The ÃÂinh dynasty (; Chữ Hán: æÂÂä¸Â; or ; Chữ Nôm: è¹ä¸Â), officially ÃÂại Cá» Viá»Ât (Chữ Hán: 大ç¿è¶Â), was a Vietnamese dynasty. It was founded in 968 when ÃÂinh Bá» Lénh vanquished the upheavals of Twelve warlords and ended when the son of ÃÂinh Bá» Lénh, ÃÂinh Toàn, ceded the throne to Lê Hoàn in 980.
The ÃÂinh family originated from the village of Hoa Lð, Jinghai kingdom in modern-day Ninh Bình province, northern Vietnam. ÃÂinh Bá» Lénh's father, ÃÂinh Công Trứ had served both Dðáng ÃÂình Nghá» and Ngô Quyá»Ân as governor of Hoan Châu (modern-day the city of Vinh). According to Chinese accounts, Bá» Lénh succeed his father as Duke of Hoan. His father died when he was a child and he lived with his mother and other family members in a holy temple near a mountain in Hoa Lð. ÃÂinh Bá» Lénh had a sister named ÃÂinh Quế Hðáng.
Around 940s, the young ÃÂinh Bá» Lénh emerged as a leader of villages youth, who played âÂÂroyal gamesâ in which Bá» Lénh was the king. The tradition folk said he had them collect wood for his mother, who slaughtered a pig and put on a feast. Villagers sensed a grim future leader: âÂÂWeâÂÂd better follow him now before it is too late.â They delivered their youths to Bá» Lénh, and he set up a base on the land of his uncle, who refused to submit to him. Bá» Lénh sent his friends to attack the uncle, who pursued him, found him trapped under a collapsed bridge, and almost intended to kill him, but then saw two yellow dragons flying above. The uncle withdrew and later submitted to him. Historian Oliver W. Wolters termed the story as a "man of prowess" possessing the âÂÂsoul stuffâ befitting a chief.
In 951, he began challenging the royal authority of the ruling Ngô family. Two king Ngô Xðáng NgáºÂp and Ngô Xðáng VÃÂn sent a force tried suppressing Bá» Lénh that failed but captured ÃÂinh Bá» Lénh's son, ÃÂinh Liá» n as a hostage. The two kings suspended Lien from a pole in plain view of Bá» Lénh and shouted that he would be killed unless Bá» Lénh submitted. Bá» Lénh angrily replied, "How can a great man compromise a great affair simply because of his son?" Bá» Lénh ordered more than ten arrows shot in Liá» n's direction. The two kings were horrified and withdrew their troops.
After ÃÂinh Liá» n was able to escaped and returned to Hoa Lð, ÃÂinh Bá» Lénh went to convinced Trần Lãm, another warlord who occupied Bá» Hải Khẩu (modern-day Thái Bình province) as his ally. When king Ngô Xðáng VÃÂn was killed during a battle in 965 and the country fells into chaotic civil wars between warlords, ÃÂinh Bá» Lénh and ÃÂinh Liá» n commanded their army subdued the highland tribes, then took capital Cá» Loa in the same year. Two years later, he defeated or had all the warlords submitted, pacified the country at the age of 43. In 967, Bá» Lénh assigned his son Liá» n the title "King of Nam Viet". The only survivor of the previous Ngô family, Ngô NháºÂt Khánh submitted to Bá» Lénh, and he gave one of his own daughters, Princess Phất Kim in marriage with NháºÂt Khánh. After that, Ngô NháºÂt Khánh took his wife and fled to the south. He scolded her face and hatred of her father, and he went exiled in Champa.
In 968, ÃÂinh Bá» Lénh established the kingdom of ÃÂại Cá» Viá»Ât, relocated the capital to his home in Hoa Lð. At first he styled himself as Vạn Thắng Vðáng (Great Vanquishing King), then proclaimed the title emperor. In 970 ÃÂinh Bá» Lénh made his reign era Thái Bình (chữ Hán: 太平), issued the coin mining and started the tradition of Vietnamese cash coins. ÃÂinh Bá» Lénh established 5 queens. In 971, ÃÂinh Bá» Lénh officially published his appointments to the chief court positions. Nguyá» n Bặc was placed at the head of the nobility, with the title "Nation Establishing Duke" (ÃÂá»Ânh Quá»Âc Công). Lê Hoàn, a 35-year-old military officer from ÃÂi (Thanh Hoá) was appointed as the commander of the royal army.
The ÃÂinh family established the official religious organization in incorporating Taoists and Buddhists in an administrative hierarchy. Bá» Lénh awarded additional titles such as "Buddhist Priest Overseer" to ÃÂại Viá»Ât's ranking monks, and in 971 assigned Buddhism's top position, that of great preceptor (ÃÂại sð) for reforming the Viá»Ât (khuông Viá»Ât), to the patriarch of the Vô Ngôn Thông sect, Ngô Chân Lðu, who occupied the post until his death forty years later. Another Buddhist priest, Trðáng Ma-ni and a Taoist priest, ÃÂặng Huyá»Ân Quang were given the title "Buddhist Priest Overseer" (TÃÂng lá»±c ÃÂạo sé) and "Noble and Upright Majesty". ÃÂinh Bá» Lénh also established shrines to the gods of earth and agriculture. In 973, Prince ÃÂinh Liá» n erected one hundred ratanadhvaja stone columns contain Uá¹£á¹Âëṣa Vijaya DhÃÂraá¹Âë sutras (written in Classical Chinese) in order to generate merits to help liberate the spirit of his deceased brother. Liá» n established another hundred tantric pillars in 979, aiming to gain a healthy perpetuation of the kingdom. Archaeological efforts from 1963 to 1987 have recovered 20 of those stone pillars.
In 972 ÃÂinh Bá» Lénh sent tribute envoys include cloth, rhinoceros horns, elephant tusks and perfumed tea to the Song dynasty of China. The Song responded by sending an embassy to Dai Viet and awarding the title "King of Jiaozhi Prefecture" to Bá» Lénh; that title was given to Vietnamese monarchs by the Song emperors until 1174.
In October 979, a eunuch named ÃÂá» ThÃÂch killed the emperor ÃÂinh Bá» Lénh and prince ÃÂinh Liá» n while they were sleeping in the palace at night. The general Lê Hoàn took power as regent while five-year-old ÃÂinh Toàn occupied the throne. Rebellions erupted. At this juncture, the Song sent troops under Hou Renbao in attempt to restore the throne of the young prince. However, the threat of renewed Chinese intervention in Vietnam caused court officials to support Lê Hoàn's bid for power. They urged him to become king and establish a more stable government, prepare for the Chinese invasion. In 980, officials and generals gathered at Hoa Lð and empress Dðáng Vân Nga brought out the emperor's robe to put on Lê Hoàn, offered him the throne, and subsequently ended the rule of the ÃÂinh dynasty and transferred power to the Lê family.
After 980, ÃÂinh Bá» Lénh's deposed son ÃÂinh Toàn still held a position in the military. However, in 1001 a rebellion erupted in Phong (modern-day Phú Thá» province), Mðá»Âng rebels trapped the royal army on the ÃÂàRiver, and ÃÂinh Toàn was killed on his boat.
From 970 to 975, ÃÂinh Bá» Lénh established the status of ÃÂại Viá»Ât as a protectorate and tributary state of the Song dynasty to gain Chinese recognition of the independence of ÃÂại Viá»Ât. The tributary relationship would last until the French protectorate was established in 1883.
The ÃÂinh clan was the first fully independent Vietnamese dynasty. These early Vietnamese warrior-monarchs of Hoa Lð endorsed Vietnamese Buddhism as monks made themselves indispensable to the royal family.