Podcast
Questions and Answers
The Tran Dynasty successfully defended Vietnam from the ______ armies
The Tran Dynasty successfully defended Vietnam from the ______ armies
Mongol
The Tran monarch Tran Anh Ton invaded and captured ______
The Tran monarch Tran Anh Ton invaded and captured ______
Champa
The Later Le Dynasty was established when Le Loi began a resistance movement against the ______ armies
The Later Le Dynasty was established when Le Loi began a resistance movement against the ______ armies
Chinese
Le Thanh Tong permanently subjugated ______
Le Thanh Tong permanently subjugated ______
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Le Thanh Tong divided Vietnam into 13 provinces or ______
Le Thanh Tong divided Vietnam into 13 provinces or ______
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The Hong Duc code contained distinctly Vietnamese elements and some ______ influence
The Hong Duc code contained distinctly Vietnamese elements and some ______ influence
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The Chams in the east and the Thais in the west took large chunks of the Khmer empire; in 1413, Angkor itself was captured by the ______.
The Chams in the east and the Thais in the west took large chunks of the Khmer empire; in 1413, Angkor itself was captured by the ______.
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PYUS - First to establish a kingdom in Myanmar (3rd century AD), who probably migrated from southwest China with its capital in ______.
PYUS - First to establish a kingdom in Myanmar (3rd century AD), who probably migrated from southwest China with its capital in ______.
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PYUS - Practiced Hinduism as well as Theravada and Mahayana Buddhism.- They were among the most peace-loving people in Southeast Asia.They were nonviolent to a fault.- The most famous dynasty was Pyu Vikrama (AD 638) - Defeated by ______ in the 8th century, they became vassals of the Thai Kingdom of Nan Chao.
PYUS - Practiced Hinduism as well as Theravada and Mahayana Buddhism.- They were among the most peace-loving people in Southeast Asia.They were nonviolent to a fault.- The most famous dynasty was Pyu Vikrama (AD 638) - Defeated by ______ in the 8th century, they became vassals of the Thai Kingdom of Nan Chao.
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BURMANS - Earliest known occupants of Kyaukse Plain - based on Burman power located along the Irrawaddy.- Ethnically related to the ______.
BURMANS - Earliest known occupants of Kyaukse Plain - based on Burman power located along the Irrawaddy.- Ethnically related to the ______.
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BURMANS - Adopted Mahayana Buddhism; later Theravada in the 11th century.- The Burmans founded their kingdom around their chief city, Pagan, around A.D. ______.
BURMANS - Adopted Mahayana Buddhism; later Theravada in the 11th century.- The Burmans founded their kingdom around their chief city, Pagan, around A.D. ______.
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NAM VIET - Chinese (Wade-Giles romanization) Nan Yüeh or (Pinyin) Nan Yue, an ancient kingdom occupying much of what is now northern Vietnam and the southern Chinese provinces of Kwangtung and Kwangsi.- Nam Viet was thus, ethnically speaking, a composite Sino-________ state.
NAM VIET - Chinese (Wade-Giles romanization) Nan Yüeh or (Pinyin) Nan Yue, an ancient kingdom occupying much of what is now northern Vietnam and the southern Chinese provinces of Kwangtung and Kwangsi.- Nam Viet was thus, ethnically speaking, a composite Sino-________ state.
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Under the Han dynasty, the independence of Nam Viet was liquidated in 111 B.C., when it was turned into a province of the Chinese empire. Yet, it remained an integral part of the Chinese Empire for the next millennium. For administrative purposes, the Han emperors divided Nam Viet into three commanderies: Chiao Chih (or Tongking, Chinese for Hanoi, the eastern capital), Chui Chen (Than Hoa), and Jenan (North Annam). The kingdom was formed in 207 BCE, during the breakup of the Ch'in dynasty (221-206 BCE), when the Ch'in governor of Yüeh (now Kwangtung and Kwangsi provinces) declared his territory independent. His son Chao T'o (Trieu Da) expanded the new kingdom southward, incorporating the Red River Delta and the area as far as Da Nang.
Under the Han dynasty, the independence of Nam Viet was liquidated in 111 B.C., when it was turned into a province of the Chinese empire. Yet, it remained an integral part of the Chinese Empire for the next millennium. For administrative purposes, the Han emperors divided Nam Viet into three commanderies: Chiao Chih (or Tongking, Chinese for Hanoi, the eastern capital), Chui Chen (Than Hoa), and Jenan (North Annam). The kingdom was formed in 207 BCE, during the breakup of the Ch'in dynasty (221-206 BCE), when the Ch'in governor of Yüeh (now Kwangtung and Kwangsi provinces) declared his territory independent. His son Chao T'o (Trieu Da) expanded the new kingdom southward, incorporating the Red River Delta and the area as far as Da Nang.
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Under the Han dynasty, the independence of Nam Viet was liquidated in 111 B.C., when it was turned into a province of the Chinese empire. Yet, it remained an integral part of the Chinese Empire for the next millennium. For administrative purposes, the Han emperors divided Nam Viet into three commanderies: Chiao Chih (or Tongking, Chinese for Hanoi, the eastern capital), Chui Chen (Than Hoa), and Jenan (North Annam). The kingdom was formed in 207 BCE, during the breakup of the Ch'in dynasty (221-206 BCE), when the Ch'in governor of Yüeh (now Kwangtung and Kwangsi provinces) declared his territory independent. His son Chao T'o (Trieu Da) expanded the new kingdom southward, incorporating the Red River Delta and the area as far as Da Nang. DAI VIET - In 939, the Chinese were pushed out as the leader of the movement, Ngo Quyen, declared himself ruler of the kingdom of Dai Viet.
Under the Han dynasty, the independence of Nam Viet was liquidated in 111 B.C., when it was turned into a province of the Chinese empire. Yet, it remained an integral part of the Chinese Empire for the next millennium. For administrative purposes, the Han emperors divided Nam Viet into three commanderies: Chiao Chih (or Tongking, Chinese for Hanoi, the eastern capital), Chui Chen (Than Hoa), and Jenan (North Annam). The kingdom was formed in 207 BCE, during the breakup of the Ch'in dynasty (221-206 BCE), when the Ch'in governor of Yüeh (now Kwangtung and Kwangsi provinces) declared his territory independent. His son Chao T'o (Trieu Da) expanded the new kingdom southward, incorporating the Red River Delta and the area as far as Da Nang. DAI VIET - In 939, the Chinese were pushed out as the leader of the movement, Ngo Quyen, declared himself ruler of the kingdom of Dai Viet.
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Under the Han dynasty, the independence of Nam Viet was liquidated in 111 B.C., when it was turned into a province of the Chinese empire. Yet, it remained an integral part of the Chinese Empire for the next millennium. For administrative purposes, the Han emperors divided Nam Viet into three commanderies: Chiao Chih (or Tongking, Chinese for Hanoi, the eastern capital), Chui Chen (Than Hoa), and Jenan (North Annam). The kingdom was formed in 207 BCE, during the breakup of the Ch'in dynasty (221-206 BCE), when the Ch'in governor of Yüeh (now Kwangtung and Kwangsi provinces) declared his territory independent. His son Chao T'o (Trieu Da) expanded the new kingdom southward, incorporating the Red River Delta and the area as far as Da Nang.
Under the Han dynasty, the independence of Nam Viet was liquidated in 111 B.C., when it was turned into a province of the Chinese empire. Yet, it remained an integral part of the Chinese Empire for the next millennium. For administrative purposes, the Han emperors divided Nam Viet into three commanderies: Chiao Chih (or Tongking, Chinese for Hanoi, the eastern capital), Chui Chen (Than Hoa), and Jenan (North Annam). The kingdom was formed in 207 BCE, during the breakup of the Ch'in dynasty (221-206 BCE), when the Ch'in governor of Yüeh (now Kwangtung and Kwangsi provinces) declared his territory independent. His son Chao T'o (Trieu Da) expanded the new kingdom southward, incorporating the Red River Delta and the area as far as Da Nang.
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Under the Han dynasty, the independence of Nam Viet was liquidated in 111 B.C., when it was turned into a province of the Chinese empire. Yet, it remained an integral part of the Chinese Empire for the next millennium. For administrative purposes, the Han emperors divided Nam Viet into three commanderies: Chiao Chih (or Tongking, Chinese for Hanoi, the eastern capital), Chui Chen (Than Hoa), and Jenan (North Annam). The kingdom was formed in 207 BCE, during the breakup of the Ch'in dynasty (221-206 BCE), when the Ch'in governor of Yüeh (now Kwangtung and Kwangsi provinces) declared his territory independent. His son Chao T'o (Trieu Da) expanded the new kingdom southward, incorporating the Red River Delta and the area as far as Da Nang. DAI VIET - In 939, the Chinese were pushed out as the leader of the movement, Ngo Quyen, declared himself ruler of the kingdom of Dai Viet.
Under the Han dynasty, the independence of Nam Viet was liquidated in 111 B.C., when it was turned into a province of the Chinese empire. Yet, it remained an integral part of the Chinese Empire for the next millennium. For administrative purposes, the Han emperors divided Nam Viet into three commanderies: Chiao Chih (or Tongking, Chinese for Hanoi, the eastern capital), Chui Chen (Than Hoa), and Jenan (North Annam). The kingdom was formed in 207 BCE, during the breakup of the Ch'in dynasty (221-206 BCE), when the Ch'in governor of Yüeh (now Kwangtung and Kwangsi provinces) declared his territory independent. His son Chao T'o (Trieu Da) expanded the new kingdom southward, incorporating the Red River Delta and the area as far as Da Nang. DAI VIET - In 939, the Chinese were pushed out as the leader of the movement, Ngo Quyen, declared himself ruler of the kingdom of Dai Viet.
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Under the Han dynasty, the independence of ______ was liquidated in 111 B.C., when it was turned into a province of the Chinese empire. Yet, it remained an integral part of the Chinese Empire for the next millennium. For administrative purposes, the Han emperors divided ______ into three commanderies: Chiao Chih (or Tongking, Chinese for Hanoi, the eastern capital), Chui Chen (Than Hoa), and Jenan (North Annam). The kingdom was formed in 207 BCE, during the breakup of the Ch'in dynasty (221-206 BCE), when the Ch'in governor of Yüeh (now Kwangtung and Kwangsi provinces) declared his territory independent. His son Chao T'o (Trieu Da) expanded the new kingdom southward, incorporating the Red River Delta and the area as far as Da Nang. DAI VIET - In 939, the Chinese were pushed out as the leader of the movement, Ngo Quyen, declared himself ruler of the kingdom of Dai Viet. Vietnam enjoyed nearly a thousand years of freedom from alien rule.
Under the Han dynasty, the independence of ______ was liquidated in 111 B.C., when it was turned into a province of the Chinese empire. Yet, it remained an integral part of the Chinese Empire for the next millennium. For administrative purposes, the Han emperors divided ______ into three commanderies: Chiao Chih (or Tongking, Chinese for Hanoi, the eastern capital), Chui Chen (Than Hoa), and Jenan (North Annam). The kingdom was formed in 207 BCE, during the breakup of the Ch'in dynasty (221-206 BCE), when the Ch'in governor of Yüeh (now Kwangtung and Kwangsi provinces) declared his territory independent. His son Chao T'o (Trieu Da) expanded the new kingdom southward, incorporating the Red River Delta and the area as far as Da Nang. DAI VIET - In 939, the Chinese were pushed out as the leader of the movement, Ngo Quyen, declared himself ruler of the kingdom of Dai Viet. Vietnam enjoyed nearly a thousand years of freedom from alien rule.
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