The most important was that of the two sisters, Trung Trac and Trung
Nhi, born of a family of military chiefs in the district of Me Linh
(northwest of
Hanoi).
Between 40 and 43 A.D the Trung sisters launched a vast movement
throughout Chiao Chih led by women in many places. Trung Trac was
made "Queen" and Chinese imperialist domination was overthrown. The
Han emperor, then at the peak of his power, had to send his best
general, Ma Yuan "Tamer of Waters"to Chiao Chih. By the end of the
year 43 A.D., the insurrection was crushed, but it left an indelible
imprint on the history of the country.
However, Chinese annals kept deploring that "the people of Chiao
Chih, relying on remote inaccessible areas, liked to rebel". The
insurrection in the
Red River
valley spread to the south; military posts and the domains of
imperial functionaries were attacked. Another young woman, Lady
Trieu, launched a large-scale movement against foreign domination in
248 A.D. in the
province
of
Chiu Chen
(present-day
Thanh
Hoa
Province).
She said, "I'd like to ride storms, kill the sharks in the open sea,
drive out the aggressors, reconquer the country, undo the tics of
serfdom, and never bend my back to be the concubine of any man".
Riding an elephant, she led the way to the battlefield. However, she
was unable to maintain a very long resistance against the Chinese
Imperial army.
Other insurrections marked the 4th and 5th centuries, including one
in the year 412 when Chinese peasants who had risen in revolt and
been driven out of
China
co-ordinated their efforts with Vietnamese patriots. The 6th century
was marked by a major insurrection led by Li Bi, a notable from Long
Hung in present-day
Thai
Binh
Province,
who launched his movement in 542, swept away the Chinese
administration, and defeated a counter-offensive by the imperial
army in 543 and an attack by the Cham in the south. In 544 Ly Bi
made himself King of Van Xuan kingdom and established a national
administration. However, he was defeated by the Chinese imperial
army in 545-546 and died in 548, handing over command to one of his
aides, Trieu Quang Phuc. The latter mustered his troops in the
swampy areas of Da Trach (in present-day Hung Yen Province),
carrying out guerrilla raids and making himself king after Ly Bi's
death. In 550, availing himself of internal disturbances in
China,
he reconquered a sizable part of the nation's territory. However,
the Vietnamese feudalists did not get on together and the last
decades of the 6th century were marked by their rivalry, which
enabled
China's
Sui dynasty to reconquer the country in 603.
The Sui dynasty moved the administrative capital to Tong Binh
(present-day
Hanoi).
In 618, the Tang dynasty took power in China; China's economy and
culture saw unprecedented development as the empire experienced its
greatest ever expansion. For the Tang dynasty, Chiao Chih (Vietnam)
was not only a colony for exploitation, but also a starting point
for expansion into
Southeast Asia.
In 679, they instituted the "Protectorate of Annam (Pacified
South)"; the term then came to be used for tile country itself. The
Tang dynasty extended their administrative network to cover villages
and mountainous regions; the annual tribute to the Court and the
various taxes, cover and duties were increased. However agriculture
and handicrafts in particular, continued to develop, as well as
land, river and maritime communications. The three doctrines
-Confucianism, Taoism, and notably Buddhism - spread nationwide,
without doing away with local beliefs. The veneration of local
genies, often patriots or founders of villages, remained widespread.
In order to stifle deep-rooted national sentiment, the Chinese
imperialists used geomancy in an attempt to drain the "veins of the
dragon" running through Vietnamese soi resulting in resistance from
the people. In society, more and more of those obtaining high
positions in the administration through education or bribery were
those who obtained important domains.
Under the Tang dynasty the country faced several invasions from the
south - Champa, Java, and
Malaya
and from the
kingdom
of
Nan Chiao
(present-day
Yunnan).
In 863, Nan Chiao troops reached the capital Tong Binh and destroyed
it. The
Tang Court
had to send General Gao Pian to fight against the Nan Chiao.
Becoming governor after defeating the Nan Chiao, Gao Pian tried to
suppress the nationalist movement which had continued to develop
after the Tang dynasty took power.
Many insurrections took place under the Tang dynasty, including that
of Ly Tu Tien and Dinh Kien in 687, of Mai Thuc Loan in 722, of
Phung Hung in 766-791, and Duong Thanh in 819-820. By the end of
the 9th century, internal disturbances, particularly the
insurrection of Hwang Chao (874-883) in
China,
shook the Tang reign and
China
entered a long period of anarchy that started at the beginning of
the 10th century. In 905, the last governor sent by the Chinese
imperial court to
Vietnam
died.
Taking advantage of the disturbances in
China,
a notable from Cuc Bo (in the present-day
province
of
Hai Duong),
Khuc Thua Du, made himself governor, and in 906 the Tang court had
to recognize this fait accompli. Khuc Thua Du's son, Khuc Hao, tried
to set up a national administration; in 930 the Southern Ban
dynasty, which had taken power in southern
China,
again invaded the country. In 931, however, a patriot, Duong Dinh
Nghe, took up the fight and made himself governor. After Duong Dinh
Nghe died, murdered by one of his aides, the fight was led by Ngo
Quyen, who in 938 clashed with a Southern Han expeditionary corps
approaching by sea. The Southern Han fleet entered
Vietnam
via the Bach Dang estuary (mouth of the river which flows into
Halong
Bay)
where iron-tipped stakes had been sunk into the riverbed by Ngo
Quyen. At high-tide a Vietnamese flotilla attacked the enemy then,
pretending to escape, lured the Southern Han boats into the estuary
beyond the stakes still covered by the tide. At low-tide, the entire
Vietnamese fleet counter-attacked, forcing the enemy to flee and
sink, impaled on the barrage of stakes.
The Bach Dang victory in 938 put an end to the period of Chinese
imperial domination. In 939 Ngo Quyen proclaimed himself king,
established his capital at Co Loa (previously a capital in the 3rd
century B.C.) and set up a centralized government. It was the first
truly independent Vietnamese state.
Domestically, the main obstacle to the founding of a centralized
power structure capable of assuming direction of the economy -
management of the dyke system in particular - and of successfully
resisting foreign aggression was the existence of feudal lords who
each ruled an area of territory. On the death of Ngo Quyen in 944,
12 warlords divided the country among themselves and began to fight
one another.
Starting from Hoa Lu in present-day Ninh Binh, Dinh Bo Linh defeated
them all, one after another, and unified the country in 967. The
next year he made himself king, named the country Dai Co Viet,
established his capital at Hoa Lu, reorganized the army and
administration, and appointed renowned Buddhist monks as advisers.
The murder of Dinh Bo Linh in 979 brought a six-year-old child to
the throne. Meanwhile the Sung dynasty had taken power in
China
where order was restored. A Sung expeditionary corps was sent to
reconquer
Vietnam,
which was also being attacked from the south by the Cham. To deal
with this danger, the Court and army appointed a talented general,
Le Hoan. The latter defeated the Sung army on both land and water,
thus saving the country (981). The next year, and expedition led by
Le Hoan invaded the
Kingdom
of
Champa
and conquered its capital Indrapura (now in Quang
Nam
province), removing the threat of invasion from the south for a long
time to come.