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Lý Thường Kiệt (李 常 傑; 1019–1105), real name Ngô Tuấn (吳 俊), was a Vietnamese general and admiral of the Lý dynasty. [1] He served as an official through the reign of Lý Thái Tông , Lý Thánh Tông and Lý Nhân Tông and was a general during the Song–Lý War .
Once Ỷ Lan became regent on behalf of Lý Thánh Tông during his military campaign in Champa, she continued to prove her ability in successfully assisting the emperor in ruling the country, together with the chancellor Lý Đạo Thành and the commander-in-chief Lý Thường Kiệt. In the second month of 1117, following Ỷ Lan's advice ...
Ỷ Lan then became regency with help of Chancellor Lý Thường Kiệt. In the 1050s, tensions between Đại Việt and the Song dynasty became high. In 1075, Wang Anshi, the chancellor of the Song dynasty, told Emperor Shenzong that Đại Việt was destroyed by Champa, with less than ten thousand soldiers surviving, so it would be a good ...
Lý Thường Kiệt, Lý dynasty general; Lý Tiến (李進), civil servant in Jiaozhi, later became Imperial adviser for Emperor Xian of Han in capital Luoyang; Lý Trường Nhân (李長仁), local ruler of Jiaozhou recognised by Emperor Ming of Song from 468 to 485. Ly dynasty; Lý Nam Đế (李賁), founder of the Early Lý dynasty of ...
Lý Nhân Tông; Lý Thường Kiệt; V. Vạn Hạnh This page was last edited on 12 June 2024, at 13:52 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
The Lý clan of Lý Công Uẩn's adoptive father Lý Khánh Văn was a clan that originated from Phong Châu district. [ citation needed ] Công Uẩn was educated by monk Vạn Hạnh , the most eminent Buddhist patriarch of the time, in the village of Đình Bảng , a short distance across the Red River from Hanoi to the northeast.
Accordingly, 8 communes and Yên Mỹ township in Yên Mỹ rural district were merged each other to implement the streamlined policy of the apparatus (chính-sách tinh-gọn bộ máy nhà-nước) that Party's General Secretary Tô Lâm set out. Two communes Nghĩa Hiệp và Giai Phạm were merged into Nguyễn Văn Linh commune.
The Tự Lực văn đoàn was an influential literary collective founded in 1932-1933 by Nhất Linh and Khái Hưng.They were one of the most significant political and literary movements in twentieth-century Vietnam and published significantly via their two journals, Phong Hóa (Mores, 1932–1936) and Ngày Nay (Today, 1936–1940, 1945) as well as their own publishing house (Đời Nay).