Lê Hoàn (10 August 941 – 18 March 1005), posthumously title Lê Đại Hành, was the third ruler of
Đại Việt kingdom, ruling from 981 to 1005, and founder of the
Early Lê dynasty
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. He first served as the
generalissimo commanding a ten-thousand man army of the Đại Việt court under the reign of
Đinh Bộ Lĩnh. Following the death of Đinh Bộ Lĩnh in late 979, Lê Hoàn became regent to Đinh Bộ Lĩnh's successor, the six-year-old
Đinh Toàn. Lê Hoàn deposed the boy king, married his mother, Queen
Dương Vân Nga, and in 980 he became the ruler. He commanded the Việt army, which fended off a northern invasion in 981, then led a seaborne invasion of the southern
Champa
Champa (Cham language, Cham: ꨌꩌꨛꨩ, چمڤا; ; 占城 or 占婆) was a collection of independent Chams, Cham Polity, polities that extended across the coast of what is present-day Central Vietnam, central and southern Vietnam from ...
kingdom in 982.
Early career
Lê Hoàn was born in 941, a native of Ai Province (
Thanh Hoa). He rose to power as a general of the Hoa Lu warlord
Đinh Bộ Lĩnh. In 968, after defeating all other warlords, Đinh Bộ Lĩnh founded the Dai Viet kingdom with Hoa Lu as capital. Lê Hoàn was appointed the title "General of Ten Circuits" and commander of the kingdom's military.
Rise to the throne

In late 979 Đinh Bộ Lĩnh and his son
Dinh Lien were slain by an official named Do Thich while sleeping in the courtyard. Following the deaths of the king and the prince, notable members of the court
Nguyen Bac and Le Hoan enthroned the six-year-old prince
Đinh Toàn as king. However Queen Duong wanted Le Hoan to become the ruler as it would be better for the kingdom. Đinh Toàn gave up the crown while Le Hoan took power with the reign name Thien Phuc, thus transferring power from the Đinh clan to the
Le clan.
Reign
Foreign relations with Song China and Champa
Disturbances in Dai Viet had attracted attention from the Chinese
Song Empire in the north. The emperor Taizong ordered
Hou Renbao advance into Dai Viet territories, although Le Hoan had sent a message to the Song court which was declined. In early 981 the Chinese navy under Liu Cheng defeated Le Hoan's military on the
Bạch Đằng River, killing 1,000 Viet sailors and seizing 200 junks. Hou Renbao urged his troops to march forward, but they didn't until Liu Cheng finally arrived and the Song land forces and navy regrouped at Da La village, then returned to Hoa Bo (
Chi Lăng). Le Hoan pretended to surrender, tricked Hou Renbao to come, and then killed him and massacred his troops. The Song army was forced to retreat and their generals were punished with summary execution in Kaifeng for military failures. The Sung then sent three envoys in 986, 998, and 990 to Dai Viet, normalizing the relations between the two countries.
The king of
Champa
Champa (Cham language, Cham: ꨌꩌꨛꨩ, چمڤا; ; 占城 or 占婆) was a collection of independent Chams, Cham Polity, polities that extended across the coast of what is present-day Central Vietnam, central and southern Vietnam from ...
,
Paramesvaravarman I, previously had attacked Dai Viet in late 979 in the name of restoring
Ngô Nhật Khánh a Vietnamese former warlord during the
Period of the 12 Warlords who had escaped to
Champa
Champa (Cham language, Cham: ꨌꩌꨛꨩ, چمڤا; ; 占城 or 占婆) was a collection of independent Chams, Cham Polity, polities that extended across the coast of what is present-day Central Vietnam, central and southern Vietnam from ...
, but the plan failed when a
typhoon
A typhoon is a tropical cyclone that develops between 180° and 100°E in the Northern Hemisphere and which produces sustained hurricane-force winds of at least . This region is referred to as the Northwestern Pacific Basin, accounting for a ...
destroyed most of the Cham fleet including Khanh who drowned. In the next year Le Hoan sent an embassy to Champa, however was detained by the Cham king. The Viet King then led an army stormed south, killed Paramesvaravarman in battle and sacked
Indrapura. Paramesvaravarman's Prince Jaya Indravarman IV sought refuge in the south. In the next year,
Lưu Kế Tông, a Vietnamese officer in the Cham army, had seized power in Champa and successfully resisted Le Hoan's attempt to remove him from power.
In early 995, 100 Viet warships sailed onto
Yongzhou (Nanning,
Guangxi
Guangxi,; officially the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, is an Autonomous regions of China, autonomous region of the China, People's Republic of China, located in South China and bordering Vietnam (Hà Giang Province, Hà Giang, Cao Bằn ...
), sacked the town of Ruhong before leaving. In summer, Le Hoan's local officials from To Mau (modern-day
Quang Ninh) led a village force of 5,000 men and sailors who invaded China, plundered Luzhou near Yongzhou, but were defeated by Chinese general
Yang Wenjie. In 1004, Le Hoan sent a mission to China led by one of his sons, Prince Lê Minh Đề. Minh Đề was invited for the 1005 Lunar New Year Festival's feast of the Song court along with emissaries of Champa and Arab. The Song records treated Dai Viet along with Java,
Pagan, and the Arabs as equal sovereign states. Outside China and Champa, a
Khmer inscription dated 987 records the arrival of Vietnamese merchants in
Angkor
Angkor ( , 'capital city'), also known as Yasodharapura (; ),Headly, Robert K.; Chhor, Kylin; Lim, Lam Kheng; Kheang, Lim Hak; Chun, Chen. 1977. ''Cambodian-English Dictionary''. Bureau of Special Research in Modern Languages. The Catholic Uni ...
.
Kingship
File:Đền Lê Hoàn.jpg, Temple of Lê Hoàn
File:An42 Tien Le Thien Phuc 1ar (13332606673).jpg, A copper coin of Le Hoan, c. 990
In the court, Le Hoan maintained the Buddhist patriarch
Khuông Việt as the great preceptor, while appointing a Chinese named Hongjian as the position of classic and history expert of the court. He established five queens as minor wives while Queen Duong remained as his first lady. He appointed his family members including his brother and his sons to rule other parts of the kingdom. In 987, five years after a drought in 982, Le Hoan held a
Royal Ploughing Ceremony
Royal Ploughing Ceremony (, ; , ; , ), also known as The Ploughing Festival, is an ancient royal rite held in many Asian countries to mark the traditional beginning of the rice growing season. The royal ploughing ceremony, called (, ) or (), was ...
on two rice fields and put a pot of gold in each. In 995 he built the Mahayana Nhat Tru church and temple in Hoa Lu and left inscriptions on it, cited verses from the ''
Śūraṅgama Sūtra.''
Death
In 1005 he died at age 64 while a civil war for succession erupted between his sons. He was called Đại Hành Hoàng đế (
大行皇帝; literally "the Departed Emperor") after his death and later became his posthumously title.
['' Đại Việt sử ký toàn thư'', vol. 1] His twenty-years old fifth son
Le Long Dinh seized the throne in later that year after murdering his older brother
Lê Long Việt who only held the crown in 3 days, and ruled the country for the next four years.
Family
* Parents
** Lê Mịch (黎覔)
** Đặng Thị Sen (鄧氏𬞮)
* Wives
** Lady
Dương Vân Nga (楊雲娥, 942 – 1000)
** Phụng Càn Chí Lý Hoàng hậu (奉乾至理皇后)
** Thuận Thánh Minh Đạo Hoàng hậu (順聖明道皇后)
** Lady Trịnh Quắc (鄭國皇后)
** Lady Phạm (范皇后)
* Children
** Lê Long Thâu (黎龍鍮, ? – 1000), first son
** Lê Long Tích (黎龍錫; ? – 1005), second son
**
Lê Long Việt (黎龍鉞, 983 – 1005), successor, reigned 3 days (the shortest reign of Vietnamese monarchs), third son
** Lê Long Đinh (黎龍釘, 986 – ?), fourth son
**
Lê Long Đĩnh (黎龍鋌, 986 – 1009), the third monarch of the family), fifth son
** Lê Long Cân (黎龍釿), sixth son
** Lê Long Tung (黎龍鏦), seventh son
** Lê Long Tương (黎龍鏘), eighth son
** Lê Long Kính (黎龍鏡, ? – 1005), ninth son
** Lê Long Mang (黎龍鋩), tenth son
** Lê Minh Đề(黎明提), eleventh son
** Dương Hy Liễn, adopted daughter
**
Lê Thị Phất Ngân (黎氏佛銀, 981 - ?), wife of
Lý Công Uẩn
LY or ly may refer to:
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* Libya (ISO 3166-1 country code LY)
* Lý dynasty, a Vietnamese dynasty
* Labour Youth of Ireland
* Legislative Yuan, the unicameral legislature of the Republic of China (Taiwan)
Science and tech ...
Ancestry
References
Work cited
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Le, Hoan
941 births
1005 deaths
Early Lê dynasty emperors
Đinh dynasty generals
Đinh dynasty officials
Vietnamese monarchs
Founding monarchs in Asia
10th-century regents
People from Thanh Hóa province