Vietnamese rebellion (1420) (original) (raw)

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The Vietnamese rebellion of 1420, also known as Lê Ngạ's Uprising, was a Vietnamese anti-Chinese rebellion led by a former slave named Lê Ngạ, during the Ming colonial rule in northern Vietnam. In 1407, around 9,000 Vietnamese elitists, including scholars, craftmen, physicians, medicine experts were shipped to China, where these people were retrained in Chinese and could be sent back to Ming-occupying Dai Viet as bureaucrats. In addition, 7,700 Vietnamese tradesmen, artisans and workers were sent to Peking, the second capital of Ming Empire to built the Forbidden City, while the Ming state took direct control over Dai Viet's metal mines, precious aromatics and pearls.

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dbo:abstract The Vietnamese rebellion of 1420, also known as Lê Ngạ's Uprising, was a Vietnamese anti-Chinese rebellion led by a former slave named Lê Ngạ, during the Ming colonial rule in northern Vietnam. In 1407, around 9,000 Vietnamese elitists, including scholars, craftmen, physicians, medicine experts were shipped to China, where these people were retrained in Chinese and could be sent back to Ming-occupying Dai Viet as bureaucrats. In addition, 7,700 Vietnamese tradesmen, artisans and workers were sent to Peking, the second capital of Ming Empire to built the Forbidden City, while the Ming state took direct control over Dai Viet's metal mines, precious aromatics and pearls. In 1420, Lê Ngạ rallied people to the woods of Lạng Sơn and subsequently declared king. He said to his followers, "If you want to be rich, follow me!" The rebels marched down the Red River Delta, seized Xương Giang. Lê Ngạ's former slave owner saw Ngạ and attacked him. The Chinese military commander of Jiaozhi–Marquis , arrived and forced Lê Ngạ's rebels to flee into the mountains. After hearing the news, Emperor Zhu Di felt angry and demanded that Lê Ngạ be captured and transported to the Ming capital. Unable to immediately have the emperor's demand succeed, Li Bin seized and sent an innocent man instead, claiming that it was Lê Ngạ. Lê Ngạ would not surrender until Huang Fu–the surveillance and prosecution commissioner of Jiaozhi, intervened. (en)
dbo:combatant Ming dynasty Vietnamese anti-Chinese rebels
dbo:commander dbr:Li_Bin_(Ming_dynasty)
dbo:place dbr:Bắc_Giang_Province dbr:Northern_Vietnam dbr:Jiaozhi_Province
dbo:result Chinese victory
dbo:strength unknown
dbo:wikiPageID 68470619 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength 3511 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID 1096660583 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink dbr:Peking dbr:Bắc_Giang_Province dbr:Vietnam dbr:Northern_Vietnam dbc:15th-century_rebellions dbc:Rebellions_in_Asia dbc:15th_century_in_Vietnam dbc:Conflicts_in_1420 dbc:Wars_involving_the_Ming_dynasty dbc:Yongle_Emperor dbr:Forbidden_City dbr:Fourth_Era_of_Northern_Domination dbr:Red_River_Delta dbr:China dbr:Jiaozhi_Province dbr:Ming_dynasty dbr:Xương_Giang dbr:Li_Bin_(Ming_dynasty) dbr:Lạng_Sơn_Province dbr:Zhu_Di
dbp:combatant dbr:Ming_dynasty Vietnamese anti-Chinese rebels (en)
dbp:commander dbr:Li_Bin_(Ming_dynasty) Lê Ngạref|In Chinese records, he was called Li Hung (黎餓).
dbp:conflict Vietnamese rebellion (en)
dbp:date 1420 (xsd:integer)
dbp:place Bắc Giang, Jiaozhi Province, today Northern Vietnam (en)
dbp:result Chinese victory (en)
dbp:strength unknown (en)
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate dbt:Citation dbt:Cite_book dbt:Infobox_military_conflict dbt:Refbegin dbt:Refend dbt:Reflist dbt:Sfnp
dct:subject dbc:15th-century_rebellions dbc:Rebellions_in_Asia dbc:15th_century_in_Vietnam dbc:Conflicts_in_1420 dbc:Wars_involving_the_Ming_dynasty dbc:Yongle_Emperor
rdf:type owl:Thing schema:Event dul:Event dbo:SocietalEvent wikidata:Q1656682 dbo:Event dbo:MilitaryConflict
rdfs:comment The Vietnamese rebellion of 1420, also known as Lê Ngạ's Uprising, was a Vietnamese anti-Chinese rebellion led by a former slave named Lê Ngạ, during the Ming colonial rule in northern Vietnam. In 1407, around 9,000 Vietnamese elitists, including scholars, craftmen, physicians, medicine experts were shipped to China, where these people were retrained in Chinese and could be sent back to Ming-occupying Dai Viet as bureaucrats. In addition, 7,700 Vietnamese tradesmen, artisans and workers were sent to Peking, the second capital of Ming Empire to built the Forbidden City, while the Ming state took direct control over Dai Viet's metal mines, precious aromatics and pearls. (en)
rdfs:label Vietnamese rebellion (1420) (en)
owl:sameAs wikidata:Vietnamese rebellion (1420) https://global.dbpedia.org/id/Fu2bh
prov:wasDerivedFrom wikipedia-en:Vietnamese_rebellion_(1420)?oldid=1096660583&ns=0
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf wikipedia-en:Vietnamese_rebellion_(1420)
foaf:name Vietnamese rebellion (1420) (en)
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of dbr:List_of_wars:_1000–1499
is foaf:primaryTopic of wikipedia-en:Vietnamese_rebellion_(1420)