Lý Thðá»Âng Kiá»Ât (; 1019âÂÂ1105), real name Ngô Tuấn (), was a Vietnamese general and admiral of the Lý dynasty. He served as an official through the reign of Lý Thái Tông, Lý Thánh Tông and Lý Nhân Tông and was a general during the SongâÂÂLý War.
In Vietnamese history, he helped invade Champa (1069), raid the three Song dynasty provinces of Yongzhou, Qinzhou, Lianzhou (1075âÂÂ1076), and defeat the Song invasion of Vietnam led by Gou Kui and Zhao Xie.
Lý Thðá»Âng Kiá»Ât was born in ThÃÂng Long (now Hanoi), the capital of ÃÂại Viá»Ât (ancient Vietnam). His real name was Ngô Tuấn. His father was a low-ranking military officer. He was originally from Thái Hòa ward (太åÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ) of ThÃÂng Long citadel. According to Hoàng Xuân Hãn, Thái Hòa was also the name of a small mountain in the west of ThÃÂng Long citadel, south of the Bách Thảo dike, near the place turn down to the horse racing. Lý Thðá»Âng Kiá»Ât surname was not originally Lý, because he was given the royal surname. As for his original surname, there are now two major controversial theories:
Chinese histories often say that [Thðá»Âng Kiá»Ât] is Lý Thðá»Âng Cát or Lý Thðợng Cát. In the family, he has a younger brother named Lý Thðá»Âng Hiến (æÂÂ常æÂ²). Perhaps like his brother, "Thðá»Âng Hiến" is the name after maturity, not the real name; it is customary in the old days that the name after maturation has a similar or opposite meaning to the real name and is used to call outside as an understanding of the politeness, only in the home to call the real name.
According to the comment of ÃÂại Viá»Ât sá» ký toàn thð history book, his family succeeded as mandarins in the way of hereditary, that is the ordination was permanent throughout the generations, so his family could be seen as a bureaucracy with a strong roots. From a young age, Lý Thðá»Âng Kiá»Ât has proved to be a person with the will and energy, studying, practicing both literature and martial arts, having studied military tactics.
Due to two different sources, Lý Thðá»Âng Kiá»Ât's father position is also different. The Viá»Ât ÃÂiá»Ân u linh táºÂp history book that were compiled with [Ngô surname sources] all mention Lý Thðá»Âng Kiá»Ât's father named An Ngữ, and was a "Sùng ban Lang tðá»Âng". The An Nam chàlðợc history book in the Lý dynasty has two names Sùng ban and Lang tðá»Âng, but that policy copies the two names apart. Perhaps "Sùng ban Lang tðá»Âng" is "Lang tðá»Âng belonging to Sùng ban", because even in Chàlðợc book there was a position called "Và © ná»Âi Lang tðá»Âng", but it is not clear how these positions are in the court. As for [Quách surname sources], Lý Thðá»Âng Kiá»Ât was the son of Quách Thá»Ânh ÃÂch, a commander-in-chief, so his position was different.
Nhữ Bá Sé wrote about the legend youth of Lý Thðá»Âng Kiá»Ât as follows:
Scholar Hoàng Xuân Hãn, when extracting content from Nhữ Bá Sé's stele, also commented: "This paragraph, copied from Nhữ Bá Sé stele, a new stele built in Tá»± ÃÂức's reign. Certainly, Nhữ Bá Sé copied the oral tradition of the people. The word of the people is mostly an oral or a fabrication, we cannot fully believe the details that are so clearly written in the oral. But the above mentioned Thðá»Âng Kiá»Ât education is consistent with what we still know about the Lý dynasty."
He may have been the author of the Vietnamese poem Nam Quá»Âc Sán HÃÂ. However controversy surrounds its exact authorship.
The poem was written to motivate troops to fight against the Song dynasty.
According to the 20th century historian Trần Trá»Âng Kim, Ly was afraid that his soldiers would lose morale so he wrote this poem and said it was done by the Gods to restore their fighting spirit.
In US President Barack Obama's visit to Vietnam, he referred to the poem as Vietnam's "declaration of independence" saying that large countries should not bully smaller countries.
Nonetheless, to this day the poem is still well known in Vietnam, and Ly is considered a national hero, with some Vietnamese still delivering tribute to and worshipping him as a deity at his shrine in Hanoi.
General Ly Thuong Kiet was also the author of the (chữ Hán: ä¼Âå®Âé²å¸ÂæÂÂ, An Account of the Campaign to Punish the Song), another poem against the Song dynasty.