Anarchy of the 12 Warlords
Civil War in Vietnam
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The Anarchy of the 12 Warlords[1] (Vietnamese: Loạn 12 sứ quân, chữ Nôm: äºð¨®ð ©ä½¿å; Sino-Vietnamese: Tháºp nhá» sứ quân chi loạn, chữ Hán: åäºä½¿åä¹äº), also the Period of the 12 Warlords,[2] was a period of chaos and civil war in the history of Vietnam, from 965 to 968 caused by the succession of the Ngô dynasty after the death of King Ngô Quyá»n. This period is also sometimes simply called the Twelve Warlords[3] (Vietnamese: Mưá»i hai sứ quân, ð¨®ð ©ä½¿å). Four of the warlords are verified to have traced their direct lineage from what is now China today. This period ended in 968 with the unification war of Vietnam by Äinh Bá» LÄ©nh, who later established the Äinh dynasty.

Name
The name of this period came from a Vietnamese envoy to the Song dynasty court. The envoy used a literary allusion to Emperor Shun's Twelve Regions which the Song translated literally, calling it the Chaos of the Twelve Prefectures. Later Vietnamese historians reinterpreted the Song translation as Chaos of the Twelve Lords.[4]
History
In 939, Ngô Quyá»n became King of TÄ©nh Hải quân (as Vietnam was called then) after defeating the Southern Han and declaring independence from centuries of Chinese rule. After Ngô Quyá»n's death in 944, his brother-in-law Dương Tam Kha, who was to serve as regent to the king's son Crown Prince Ngô Xương Ngáºp, usurped the throne and proclaimed himself king under the title Dương Bình Vương, ruling from 944 to 950. As a result, Crown Prince Ngô Xương Ngáºp fled and hid in the countryside. The prince's younger brother, Prince Ngô Xương VÄn became the adopted son of Dương Tam Kha.
Division of Vietnam
Because of the illegitimate accession of Dương Tam Kha, many local warlords rebelled by seizing power of their local governments and creating conflicts with the Dương court. King Dương Tam Kha sent an army led by Prince Ngô Xương VÄn to suppress the rebellion. However, with the army at his command, the prince staged a coup d'état in 950. Rather than administering a harsh punishment, Ngô Xương VÄn forgave Dương Tam Kha and demoted him to the title of "Lord". Ngô Xương VÄn was then crowned king under the title "Nam Tấn Vương", and sent envoys in search for his refuged older brother, Ngô Xương Ngáºp. In 951, Ngô Xương Ngáºp returned to Cá» Loa and was crowned king under the title "Thiên Sách Vương", and with his brother became a co-ruler of the TÄ©nh Hải Quân. However, the co-rulership was short-lived, as the elder brother King Ngô Xương Ngáºp died of illness in 954.
Despite the return of the legitimate heirs to the throne, rebellions continued to afflict the country. In 965, in an attempt to quell the rebellion in 2 villages ÄÆ°á»ng and Nguyá» n, King Ngô Xương VÄn was killed by the rebels.[5] Lã Xá» Bình, Xương VÄn's subordinate general, then took control of the royal capital at Cá» Loa.[6] Prince Ngô Xưong XÃ, the son of King Ngô Xương VÄn, inherited the throne, but he could not maintain his father's authority. He retreated to the area of Bình Kiá»u and established his power base there. When the Ngô dynasty collapsed under Lã Xá» Bình's rebellion, TÄ©nh Hải Quân became a power vacuum and divided into 12 domains where each was administered by a powerful warlord converging into three main factions during the conflict: the Ngô dynasty royalists under Ngô Xương XÃ; military junta under Lã Xá» Bình in Cá» Loa; and the regional governorship under Trần Lãm.[7]

Other minor warlords eventually joined in and formed alliances among the three main factions of the conflict.
Äinh Bá» LÄ©nh's Unification war
Äinh Bá» LÄ©nh, adopted son of Lord Trần Lãm who ruled the region of Bá» Hải Khẩu (now Thái Bình Province), succeeded Lãm after his death. In 968, Äinh Bá» LÄ©nh defeated the other eleven major warlords and reunified the nation under his rule. In the same year, Äinh Bá» LÄ©nh ascended the throne, proclaiming himself emperor with the title Äinh Tiên Hoà ng, establishing the Äinh dynasty, and he renamed the nation as Äại Cá» Viá»t ("Great Viet"). He moved the capital to Hoa Lư (modern-day Ninh Bình).
List of 12 warlords
- Ngô Xương Xà held Bình Kiá»u, now Khoái Châu, (Triá»u SÆ¡n - Thanh Hóa) Thanh Hóa Province.
- Äá» Cảnh Thạc referred himself as the Duke Äá» Cảnh (Äá» Cảnh Công), held Äá» Äá»ng Giang, now Thanh Oai, Hà Ná»i (Chinese)
- Trần Lãm referred himself as the Duke Trần Minh, held Bá» Hải Khấu, Kỳ Bá», Thái Bình Province
- Kiá»u Công Hãn referred himself as Kiá»u Tam Chế, held Phong Châu â Bạch Hạc, Phú Thá» Province (Chinese)
- Nguyá» n Khoan referred himself as Nguyá» n Thái Bình, held Tam Äái - VÄ©nh Tưá»ng, VÄ©nh Phúc Province
- Ngô Nháºt Khánh referred himself as the Duke Ngô Lãm (Ngô Lãm Công), held ÄÆ°á»ng Lâm, SÆ¡n Tây, Hà Ná»i
- Lý Khuê referred himself as Lý Lãng Công, held Siêu Loại - Thuáºn Thà nh, Bắc Ninh Province.
- Nguyá» n Thá»§ Tiá»p referred himself as Nguyá» n Lá»nh Công, held Tiên Du, Bắc Ninh Province (Chinese)
- Lã ÄÆ°á»ng referred himself as the Duke Lã Tá, held Tế Giang - VÄn Giang, Hưng Yên Province
- Nguyá» n Siêu referred himself as the Nguyá» n Hữu Công, held Tây Phù Liá»t - Thanh Trì, Hà Ná»i (Chinese)
- Kiá»u Thuáºn referred himself as the Kiá»u Lá»nh Công, held Há»i Há» - Cẩm Khê, Phú Thá» province
- Phạm Bạch Há» referred himself as Phạm Phòng Ãt, held Äằng Châu, Hưng Yên Province.
Of those, Ngô Xương Xà and Ngô Nháºt Khánh were nobles of the Ngô dynasty, Phạm Bạch Há», Äá» Cảnh Thạc, Kiá»u Công Hãn were officials of the Ngô dynasty. The remainders were considered local landlords or nobles from Northern nations, which was the ancient nations holding what is now China. Four of the lords are verified to have traced their lineage from what is now China today.
Recent findings suggest that there was a 13th warlord that is not included in the list: Dương Huy, who ruled a region to the South-East of CỠLoa.[6]
Äinh Bá» LÄ©nh
Äinh Bá» LÄ©nh used to hold some posts in Hoan Châu (Nghá» An and Hà TÄ©nh today), but lost his positions and went back to Hoa Lư in 950. Here, he became an adoptive son and subordinate general to Trần Lãm. Considering Äinh Bá» LÄ©nh as a reasonable leader who could manage the circumstances, Trần Lãm retired and gave all power to him. Äinh Bá» LÄ©nh led the army to occupy Hoa Lư, which became the national capital under his reign afterward.[8]
Äinh Bá» LÄ©nh was respected as Vạn Thắng Vương (è¬åç, Wà nshèng Wáng, lt. the King of Ten Thousand Victories) because of the continuous victories. In 968, the era ended and was replaced by the era of the Äinh dynasty.
Defeating the warlords
Äinh Bá» LÄ©nh began by defeating Lã Xá» Bình in Cá» Loa.[9]
The battle with Äá» Cảnh Thạc in Äá» Äá»ng Giang took over a year, until Äinh Bá» LÄ©nh seized the fortress and Äá» Cảnh Thạc was killed.
In Tây Phù Liá»t, Nguyá» n Siêu lost four of his generals in the first battle with Äinh Bá» LÄ©nh. In the second battle, he split his army in half to seek backup. However, their ships were wrecked, upon which Äinh Bá» LÄ©nh commanded his soldiers to set fire to the camps of the remaining army. Nguyá» n Siêu died.[10]
By the beginning of 968, after defeating and killing Nguyá» n Thá»§ Tiá»p, Kiá»u Công Hãn, Nguyá» n Khoan, Kiá»u Thuáºn, Lý Khuê, Lã ÄÆ°á»ng, the war ended and Äinh Bá» LÄ©nh successfully united the divided regions.[11][12]
He also convinced Phạm Bạch Há», Ngô Xương XÃ, and Ngô Nháºt Khánh to surrender and join his army.[13]