The Canh line (; chữ Hán: æÂ¯åºÂ; chi can also be translated to as branch) was the fifteenth dynasty of Hùng kings of the Há»Âng Bàng period of VÃÂn Lang (now Viet Nam). Starting 754 BC, the line refers to the rule of Cảnh Chiêu Lang and his successors. It is best known as the period when the Lạc Viá»Ât made their appearance in VÃÂn Lang and whose influence was an important one on Vietnamese history.
Cảnh Chiêu Lang took the regnal name of Hùng Triá»Âu Vðáng (éÂÂæÂÂçÂÂ) upon becoming Hùng king. The series of all Hùng kings following Cảnh Chiêu Lang took that same regnal name of Hùng Triá»Âu Vðáng to rule over VÃÂn Lang until approximately 661 BC.
During this period, at a regional level, VÃÂn Lang was divided into as many as 15 administrative regions called bá»Âs each still governed by a Lạc tðá»Âng. Hùng Vðáng () became a form of address for a person who was king.
The Hùng kings of this line restored a single strong kingship as part of the ÃÂông Sán period, and initiating another glorious chapter in Vietnamese history, as the Vietnamese people increasingly identified with the ÃÂông Sán culture.
The 7th century BC witnessed the process of migration of Lạc Viá»Ât refugees who fled the Spring and Autumn period to VÃÂn Lang. The Lạc Viá»Ât were a people from East Asia. The migrant people finally settled in the Red River Delta. Slowly, the Lạc Viá»Ât settlers would grasp power over VÃÂn Lang.