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Article 344 of the Nguyen dynasty code and Article 305 of the Le dynasty code both forbade self-castration and castration of Vietnamese men. [35] Self-castration of Vietnamese men was banned by Lê Thánh Tông, the emperor, in 1464. [36] The Vietnamese under Emperor Le Thanh Tong cracked down on foreign contacts and enforced an isolationist ...
This syncretic religion, dubbed "Ly dynasty religion" by Taylor, embraces the amalgamating worship of Buddhism, Indian Buddhist deities Indra and Brahma, and the Cham folk legend Lady Po Nagar. [173] [174] The Lý dynasty religion was later absorbed into Vietnamese folk religion.
The Early Lê dynasty, alternatively known as the Former Lê dynasty (Vietnamese: Nhà Tiền Lê; chữ Nôm: 茹 前 黎; pronounced [ɲâː tjə̂n le]) in historiography, officially Đại Cồ Việt (Chữ Hán: 大瞿越), was a dynasty of Vietnam that ruled from 980 to 1009. It followed the Đinh dynasty and was succeeded by the Lý ...
Except for legendary rulers and the Sinitic-speaking Zhao dynasty and the Early Ly dynasty, the most popular and common Vietnamese designation for ruler, vua 𪼀 (lit. sovereign, chieftain), according to Liam C. Kelley, is "largely based on a pure semantic association based on the benevolent feature associated to the 'father' (but, on the ...
Hồ Quý Ly, the founder of the Hồ dynasty, was the maternal grandfather of Trần An, the last emperor of the Trần dynasty; Giản Định Đế, the founder of the Later Trần dynasty, was a son of the ninth Trần monarch, Trần Nghệ Tông; he was also an older brother of the 12th emperor of the Trần dynasty, Trần Thuận Tông
Early Lê dynasty: 1009 – 1010: Later Lý dynasty: Thăng Long: 1010 – 1225: Đại Việt: Later Lý dynasty: Imperial Citadel of Thăng Long: Hanoi: 1226–1440: Trần dynasty: Tây Đô: 1400–1407: Đại Ngu: Hồ dynasty: Ho Citadel: Vĩnh Lộc District, Thanh Hóa Province: Mô Độ: 1407–1409: Jiaozhi (under Ming domination ...
A depiction of Lê Lợi. Thuận Thiên (順天, lit. "to obey, to accord with, to comply with Heaven") was the mythical sword of the Vietnamese Emperor Lê Lợi, who liberated Vietnam from Ming occupation after ten years of fighting from 1418 until 1428. [1]
The Primal Lê dynasty (1428–1527) and the Revival Lê dynasty (1533–1789) collectively formed the Later Lê dynasty. [ 1 ] This period marked the end of the second or Later Lê dynasty which had flourished for 100 years from 1428 to 1527 until a high-ranking mandarin Mạc Đăng Dung stole the throne of emperor Lê Cung Hoàng in 1527 and ...