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A diorama of an ancient Ban Chiang lady painting pots, Ban Chiang National Museum Wat Pho Si Nai is about 700 m from the Ban Chiang Museum. It is the only original archaeological site in a cluster that has not been built on by the encroachment of the village.
The Ban Chiang (Thai: มู่ที่ 13 ตำบล บ้านเชียง, romanized: Hamlet 13 Tambon Ban Chiang) archaeological site has been a world heritage site since 1992. It was settled from the Neolithic to the Iron Age, and then abandoned from about 300 CE until the early-19th century.
Jiaozhi (northern Vietnam) when it was under Ming occupation. In mid-late 14th century, the kingdom of Đại Việt (north Vietnam) faced a series of troubles resulting in an ecological breakdown. [1] This led to the rising of a radical intellectual and reformer, Hồ Quý Ly (c. 1336 – 1408).
For centuries before the Lê dynasty, the Vietnamese and Lao polities existed side by side and frequently interacted. The Vietnamese chronicles records growing clashes between various Tai polities with the Viet court in the 1320s and 1330s, specifically the Ngưu Hống of Sip Song Chau Tai and the Ailao of Houaphanh and Vientiane. [11]
Nguyễn Huệ (Quang Trung) proclaimed Emperor of Đại Việt; Qing recognized Quang Trung as official ruler of Đại Việt; Đại Việt-Vientiane War (1791) Đại Việt under Tây Sơn dynasty: Vientiane Muang Phuan Lê's loyalists Victory. Vientiane submitted to Đại Việt; Muang Phuan annexed into Đại Việt; Lê's loyalists ...
The earliest name for the Mekong River was Nam Nyai Ngu Luang or "Great River of the Giant Serpent." [ 85 ] Ngueak, and the nāga which have been "tamed" by Buddhism , were believed to bring rains, or change shape, and nāga in particular were believed to be protection spirits which inhabited the cities of Vientiane and Luang Prabang in Lan Xang.
The oldest text compiled by a Vietnamese court, the 13th century Đại Việt sử ký, considered Nanyue to be the official starting point of their history. According to the Đại Việt sử ký, Zhao Tuo established the foundation of Đại Việt. However, later historians in the 18th century started questioning this view.
The Ming invasion of Viet (Chinese: 明入越 [5] / 平定交南 [6]), known in Vietnam as the Ming–Đại Ngu War (traditional Chinese: 大虞與明戰爭; simplified Chinese: 大虞与明战争; Vietnamese: Chiến tranh Đại Ngu–Đại Minh / cuộc xâm lược của nhà Minh 1406–1407; Hán Nôm: 戰爭大虞 – 大明) was a military campaign against the kingdom of Đại Ngu ...