Second Chinese domination (History of Vietnam)
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Second Chinese dominiation of Vietnam saw strengthen control on the region. The area came under control in the late Han period in 43 AD and was ruled by Chinese Governors. Even with the fall of the Eastern Han Dynasty in 220 AD, Chinese control remained unchanged with the establishment of the Three Kindgoms (North Wei, West Shu and East Wu).
A female rebel named Trieu Thi Trinh briefly pushed the Chinese rulers out in 220 AD, but was soon overthrown. Chinese under the Song Dynasty and the first half of the Sung Dynasty. The domination ended by 544.
Reference
| Preceded by: Trung Sisters revolt | Ruler of Vietnam 43–544 | Succeeded by: Lý Nam Đế |
Categories
43 establishments | History of Vietnam | Vietnamese dynasties
