Previous   Next
Home » Images » 0044 Pictures From History » CPA0021530

Vietnam: Ngo Quyen (aka King Ngo Vuong, 897 - 944 CE), the great Vietnamese general who defeated the Chinese at the First Battle of the Bach Dang River, Army Museum, Hanoi

Vietnam: Ngo Quyen (aka King Ngo Vuong, 897 - 944 CE), the great Vietnamese general who defeated the Chinese at the First Battle of the Bach Dang River, Army Museum, Hanoi

Vietnam’s millennium of foreign occupation ended in 939 when the great Vietnamese general Ngo Quyen drove out the Chinese and proclaimed himself King Ngo Vuong. In a move clearly designed to emphasise the restoration of national independence, he transferred the capital from the fortress at Dai La back to Co Loa, capital of the first free Viet Kingdom of Au Lac.

Ngô Quyền (吳權; March 12, 897 – 944) (r. 939–944) was a Vietnamese prefect and general during the Southern Han Dynasty occupation of Giao Châu in the Red River Valley in what is now northern Vietnam. In 938, he soundly defeated the Chinese at the famous Battle of Bạch Đằng River north of modern Haiphong and ended 1,000 years of Chinese domination dating back to 111 BC under the Han Dynasty.






Copyright:

CPA Media Co. Ltd.

Photographer:

David Henley

Credit:

Pictures From Asia

Quick links to other images in this gallery: