Third Era of Northern Domination

Third Era of Northern Domination
Bắc thuộc lần thứ ba
北屬吝次𠀧
602–905 or 938
Northern Vietnam as the southernmost Jiaozhou with capital Jiaozhi (Hanoi) under the Sui dynasty
Northern Vietnam as the southernmost Jiaozhou with capital Jiaozhi (Hanoi) under the Sui dynasty
StatusProvince of Sui dynasty, Tang dynasty, Zhou dynasty, Southern Han dynasty
Autonomous polity under the Khúc clan (after 905)
CapitalSongping
Đại La
Emperor 
• 602–604
Emperor Wen of Sui (first)
• 618–626
Emperor Gaozu of Tang
• 917–938
Emperor Gaozu of Southern Han (last)
Jiedushi 
• 905
Dugu Sun
• 905–907
Khúc Thừa Dụ (Autonomous period)
• 907–917
Khúc Hạo
• 923–937
Dương Đình Nghệ
• 937–938
Kiều Công Tiễn (Last)
History 
602–605
• Sui dynasty annexed kingdom of Vạn Xuân
602
• Vietnam under Tang dynasty
618
679
854–866
• End of Tang rules
880
905 or 938
CurrencyCash coins
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Early Lý dynasty
Ngô dynasty
Today part ofVietnam
China

The Third Era of Northern Domination refers to the third period of Chinese rule in Vietnamese history. The era starts from the end of the Early Lý dynasty in 602 to the rise of the local Khúc family and other Viet warlords in the early 10th century, finally ending in 938 after the defeat of the Southern Han armada by the Viet leader Ngô Quyền. This period saw three Chinese imperial dynasties rule over what is today northern Vietnam: Sui, Tang and Wu Zhou. The Sui dynasty ruled northern Vietnam from 602 to 618, and briefly reoccupied central Vietnam in 605. The successive Tang dynasty ruled northern Vietnam from 621 to 690, and again from 705 to 880. Between 690 and 705, the Tang dynasty was briefly interrupted by the Wu Zhou dynasty which maintained Chinese rule over Vietnam.


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