Ngô Quyền (
Hán tự:
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 B.C. under the
Han Dynasty.
Ngô Quyền was born in 897 A.D. in
Đuong Lâm (Modern-day
Ba Vì District, in the
Ha Tay Province of northern Vietnam, near
Hanoi). He was the son of
Ngô Mân, an influential government official in Annam during the
Tang Dynasty occupation. His father was a strong supporter of
Phùng Hưng, the first Lord Protector of the
Annam and semi-autonomous ruler when the Tang Dynasty was in decline.
In 931, he served under
Dương Đình Nghệ and quickly rose through the military ranks and government administration, by 934, he was promoted military governor of Ái Châu. After Dương Đình Nghệ was assassinated in a military coup in 938 by a usurper named Kiều Công Tiễn, he took control of the military and was well received. That same year, Ngô Quyền's forces defeated the rebel Kiều Công Tiễn and had him executed. This transpired into an opportunistic pretense for wrestling control of Annam by the new Southern Han regime due to its strategic geographical location. Ngô Quyền foresaw the Chinese intention. He quickly mobilized the armed forces and made war preparations well in advance. His victory at the Battle of Bach Dang paved the way for Viet independence.
Ngô Quyền was declared King and was officially recognized by Imperial China in 939. In the process, Annam (future Vietnam) gained full independence and governmental autonomy ever since (with the exception of a short period of 20 years under military occupation by the
Ming Dynasty in the early 1400s.
Rise in the military
Ngô Quyền was a commander and trusted son-in-law of Vietnamese warlord and de-facto Lord Protector
Dương Đình Nghệ. In 931, when Dương Đình Nghệ defeated the crumbling
Southern Han influence in Annam, Ngô Quyền was a 33-year-old Army General. Dương Đình Nghệ loved his talent and gave him one of his daughters, Lady Dương, in marriage and placed him in charge of Ái Châu (Nghệ An province at present). The province was Dương Đình Nghệ's hometown and military power base. By giving Ngô Quyền command of this region Dương Đình Nghệ indicated Ngô Quyền's loyalty and talented leader amongst his subordinates.
Defeating the Southern Han
In 938, the Chinese dispatched an army to quell the Viet rebellion. Ngô Quyền calculated that the Chinese would sail down the Bạch Đằng River to unload their troops right in the middle of Giao Châu to do the most damage. To prevent this incursion, Ngô Quyền strategized and ordered the waters of Bạch Đằng embedded with thousands of large wooden pikes hidden just beneath the rising tide water. He used boats with shallow drafts to instigate and lure the Chinese toward the traps after the tide had risen. When the Chinese hundreds of ships were punctured and caught against the deadly traps, Ngô Quyền led his forces in the attack. Hundreds of trapped ships were burned and sabotaged and thousands of Chinese soldiers were killed, while some managed to retreat and were chased out relentlessly by the Viet forces. In the thick of battle, most of the Han army, including the Admiral
Liu Hung-ts'ao (
劉弘操; Vietnamese: Lưu Hoàng Thao; the son of the South Chinese imperator), commander of the Chinese force, were drowned.
King of Viet Nam
After vanquishing the Chinese invaders and founding the
Ngô Dynasty, arguably the first Vietnamese dynasty, Ngô Quyền transferred the capital to
Cổ Loa, the capital of
Âu Lạc Kingdom, thus affirming the continuity of the traditions of the
Lạc Việt people.
From this time, Ngô Quyền reclaimed Vietnamese independence and was proclaimed as King (Ngô Vương) of An Nam in 939.
Ngô Quyền's immediate heirs proved unable to maintain a unified state. After his death in 944, Duong-Binh Vuong Tam-Kha usurped the throne for a brief time—until Ngô Quyền's two sons, Ngô Nam-Tan Vuong Xuong-Van and Ngô Thien-Sach Vuong Xuong-Ngap, finally established a joint rule, which lasted until the collapse of the
Ngô Dynasty in 954.
References/Further reading
Category:Ngô DynastyCategory:938 in VietnamCategory:Vietnamese emperorsCategory:897 birthsCategory:944 deathsCategory:10th-century rulers in Asiade:Ngô Quyềnja:呉権pl:Ngô Quyềnsv:Ngo Quyenvi:Ngô Quyềnzh:吳權