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The China History Podcast

Ep. 198 | The History of China-Vietnam Relations (Part 2)

The China History Podcast

Laszlo Montgomery

History, Society & Culture

4.81.2K Ratings

🗓️ 25 March 2018

⏱️ 41 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Shi Xie's impact on bringing Chinese culture to the Jiao region is discussed. For most of this period, Vietnam remained under the direct administrative control of China. Aside from a few quiet moments, there was sustained local unrest to deal with. Either local Viets were rising up against their Chinese overlords or there was a constant battle being fought with Lao, Linyi, Champa, and other tribes, states, and kingdoms that surrounded Vietnam to the west and south.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen, Lauslam-Uncomer yet again, China History Podcast,

0:05.0

The History of China Vietnam Relations, part two this time.

0:09.0

Last episode, we flew higher than an SR-71 the landscape taking in the earliest centuries of Vietnamese history,

0:17.0

the Hong-Bank dynasty, the emergence of Aulak and the Lac people, the arrival of the Chin armies, the establishment of a fort or

0:26.5

commandery, a june to control the region for Imperial China.

0:31.5

Then the Chin fell which led to the rise of Jautau, Jieu D'A, and the establishment of the Nagnu

0:37.8

Nam Viet Kingdom. And for the first time the Red River Delta region gets a fully loaded adult dosage of Chinese culture.

0:47.0

The Jew Dynasty of Nagnu We fell to the mighty Han 111B.

0:52.0

And for the first time the Vietnamese people fall under China's

0:56.5

thumb during this first period of Chinese domination. 111 B.C. E. marks the commencement of the Bachtuk. There's a momentary breath of fresh air with

1:08.6

the June sisters who shake off Han rule in 40 C. E. but this is over in a few short years, and the Chinese

1:17.0

return for the second time to reassert themselves over this land that today comprises only the northernmost portion of today's Socialist Republic of Vietnam.

1:28.0

From almost the city of Hui, north to the China border.

1:32.0

And this is where we shall return to our story.

1:35.0

Last time we looked at Jau Tuau, a man who hailed originally from Herbei,

1:41.0

Jau State. This time we look a Shishir, a Han Chinese with roots in Shandong, but who was born six generations deep into the world of Jao province, Jao Jao Jao Jao, born and raised in Vietnam.

1:56.8

The Vietnamese, no shi shi as C-Ny, and also as C-Vung, King C. He lived 137 to 226, early Han to early three kingdoms period in China.

2:11.0

The record of the three kingdoms, the San Guo Jir, is where we get most of the skinny on Shishya.

2:17.0

Being a sixth generation Jau Jir and all, he came from a very respected and influential family.

2:25.0

Shishya had a classical upbringing, studying in Loyang, the Eastern Han capital,

2:30.0

going through the whole classical scholar-official routine. We remember Shishya for his long stint

2:38.0

serving as administrator of Geuchir, one of the commanders of Geau Province, beginning in 177.

...

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