants of Trần Emperors a Chinese emigre from Fujian emerged in the court and contested on behalf of the royals In 1210 Ly Cao Tong s eldest son Ly Sảm became Emperor Ly Huệ Tong r 1210 1224 of Đại Việt In 1224 Ly Sảm appointed his second princess Ly Phật Kim Empress Ly Chieu Hoang as successor while he abdicated and became a monk Finally in 1225 the Trần leader Trần Thủ Độ sponsored a marriage between his eight year old nephew Trần Cảnh with Ly Chieu Hoang that means the Ly would give up power to the Trần and Trần Cảnh became Emperor Trần Thai Tong of the new dynasty of Đại Việt 95 The young Trần Thai Tong centralized the monarchy organized the civil examination on the Chinese model built Royal Academy and Confucian Temple constructed and repaired the delta dikes during his reign 96 In 1257 the Mongol Empire under Mongke Khan who was waging a war to conquer the Song Empire sent envoys to Trần Thai Tong demanded the Emperor of Đại Việt to present himself to the Mongol Khan in Peking The envoys were imprisoned and the demand was rejected about 25 000 Mongol Dali troops led by general Uriyangqadai to invade Đại Việt from Yunnan and then to attack the Song from Đại Việt Unprepared Trần Thai Tong s army was overwhelmed at battle of Binh Lệ Nguyen on 17 January 1258 Five days later they captured and sacked Thăng Long 97 The Mongols retreated to Yunnan fourteen days later as Trần Thai Tong had submitted and sent tribute to Mongke 98 Trần Thai Tong s successors Trần Thanh Tong r 1258 1278 and Trần Nhan Tong r 1278 1293 continued to send tribute to the new Mongol led Yuan dynasty In 1283 Yuan emperor Kublai Khan launched the invasion of Champa In early 1285 he commissioned prince Toghon to led the second invasion of Đại Việt to punish the Vietnamese Emperor Trần Nhan Tong for not helping the Yuan campaign in Champa and refusing to send tribute Kublai also appointed Trần Ich Tắc a Trần prince dissent as the puppet Emperor of Đại Việt 99 Yuan forces though initially captured Thăng Long however were defeated by Cham Vietnamese alliance in June 100 In 1288 they decided to launch the third and also the largest invasion of Đại Việt but were repelled Prince Trần Hưng Đạo ended the Mongol yokes through a decisive naval victory in the battle of Bạch Đằng River in April 1288 101 102 Đại Việt continued to flourish under the reigns of Trẩn Nhan Tong and Trần Anh Tong r 1293 1314 103 Crisis of the Fourteenth century Edit Main article Cham Vietnamese War 1367 1390 By the 14th century Đại Việt kingdom began experiencing a long decline The transitional decade 1326 36 from the end of the Medieval Warm Period to the Mini ice age period affected the climate of the Red River Delta into extremes 104 Weather phenomena such as drought violent flooding storms frequently occurred weakened the irrigation system that damaged agriculture production generating famines together with widespread non bubonic plagues impoverished the peasantry unleashing robbery and chaos 105 The estimated population could have been grown from 1 2 million in 1200 to perhaps 2 4 million in 1340 106 Trần Anh Tong seized northern Champa in 1307 intervening in Champa s politics through the marriage of Cham king Jaya Simhavarman III with Trần Anh Tong s sister Queen Paramecvariin Trần Minh Tong r 1314 1329 went into conflict with Tai peoples in Laos and Sukhothai from the 1320s to 1330s 107 During the reign of the weak king Trần Dụ Tong r 1341 1369 internal rebellions led by serfs and peasants from the 1340s and 1360s weakened the royal power 108 In 1369 due to Trần Dụ Tong s lack of an heir to success Dương Nhật Lễ a man from the Dương clan seized power A short bloody civil war led by the royal Tran family against the Dương clan broke out in 1369 1370 that created turmoil The Trần reclaimed the crown enthroning Trần Nghệ Tong r 1370 1372 while Dương Nhật Lễ was deposed and executed Duong s queen mother went into exile in Champa and begged Cham king Po Binasuor to help her get revenge Took advantage Champa Empire under Po Binasuor Chế Bồng Nga invaded Đại Việt and ransacked Thăng Long in 1371 Six years later the Đại Việt army suffered a great defeat at Battle of Vijaya and Trần Duệ Tong r 1373 1377 was killed The Chams then continued to advance north besieging pillaging and looting Hanoi four times from 1378 to 1383 109 War with Champa ended in 1390 after the Cham king Che Bong Nga was killed during his northward offensive by Vietnamese forces led by prince Trần Khat Chan who used firearms in battle 110 Ming conquest and occupation Edit Main articles Ming invasion of Đại Ngu and Fourth Era of Northern Domination Tay Đo citadel built by Hồ Quy Ly c 1397 Hồ Quy Ly 1336 1407 the minister of the Trần court who has desperately fought off the Cham invasions now became the most powerful figure in the kingdom He conducted a series of reforms including replacing copper coins with banknotes despite the kingdom still recovering after the devastating war 111 Time by time he slowly eliminated the Trần dynasty and aristocracy 112 In 1400 he deposed the last Trần Emperor and became ruler of Đại Việt 113 Hồ Quy Ly became emperor moved the capital to Tay Đo and briefly changed the kingdom s name to Đại Ngu Great Joy Peace 大虞 114 In 1401 he stepped down and established his second son Hồ Han Thương r 1401 1407 who had Trần blood as king 113 In 1406 Emperor Yongle of the Ming dynasty in the name of restoring the Trần dynasty invaded Đại Ngu The ill prepared Vietnamese resistance of Hồ Quy Ly who failed to get support from his people especially from the Thăng Long literati 115 was crumbled and defeated by a Chinese army of 215 000 armed with the newest technology at the time Đại Ngu kingdom became the thirteenth province of the Ming empire 116 117 The short lived Ming colonial rule had traumatic impacts on the kingdom and the Vietnamese In pursuit of their mission civilisatrice sinicization the Ming built and opened Confucian schools and shines 118 prohibited old Vietnamese traditions such as tattooing sent several thousand Vietnamese scholars to China where they were re educated in Neo Confucian classics Some of these literati would dramatically change the Vietnamese state under the new Le dynasty when they returned in the 1430s and served the new court triggering a seismic shift from Mahayana Buddhism to Confucianism Remains of pre 1400s Hanoi Buddhist sanctuary and temples were systematically demolished and reduced to ruins or nothing 119 Revival Edit Main article Lam Sơn uprising Le Lợi son of a peasant from Thanh Hoa region led an uprising against the Chinese occupation in spring 1418 He led a war of independence against Ming colonial rule that lasted for 9 years 120 Assisted by Nguyễn Trai a prominent anti Ming scholar and other Thanh Hoa families the Trịnh and the Nguyễn his rebel forces managed to capture and defeat several major Ming strongholds and counterattacks eventually drove the Chinese back to the north in 1427 In April 1428 Le Lợi was proclaimed as Emperor of a new Đại Việt 113 He established Hanoi as Đong Kinh or the eastern capital while the dynasty s estate Lam Son became Tay Kinh or the western capital Through his proclamation Le Lợi called upon educated men of ability to come forward to serve the new monarchy 121 The old Buddhist aristocrats were stripped during the Ming occupation and gave rise to the new emerging literati class For the first time a centralized authority based on proper laws was instituted Literary examination now became crucial for the Việt state scholars like Nguyễn Trai played a large role in the court Le Lợi shifted his main affair focus to the Tai people and the Laotian Lan Xang kingdom in the west due to their betrayal and becoming allies with the Ming during his rebellion in the 1420s In 1431 and 1433 the Việt launched several campaigns on various Tai polities subdued them and incorporated the northwest region into Đại Việt Resurgent kingdom Edit Succession crisis Edit See also Le dynasty Blue line white dish decorates elephant surrounded by clouds 15th century Metropolitan Museum of Art Kneeling royal scribe 15th century Asian Civilisations Museum Le Lợi died in 1433 He chose the younger prince Le Nguyen Long Le Thai Tong r 1433 1442 as heir instead of the eldest Le Tư Tề Later Le Tư Tề was expelled from the royal family and degraded status to a commoner 122 Le Thai Tong was only ten years old when he was crowned in 1433 Le Lợi s former comrades now fought politically with each other to control the court Le Sat used his power as the young emperor s regent to purge opposition factions When Le Thai Tong found out about Le Sat s abuses of power he allied with Le Sat s rival Trịnh Khả In 1437 Le Sat was arrested and given a death sentence 123 In 1439 Le Thai Tong launched a campaign against rebelling Tai vassals in the west and Chinese settlers in Đại Việt He ordered the Chinese to cut their hair short and wear clothes of the Kinh people 124 One of his sisters raised in China was forced to commit suicide being accused of endless conspiracies Later he had four princes The eldest son Le Nghi Dan the second Le Khắc Xương the third Le Bang Cơ and the youngest Le Hạo In 1442 the emperor died in suspicion after a visit to Nguyễn Trai s family Nguyễn Trai and his clan relatives were innocently condemned to death One year old Le Bang Cơ Le Nhan Tong r 1442 1459 assumed the throne a few days after his father s death The emperor was too young and most political power of the court fell Le Lợi s former comrades Trịnh Khả and Le Thụ who allied with the queen mother Nguyễn Thị Anh During the dry season of 1445 1446 Trịnh Khả Le Thụ and Trịnh Khắc Phục attacked Champa and took Vijaya where the king of Champa Maha Vijaya r 1441 1446 was captured Trịnh Khả installed Maha Kali r 1446 1449 as a puppet king however three years later Kali s elder brother murdered him and became king Relations between the two kingdoms downfall into hostility 125 In 1451 amidst chaotic political struggles Queen Nguyễn Thị Anh ordered Trịnh Khả to be executed for an accusation of conspiracy against the royal throne Only two of Le Lợi s former comrades Nguyễn Xi and Đinh Liệt were still alive 126 During a night in late 1459 Prince Le Nghi Dan and followers stormed into the palace stabbed his half brother and the mother Four days later he was proclaimed as emperor Nghi Dan ruled the kingdom for 8 months then the two former Nguyễn Xi and Đinh Liệt carried a coup against him Two days after Nghi Dan s death the youngest prince Le Hạo was crowned known as Emperor Le Thanh Tong the Overflowing Virtue 127 r 1460 1479 128 Le Thanh Tong s reforms Edit Temple of Literature Hanoi served as royal school during 11th 18th century In the 1460s Le Thanh Tong carried out a series of reforms from centralizing government built the first extensive bureaucracy and strong fiscal system institutionalizing education trade and laws He greatly reduced the power of the traditional Buddhist aristocracy with a scholar literati class ushered a brief golden age Classical scholarly literature in nom script science music and culture flourished Hanoi emerged as the centre of learning of Southeast Asia in the 15th century Le Thanh Tong s reforms helped heightened the power of the king and the bureaucratic system allowing him to mobilize a more massive army and resources that overawed the local nobility and capable to expand the Việt territories 129 To expand the kingdom Le Thanh Tong launched an invasion of Champa in early 1471 that brought destruction to the Cham civilization and made the rump state Panduranga a vassal of Đại Việt Respond to disputes with Laos over Muang Phuan and the mistreatment of the Laotian envoy Le Thanh Tong led a strong army that invaded Laos in 1479 sacked Luang Phabang occupied it for five years and advanced far away as Upper Burma 130 131 Vietnamese products particularly porcelains were sold throughout Southeast Asia China and also in modern day East African coast Japan Iran and Turkey 132 Decline and disintegration Edit 1653 French map represents political divisions of the Đại Việt kingdom during 17th century northern part Tonkin was ruled by the Trịnh family while southern part Cochinchina was controlled by Nguyễn dynasty Painting depicts the funeral of lord Trịnh Tung who ruled northern Đại Việt from 1572 to 1623 as military dictator In the next few decades after Le Thanh Tong s death in 1497 Đại Việt once again fell to civil unrest Agricultural failures rapid population growth corruption and factionalism all compounded to stress the kingdom leading to a rapid decline Eight weak Le kings briefly held power During the reign Le Uy Mục known as the devil king r 1505 1509 bloody fighting ignited between the two rival Thanh Hoa families in the cadet branch the Trịnh and the Nguyễn on behalf of the ruling dynasty 133 Le Tương Dực r 1509 1514 tried to restore stability but chaotic political struggles and rebellions returned years later In 1516 a Buddhist peasant rebellion led by Trần Cảo stormed the capital killed the emperor plundered and destroyed the royal palace along with its library 134 The Trịnh and Nguyễn clans briefly ceased hostility for a short time suppressed Trần Cảo and installed a young prince as Le Chieu Tong r 1517 1522 then they quickly turned against each other and forced the king to flee 135 The chaos prompted Mạc Đăng Dung a military officer and well educated in Confucian classics to rise up and try to restore order By 1522 he effectively subjugated the two warring clans and put down the rebellions while establishing his clan and supporters to the government In 1527 he enforced the young Le king to abdicate and proclaimed himself emperor and began the rule of the Mạc dynasty 136 Six years later Nguyễn Kim a Nguyễn noble and Le loyalist rebelled against the Mạc enthroned Le Duy Ninh a descendant of Le Lợi and began the monarchy in exile in Laos In 1542 they reemerged from the south known as the southern court laid claim to the Vietnamese crown and opposed the Mạc the northern court The Việt kingdom now fell into a long period of depressions decentralization chaos and civil wars that lasted for three centuries 137 The Le assisted by Nguyễn Kim and the Mạc loyalists fought on behalf of reclaiming the legitimate Vietnamese crown When Nguyễn Kim died in 1545 the power of the Le dynasty swiftly fell into the dictate of the lord Trịnh Kiểm of the Trịnh family One of Nguyễn Kim s sons Nguyễn Hoang was appointed as ruler of the southern part of the kingdom thus began the Nguyễn family rule over Đang Trong 138 Annam 安南国 delegates in Beijing in 1761 万国来朝图 The Le Trịnh loyalists expelled the Mạc from Hanoi in 1592 forcing them to flee into the mountainous hinterland where their reign lasted until 1677 139 The Trịnh controlled northern Đại Việt was known as Đang Ngoai Outer Realm while the Nguyễn controlled south became Đang Trong Inner Realm They fought a fifty year civil war 1627 1673 which ended inconclusively and the two lords signed a peace treaty This stable division would last until 1771 when three Tay Sơn brothers Nguyễn Nhạc Nguyễn Huệ and Nguyễn Lữ led a peasant revolution that would overrun and topple the Nguyễn the Trịnh lords and the Le dynasty In 1789 the Tay Sơn defeated a Qing intervention that sought to restore the Le dynasty Nguyễn Nhạc established a monarchy in 1778 Thai Đức followed by his brother Nguyễn Huệ Emperor Quang Trung r 1789 1792 and nephew Nguyễn Quang Toản Emperor Cảnh Thịnh r 1792 1802 while a descendant of the Nguyễn lords Nguyễn Anh returned to the Mekong Delta after several years exiled in Thailand and France Ten years later Nguyễn loyalists defeated the Tay Sơn and conquered the whole kingdom Nguyễn Anh became the emperor of the new unified Vietnamese state Political structure EditPre 1200s Edit In the early Đại Việt period pre 1200 the Viet monarchy existed as a form of what historians describe as a charter state 140 or a mandala state 141 142 143 In 1973 Minoru Katakura used the term centralized feudal system to describe the Ly dynasty s Viet state Yumio Sakurai reconstructed the Ly dynasty as a local dynasty that the dynasty was only able to control several inner areas while outer areas phu were autonomously governed by local clans of various ethnolinguistic backgrounds who aligned to the royal clan through Buddhist alliances such as temples 144 The Viet king man of prowess was the center of the mandala structure that has influences beyond the Red River Delta via Buddhist alliance with local lords while a bureaucracy was still practically nonexistent For examples an inscription dating from 1107 in Ha Giang records the religious political connection between the Nung Ha clan with the dynasty or another inscription dated 1100 commemorates Ly Thường Kiệt as the lord of Thanh Hoa 145 As a mandala realm according to F K Lehman its direct territories could not exceed more than 150 miles in diameter however the Đại Việt kingdom was able to maintain a large influence sphere due to active coastal trade and maritime activities with other Southeast Asian states 146 Trần Hồ period Edit During the 13th and 14th century as the Trần dynasty ruled the kingdom the Trần first move was preventing matrilineality clans to take over the royal family by adopting the king retired king relation which the emperor usually abdicated in favor of his eldest son while retaining power behind the scenes and practicing consanguine marriage To prevent maternal families influences Trần kings took only queens from their dynastic lineage The state had been more centralized taxes and bureaucracy appeared chronicles were written down Most power is concentrated in the hands of the emperor and the royal families In the lowland the Trần removed all non Trần autonomous aristocratic clans from the power appointed Trần princes to rule these lands tightened up relations between the state and locals Working in Trần princely lands were serfs poor peasants that own no land and slaves Large hydraulic projects that mobilized more labors such as Red River Delta s dyke system were constructed one that maintained and increased its particularly wet rice based agricultural economy and its population by diverting rivers to aid in irrigation 147 Confucianism was ensured by the Trần monarchs as the second belief gave rise to the literati class which later became rivals to the established Buddhist clergies The Việt monarchy during this period faced a series of massive Yuan and Cham invasions political unrest famines disasters and diseases and was led to a nearly collapse in the late 1300s Hồ Quy Ly as the minister had tried to fix the troubles by eliminating the Trần aristocrats limiting monks and promote Chinese classic learning however resulted in political catastrophe 148 Early modern period Edit Painting depicts emperor Le Hy Tong r 1675 1705 giving an audience c 1685 Steles inscribe names of graduated scholars in Quốc Tử Giam of Hanoi From Le Thanh Tong s 1463 reforms onward the Vietnamese state s structure was modeled after the Ming dynasty of China He established six Ministries and six Courts The government had been centralized By 1471 Đại Việt was divided into 12 provinces and one capital city Thăng Long each governed by a provincial government consisted of military commanders civil administrators and judicial officers 149 Le Thanh Tong employed 5 300 officials into the bureaucracy A new legal code called the Le Code was published in 1462 and was practiced until 1803 150 As a Confucian king Le Thanh Tong generally disliked cosmopolitanism and foreign trade He banned slavery which had been popular during previous centuries limited trade and commercial During his reign power was based on institutional obligations that enforced loyalty to court and merits rather a religious relationship between aristocracy and the royal court Self sufficient agriculture and state monopolized crafting were encouraged 151 The social hierarchy of 15th century Đại Việt comprised 152 Vua Hoang Đế Emperor Hoang Tử Crown Prince Vương Ordinary princes Cong Duke Hầu Marquis Ba CountNon royal nobility Tử Viscount Nam Baron Đại Việt or Annam during mid 18th century politically divided near the 18th parallel north between the Trinh and Nguyen domains After the death of Le Thanh Tong in 1497 the social political orders he had built gradually fell apart as Đại Việt was entering its chaotic disintegration period under the reigns of his weak successors 153 Social upheavals ecological crisis corruption irreparable failing system political rivalry rebellions pushed the kingdom to a climatic burst of civil war between rival clans 154 The last Le king was overthrown by general Mạc Đăng Dung in 1527 who promised to restore Le Thanh Tong s golden era and stability For the next six decades from 1533 to 1592 the raging civil war between the Le loyalists and the Mạc had ruined much of the polity The Trịnh and Nguyễn clans both assisted the Le loyalists in their struggle against the Mạc After the Le Mac war ended in 1592 with the Mạc ousted from the Red River Delta the two clans of Trịnh and Nguyễn who revived the Le dynasty emerged as the strongest powers and resumed their own infighting from 1627 to 1672 The northern Trịnh clan had installed themselves as regency for the Le dynasty by 1545 but in reality they hold most power of the royal court and de facto rulers of the northern half of Đại Việt and began using the title Chua lord which is outside of the classical hierarchy of nobility 155 The Le king was reduced to a figurehead he ruled in earnest while the Trịnh lord had total power to select and enthrone or remove any king the lord favors The southern Nguyễn leader also began to proclaim as Chua lord in 1558 Initially they were considered subjects of the Le court which was controlled by the Trịnh lord But later by the early 1600s they ruled southern Đại Việt like an independent kingdom and became the main rival to the Trịnh domain Le Thanh Tong s legacy such as his 1463 Code and bureaucratic institutions was revived in the north and somehow continued to persist and lasted until French Indochina period 156 Before and after the war the two Thanh Hoa clans divided the kingdom into two simultaneously coexist but rival regimes the northern Đang Ngoai or Tonkin ruled by the Trịnh family while the southern Đang Trong or Cochinchina ruled by the Nguyễn family their natural border is the city of Đồng Hới 18th parallel north 157 Each polity had its own independent court however the Nguyễn lord still sought to subordinate himself with the Le dynasty which also stayed under Trịnh supervision 158 trying to pretend an imaginary unity Paying homage and respect to the Le king remained a source of both lords legitimacy and of adherence to the idea of a unified Vietnamese state even if such a thing no longer existed or was loosely emptied The Tay Son rebellion of the late 18th century Đại Việt was an extraordinary movement of Đại Việt s chaotic period when the three Tay Son brothers divided the kingdom into three subordinating but independently realms ruled by them who all declared kings Nguyen Hue controlled the north Nguyen Nhac controlled the central and Nguyen Lu controlled the Mekong Delta Economy Edit A 15th century Vietnamese blue white ceramic dish National Museum of Vietnamese History Fan Chengda 1126 1193 a Chinese statesman and geographer wrote an account in 1176 that described the medieval Vietnamese economy Local Annamite products include such things as gold and silver bronze cinnabar pearls cowry shells rhinoceros horn elephant kingfisher feathers giant clams and various aromatics as well as salt lacquer and kapok 159 Travelers to the Southern Counties Southern China entice people there to serve in Annam as female slaves and male bearers But when they reach the Man counties and settlements they are tied up and sold off One slave can fetch two taels of gold The counties and settlements then turn around and sell them in Jiaozhi Hanoi where they fetch three taels of gold Each year no fewer than 100 000 people are sold off as slaves For those with skills the price in gold doubles 160 Unlike southern neighbor Champa medieval 900 1500 AD Đại Việt was mostly an agricultural kingdom centered around the Red River Delta Most stelae epigraphs discussing the economy from this period concerned land reclamation maintaining irrigation system of the Red River culminating fields harvesting and the king s land donation to Buddhist clergies Trade was not primarily important in Đại Việt although Đại Việt s ceramic exports blossomed for several decades during the 15th century 161 Le Thanh Tong the greatest king of the 15th century who had conquered Champa once said Do not cast aside the roots agriculture and pursue the insignificant trade commerce showcasing his unfavorable views toward trade and merchandising 162 Đại Việt s only single port located at the mouth of the Red River a town called Van Don 163 near Ha Long Bay was considered too far away from the main sea route Similarly Marco Polo also made his description of Đại Việt where he did not visit but gathered information from the Mongols They find in this country a good deal of gold and they also have a great abundance of spices But they are such a long way from the sea that the products are of little value and thus their price is low Most Southeast Asian and Indian merchant ships sailing along the Vietnamese coast of the South China Sea often stopped at Champa s port cities then bypassed Đại Việt and the Gulf of Tonkin and headed on to southeast China citation needed Compared to a more well known Champa Đại Việt was little known to the faraway world until the 16th century with the arrival of Spanish and Portuguese explorers Medieval sources such as Ibn al Nadim s The Book Catalogue c 988 AD mention that the king of Luqin or Lukin Đại Việt invaded the state of Sanf Champa in 982 164 Đại Việt was included in the Arab geographer Muhammad al Idrisi s world atlas the Tabula Rogeriana In the early 1300s Đại Việt was briefly chronicled by Persian historian Rashid al Din in his Ilkhanid annals as Kafje Guh which was the rendition of a Mongol Chinese toponym for Đại Việt Jiaozhiquo 165 Art and religion Edit Steeple of the Keo temple timber c 1630 Buddhism had penetrated to modern day Vietnam around the first century AD during the Han occupation 166 By the 8th century Mahayana Buddhism had become the dominant faith of the Red River Delta Region The development of Mahayana faiths in the area gave rise for several Buddhist dynasties that would rule Đại Việt The epigraphy of Thanh Mai inscription c 798 indicates that a Chinese influenced Buddhist sect was widely practiced among the Red River dwellers during the Tang period Buddhist scriptures claim that in 580 an Indian monk named Vinitaruci arrived in northern Vietnam and founded the Thiền patriarch Vietnamese Zen Buddhism 167 In 820 a Chinese monk named Wu Yantong arrived in northern Vietnam and found the second Thiền sect 168 which lasted to the 13th century In 1293 Trần Nhan Tong personally opened a new Thiền patriarch called Truc Lam 169 which is still operating today Vietnamese Buddhism gained an apex during the medieval period The king the court and society were deeply Buddhist According to Đinh Liễn s Ratnaketu Dharaṇi inscriptions c 973 Mahayana Buddhism and some elements of Tantric Buddhism were promoted by the emperor and the royals who were devoutly Buddhists Mahayana sutras were inscribed along with the Prince s speech on these pillars 170 The inscription of Le Đại Hanh c 995 however mentioned Thiền Buddhism as the royal religion By the early 11th century Mahayana Hinduism folk beliefs and spiritual worship was fused and formed into a new religion by Ly royals who frequently performed Buddhist rituals blood oaths and prayed for spiritual deities This syncretic religion dubbed as Ly dynasty religion by Taylor embraces the amalgamating worship of Buddhism Indian Buddhist deities Indra and Brahma and Cham folk legend Lady Po Nagar 171 172 The Ly dynasty religion later was absorbed into Vietnamese folk religion The emperors built temples and statues delicate for Indra and Brahma in 1016 1057 and 1134 173 along with temples for Vietnamese legends At the funeral the emperor s body was put on a pyre to be burned according to Buddhist tradition The main characteristics of Vietnamese Buddhists were largely influenced by Chinese Chan Buddhists 174 A temple inscription dated from 1226 in Hanoi describes a Vietnamese Buddhist altar the Buddha statue was flanked by an Apsara one of the Hindu water and cloud nymphs and a Bodhisattva with a clenched fist Before the altar stood statues of a Guardian of the Dharma flanked by Mỹ Am king of the Gandharvas mythical musician husbands of the Apsaras and Kauṇḍinya the Buddha s leading early disciple 175 The Buddhist sangha sponsored by the royals owned the majority of farmlands and the kingdom s wealth A stele erected in 1209 records that the royal family had donated 126 acres of land to a pagoda 176 A Vietnamese Buddhist temple often consists of a temple built by timber and pagoda stupas made of bricks or granite rocks Việt Buddhist art notably shares similarities with Cham art especially at sculptures 177 The dragon bodhi leaf sculpture symbolizes the emperor while the phoenix bodhi leaf stands for the queen 178 Buddhism shaped the society and the laws during the Ly dynasty Đại Việt Princes and royals were raised in Buddhist monasteries and monkhood A Buddhist Arhat Assembly was instituted to legislate monastic and temple affairs generated relatively tolerant laws 179 Vietnamese Buddhism declined in the 15th century due to the Ming Chinese Neo Confucianism anti Buddhist agenda and later Le monarchs downplaying of Buddhism but was revived in the 16th 18th century when the royal family s efforts to restore Buddhism s role in society which resulted in today Vietnam s majority Buddhist country 180 In the south thanked the effort of Chinese monk Shilian Dashan in 1694 1695 the whole Nguyễn family converted themselves from secularism to Buddhism The Nguyễn also incorporated local Cham deities into Southern Vietnamese Buddhism 181 The Đinh village temples persisted from the 15th century are the centre of village administration and prohibited Buddhist based cults and local deities 182 Vietnamese Buddhist temples Binh Sơn stupa Vĩnh Phuc built around the year 1200 Phổ Minh stupa built in ca 1262 183 The One Pillar Pagoda Constructed around 1050 by Emperor Ly Thai Tong 184 destroyed in 1952 A 14th century stupa in the jungles of Quảng Ninh Bảo Nghiem stupa in But Thap Temple built c 1647 185 The stupa of Trấn Quốc Pagoda c 1615 186 Pagoda of the Celestial Lady c 1590 Dau Pagoda c 1647 187 Maps Edit Đại Việt during Đinh dynasty blue top right Đại Việt during Ly dynasty in 1100 Đại Việt during Trần dynasty 1225 1400 and Hồ dynasty 1400 1407 Đại Việt during the reign of Le Thanh Tong c 1480 Đại Việt c 1540 Đại Việt Annam with Mạc green and Le Nguyễn Trịnh blue c 1570 Đại Việt c 1650 Đại Việt during Tay Sơn dynastyTimeline dynasties EditStarted in 968 and ended in 1804 Ming domination Nam Bắc triều Bắc Ha Nam Ha French Indochina Chinese domination Ngo Đinh Early Le Ly Trần Hồ Later Trần Le Mạc Revival Le Tay Sơn Nguyễn Modern time Trịnh lords Nguyễn lords 939 1009 1225 1400 1427 1527 1592 1788 1858 1945 History of Vietnam by names of Vietnam 2879 2524 BC Xich Quỷ legend 2524 258 BC Văn Lang legend 257 179 BC Au Lạc204 111 BC Nam Việt111 BC 40 AD Giao Chỉ40 43 Lĩnh Nam43 299 Giao Chỉ299 544 Giao Chau544 602 Vạn Xuan602 679 Giao Chau679 757 An Nam757 766 Trấn Nam766 866 An Nam866 967 Tĩnh Hải quan968 1054 Đại Cồ Việt1054 1400 Đại Việt1400 1407 Đại Ngu1407 1427 Giao Chỉ1428 1804 Đại Việt1804 1839 Việt Nam1839 1945 Đại Nam1887 1954 Đong Dươngfrom 1945 Việt NamMain templateHistory of VietnamvteNotes Edit Han tự 大瞿越 Han tự 大虞 See also EditChampa List of monarchs of Việt NamReferences EditCitations Edit a b Li 2020 p 102 Hall 1981 p 203 Lieberman 2003 pp 2 398 399 455 Kiernan 2019 p 168 a b Li 2018 p 171 Lieberman 2003 p 345 Hall 1981 p 456 Tsai Shih shan Henry 2011 Perpetual Happiness The Ming Emperor Yongle University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0 295 80022 6 a b c Norman Jerry Mei Tsu lin 1976 The Austroasiatics in Ancient South China Some Lexical Evidence Monumenta Serica 32 274 301 doi 10 1080 02549948 1976 11731121 a b c d Meacham William 1996 Defining the Hundred Yue Bulletin of the Indo Pacific Prehistory Association 15 93 100 doi 10 7152 bippa v15i0 11537 Archived from the original on 2014 02 28 Theobald Ulrich 2018 Shang Dynasty Political History in ChinaKnowledge de An Encyclopaedia on Chinese History Literature and Art quote Enemies of the Shang state were called fang 方 regions like the Tufang 土方 which roamed the northern region of Shanxi the Guifang 鬼方 and Gongfang 𢀛方 in the northwest the Qiangfang 羌方 Suifang 繐方 Yuefang 戉方 Xuanfang 亘方 and Zhoufang 周方 in the west as well as the Yifang 夷方 and Renfang 人方 in the southeast The Annals of Lu Buwei translated by John Knoblock and Jeffrey Riegel Stanford University Press 2000 p 510 ISBN 978 0 8047 3354 0 For the most part there are no rulers to the south of the Yang and Han Rivers in the confederation of the Hundred Yue tribes Wan Xiang 2013 A Reevaluation of Early Chinese Script The Case of Yue 戉 and Its Cultural Connotations Speech at The First Annual Conference of Society for the Study of Early China Slide 36 of 70 a b c Churchman 2010 p 28 Churchman 2010 p 29 Churchman 2010 p 30 Golzio Karl Heinz 2004 Inscriptions of Campa based on the editions and translations of Abel Bergaigne Etienne Aymonier Louis Finot Edouard Huber and other French scholars and of the work of R C Majumdar Newly presented with minor corrections of texts and translations together with calculations of given dates Shaker Verlag pp 163 164 Kelley Liam C 2012 The Biography of the Hồng Bang Clan as a Medieval Vietnamese Invented Tradition Journal of Vietnamese Studies 7 2 87 130 doi 10 1525 vs 2012 7 2 87 Churchman 2010 p 33 a b Momoki Shiro The Vietnamese empire and its expansion circa 980 1840 in Asian Expansions The historical experiences of polity expansion in Asia edited by Geoff Wade p 158 Kiernan 2019 p 4 a b Churchman 2010 p 26 Churchman 2010 pp 25 27 a b Churchman 2016 p 26 Churchman 2010 p 31 Churchman 2016 p 103 Churchman 2016 p 72 Churchman 2016 p 69 Churchman 2016 p 204 Churchman 2016 pp 133 137 Churchman 2016 pp 174 183 Sidwell Paul Jenny Mathias 2021 The Languages and Linguistics of Mainland Southeast Asia A Comprehensive Guide De Gruyter p 667 ISBN 978 3 11055 814 2 Chamberlain 2000 p 122 Jiu Tangshu vol 8 Xuanzong A Jiu Tangshu vol 188 Chamberlain 2000 p 119 Lipson Mark Cheronet Olivia Mallick Swapan Rohland Nadin Oxenham Marc Pietrusewsky Michael Pryce Thomas Oliver Willis Anna Matsumura Hirofumi Buckley Hallie Domett Kate Hai Nguyen Giang Hiep Trinh Hoang Kyaw Aung Aung Win Tin Tin Pradier Baptiste Broomandkhoshbacht Nasreen Candilio Francesca Changmai Piya Fernandes Daniel Ferry Matthew Gamarra Beatriz Harney Eadaoin Kampuansai Jatupol Kutanan Wibhu Michel Megan Novak Mario Oppenheimer Jonas Sirak Kendra Stewardson Kristin Zhang Zhao Flegontov Pavel Pinhasi Ron Reich David 2018 05 17 Ancient genomes document multiple waves of migration in Southeast Asian prehistory Science American Association for the Advancement of Science AAAS 361 6397 92 95 Bibcode 2018Sci 361 92L bioRxiv 10 1101 278374 doi 10 1126 science aat3188 ISSN 0036 8075 PMC 6476732 PMID 29773666 Corny Julien et al 2017 Dental phenotypic shape variation supports a multiple dispersal model for anatomically modern humans in Southeast Asia Journal of Human Evolution 112 2017 41 56 cited in Alves Mark 2019 05 10 Data from Multiple Disciplines Connecting Vietic with the Dong Son Culture Conference Contact Zones and Colonialism in Southeast Asia and China s South 221 BCE 1700 CE At Pennsylvania State University McColl et al 2018 Ancient Genomics Reveals Four Prehistoric Migration Waves into Southeast Asia Preprint Published in Science https www biorxiv org content 10 1101 278374v1 cited in Alves Mark 2019 05 10 Data from Multiple Disciplines Connecting Vietic with the Dong Son Culture Conference Contact Zones and Colonialism in Southeast Asia and China s South 221 BCE 1700 CE At Pennsylvania State University Alves Mark 2019 05 10 Data from Multiple Disciplines Connecting Vietic with the Dong Son Culture Conference Contact Zones and Colonialism in Southeast Asia and China s South 221 BCE 1700 CE At Pennsylvania State University Churchman Michael 2010 Before Chinese and Vietnamese in the Red River Plain The Han Tang Period Chinese Southern Diaspora Studies 4 p 36 Kiernan 2019 p 110 Kiernan 2019 pp 124 125 Phan John 2013 Lacquered Words the Evolution of Vietnamese under Sinitic Influences from the 1st Century BCE to the 17th Century CE Ph D dissertation Cornell University p 430 434 Churchman 2016 p 23 Churchman 2016 p 27 Churchman 2016 pp 27 28 a b c Churchman 2016 p 25 Churchman 2016 p 46 Kiernan 2019 p 133 a b Churchman 2016 p 28 Churchman 2016 p 68 Churchman 2016 p 29 Kiernan 2019 pp 120 124 Schafer 1967 Taylor 2013 pp 43 44 Taylor 2013 p 45 Taylor 2013 p 46 Kiernan 2019 p 127 Kiernan 2019 p 139 Kiernan 2019 p 140 Taylor 2013 p 47 Trần Trọng Dương 2009 Investigation on Đại Cồ Việt Việt nation Buddhist nation originally published in Han Nom 2 93 p 53 75 online version in Vietnamese Pozner P V 1994 Istoriya Vetnama epohi drevnosti i rannego srednevekovya do H veka n e Izdatelstvo Nauka Moskva p 98 cited in Polyakov A B 2016 On the Existence of the Dai Co Viet State in Vietnam in the 10th the Beginning of 11th Centuries Vietnam National University Hanoi s Journal of Science Vol 32 Issue 1S p 53 in Vietnamese Kiernan 2019 p 141 Kiernan 2019 p 137 Taylor 2013 p 53 Kiernan 2019 p 144 Taylor 2013 p 54 Kiernan 2019 p 146 Hall 2019 p 180 Taylor 2013 pp 58 60 Taylor 2013 p 60 Taylor 2013 p 62 Taylor 2013 p 63 Bielenstein 2005 p 50 Taylor 2013 pp 70 74 Coedes 2015 p 84 Bielenstein 2005 p 685 Kiernan 2019 p 136 Taylor 2013 pp 72 73 Taylor 2013 p 79 Kiernan 2019 pp 158 520 Miksic amp Yian 2016 p 435 Kiernan 2019 pp 158 521 Taylor 2013 p 89 Schweyer amp Piemmettawat 2011 p 324 Schweyer amp Piemmettawat 2011 p 350 Coedes 2015 p 85 Taylor 2013 p 92 Kiernan 2019 p 163 Taylor 2013 p 94 Taylor 2013 p 95 Taylor 2013 p 96 Taylor 2013 p 98 Taylor 2013 pp 108 109 Taylor 2013 pp 116 122 Coedes 2015 p 126 Taylor 2013 pp 123 124 Baldanza 2016 p 24 Coedes 2015 p 128 Taylor 2013 p 136 Kiernan 2019 p 170 Miksic amp Yian 2016 p 489 Kiernan 2019 p 177 Lieberman 2003 p 368 369 Lieberman 2003 p 368 Taylor 2013 p 144 Kiernan 2019 pp 182 183 Kiernan 2019 p 183 Kiernan 2019 p 190 Taylor 2013 pp 166 167 Taylor 2013 p 168 a b c Taylor 2013 p 169 Kiernan 2019 p 193 Lieberman 2003 pp 373 374 Wade 2014 pp 69 70 Kiernan 2019 p 194 Lieberman 2003 p 375 Miksic amp Yian 2016 p 524 Taylor 2013 pp 182 186 Taylor 2013 p 187 Taylor 2013 p 191 Taylor 2013 pp 192 195 Taylor 2013 p 196 Taylor 2013 pp 198 200 Taylor 2013 pp 202 203 Dutton Werner amp Whitmore 2012 p 109 Taylor 2013 p 204 Hubert amp Noppe 2018 p 9 Lieberman 2003 p 380 Taylor 2013 p 221 Beaujard 2019 pp 393 512 Kiernan 2019 p 213 Kiernan 2019 p 214 Baldanza 2016 p 87 Baldanza 2016 p 89 Kiernan 2019 p 217 Kiernan 2019 p 218 Kiernan 2019 p 225 Lieberman 2003 p 35 Reid amp Tran 2006 p 10 Rush 2018 p 35 Lockhart 2018 p 198 Lieberman 2003 p 355 Whitmore 2009 p 8 Anderson amp Whitmore 2014 p 108 Lieberman 2003 pp 358 360 Lieberman 2003 p 373 Taylor 2013 pp 212 213 Kiernan 2019 p 205 Hall 2019 pp 251 252 Taylor 2013 p 213 Taylor 2013 pp 224 231 Taylor 2013 p 232 Lieberman 2003 p 400 Dutton Werner amp Whitmore 2012 p 92 Lieberman 2003 p 397 Kiernan 2019 p 241 Fan 2011 p 202 Fan 2011 p 203 Hall 2019 p 250 Hall 2019 pp 247 248 Hall 2019 p 36 Doge Bayard 1970 The Fihrist of al Nadim A Tenth Century Survey of Muslim Culture Columbia University Press pp 830 831 Baron et al 2018 p 17 note Introduction edited by Benedict R O G Anderson Tamara Laos Stanley J O Connor Keith W Taylor and Andrew C Willford Schweyer amp Piemmettawat 2011 p 221 Kiernan 2019 p 107 Kiernan 2019 p 151 Kiernan 2019 p 174 Schweyer amp Piemmettawat 2011 p 361 Kiernan 2019 p 157 Whitmore 2009 pp 7 8 Schweyer amp Piemmettawat 2011 p 229 Lieberman 2003 p 357 Kiernan 2019 p 165 Miksic amp Yian 2016 p 431 Miksic amp Yian 2016 p 433 Miksic amp Yian 2016 p 432 Taylor 2013 p 69 Taylor 2013 p 289 290 Kiernan 2019 p 242 Taylor 2013 p 242 Miksic amp Yian 2016 p 491 Schweyer amp Piemmettawat 2011 p 261 Schweyer amp Piemmettawat 2011 p 323 Schweyer amp Piemmettawat 2011 p 272 Schweyer amp Piemmettawat 2011 p 308 Sources Edit Andaya Barbara Watson Andaya Leonard Y 2015 A History of Early Modern Southeast Asia 1400 1830 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 88992 6 Anderson James A Whitmore John K 6 November 2014 China s Encounters on the South and Southwest Reforging the Fiery Frontier Over Two Millennia Leiden BRILL ISBN 978 9 0042 8248 3 Baldanza Kathlene 2016 Ming China and Vietnam Negotiating Borders in Early Modern Asia Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781316531310 Baron Samuel Borri Christoforo Dror Olga Taylor Keith W 2018 Views of Seventeenth Century Vietnam Christoforo Borri on Cochinchina and Samuel Baron on Tonkin Cornell University Press ISBN 978 1 501 72090 1 Beaujard Philippe 2019 The Worlds of the Indian Ocean Volume 2 From the Seventh Century to the Fifteenth Century CE Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 10864 477 8 Bielenstein Hans 2005 Diplomacy and Trade in the Chinese World 589 1276 Brill Chamberlain James R 2000 The origin of the Sek implications for Tai and Vietnamese history PDF In Burusphat Somsonge ed Proceedings of the International Conference on Tai Studies July 29 31 1998 Bangkok Thailand Institute of Language and Culture for Rural Development Mahidol University ISBN 974 85916 9 7 Retrieved 29 August 2014 Churchman Michael 2010 Before Chinese and Vietnamese in the Red River Plain The Han Tang Period Australian National University Chinese Southern Diaspora Studies Vol 4 Churchman Catherine 2016 The People Between the Rivers The Rise and Fall of a Bronze Drum Culture 200 750 CE Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 978 1 442 25861 7 Coedes George 2015 The Making of South East Asia RLE Modern East and South East Asia Taylor amp Francis Chapuis Oscar 1995 A history of Vietnam from Hong Bang to Tu Duc Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 0 313 29622 7 Dror Olga 2007 Cult Culture and Authority Princess Lieu Hanh in Vietnamese History University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 2972 8 Dutton George Werner Jayne Whitmore John K eds 2012 Sources of Vietnamese Tradition Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 51110 0 Fan Chengda 2011 Hargett James M ed Treatises of the Supervisor and Guardian of the Cinnamon Sea The Natural World and Material Culture of Twelfth Century China University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0 29599 079 8 Hall Daniel George Edward 1981 History of South East Asia Macmillan Education Limited ISBN 978 1 349 16521 6 Hall Kenneth R 2019 Maritime Trade and State Development in Early Southeast Asia University of Hawaii Press Hoang Anh Tuấn 2007 Silk for Silver Dutch Vietnamese relations 1637 1700 Brill ISBN 978 9 04 742169 6 Hubert Jean Francois Noppe Catherine 2018 Arts du Vietnam La fleur du pecher et l oiseau d azur Parkstone International ISBN 978 1 78310 815 2 Kiernan Ben 2019 Việt Nam a history from earliest time to the present Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 190 05379 6 Li Tana 2018 Nguyen Cochinchina Southern Vietnam in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries Cornell University Press ISBN 978 1 501 73257 7 Li Yu 2020 The Chinese Writing System in Asia An Interdisciplinary Perspective Routledge ISBN 978 1 00 069906 7 Lieberman Victor 2003 Strange Parallels Integration of the Mainland Southeast Asia in Global Context c 800 1830 Vol 1 Cambridge University Press Lockhart Bruce M 2018 In Search of Empire in Mainland Southeast Asia pp 195 214 Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 47259 123 4 Nguyen Tai Can 1997 Giao trinh lịch sử ngữ am tiếng Việt Sơ thảo Nxb Giao dục Nguyen Tai Thu 2008 The History of Buddhism in Vietnam Council for Research in Values and Philosophy ISBN 978 1 565 18097 0 Miksic John Norman Yian Go Geok 2016 Ancient Southeast Asia Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 317 27903 7 Reid Anthony Tran Nhung Tuyet 2006 Viet Nam Borderless Histories University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 978 1 316 44504 4 Rush James R 2018 Southeast Asia A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19024 877 2 Schafer Edward Hetzel 1967 The Vermilion Bird T ang Images of the South Los Angeles University of California Press ISBN 9780520011458 Schweyer Anne Valerie Piemmettawat Paisarn 2011 Viet Nam histoire arts archeologie Olizane ISBN 978 2 88086 396 8 Tarling Nicholas 1999 The Cambridge History of Southeast Asia Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 66372 4 Taylor K W 2013 A History of the Vietnamese Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 24435 1 Taylor K W 2018 Whitmore John K ed Essays Into Vietnamese Pasts Cornell University Press ISBN 978 1 501 71899 1 Wade Geoff 2014 The native office system A Chinese mechanism for southern territorial expansion over two millennia in Wade Geoff ed Asian Expansions The Historical Experiences of Polity Expansion in Asia Taylor amp Francis pp 69 91 ISBN 9781135043537 Whitmore John K 2009 Religion and Ritual in the Royal Courts of Dai Viet Asia Research InstituteFurther reading EditBridgman Elijah Coleman 1840 Chronology of Tonkinese Kings Harvard University pp 205 212 ISBN 9781377644080 Aymonier Etienne 1893 The Imperial and Asiatic Quarterly Review and Oriental and Colonial Record Oriental University Institute ISBN 978 1149974148 Cordier Henri Yule Henry eds 1993 The Travels of Marco Polo The Complete Yule Cordier Edition Including the Unabridged Third Edition 1903 of Henry Yule s Annotated Translation as Revised by Henri Cordier Together with Cordier s Later Volume of Notes and Addenda 1920 Courier Corporation ISBN 9780486275871 Harris Peter 2008 The Travels of Marco Polo the Venetian Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0307269133 Wade Geoff tr 2005 Southeast Asia in the Ming Shi lu an open access resource Singapore Asia Research Institute and the Singapore E Press National University of Singapore Pires Tome Rodrigues Francisco 1990 The Suma oriental of Tome Pires books 1 5 Asian Educational Services ISBN 9788120605350 Relazione de felici successi della santa fede predicata dai Padri della Compagnia di Giesu nel regno di Tunchino Rome 1650 Tunchinesis historiae libri duo quorum altero status temporalis hujus regni altero mirabiles evangelicae predicationis progressus referuntur Coepta per Patres Societatis Iesu ab anno 1627 ad annum 1646 Lyon 1652 Histoire du Royaume de Tunquin et des grands progres que la predication de L Evangile y a faits en la conversion des infideles Depuis l annee 1627 jusques a l annee 1646 Lyon 1651 translated by Henri Albi Divers voyages et missions du P Alexandre de Rhodes en la Chine et autres royaumes de l Orient Paris 1653 translated into English as Rhodes of Viet Nam The Travels and Missions of Father Alexandre de Rhodes in China and Other Kingdoms of the Orient 1666 La glorieuse mort d Andre Catechiste The Glorious Death of Andrew Catechist pub 1653 Royal Geographical Society The Journal of the Royal Geographical Society Volume 7 1837 External links Edit Dai Viet Historical Kingdom Vietnam Encyclopedia Britannica Encyclopedia Britannica Inc 2019 Portals Vietnam History Coordinates 21 01 N 105 51 E 21 017 N 105 850 E 21 017 105 850 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Đại Việt amp oldid 1153080581, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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