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The Rise of the Coast: Trade, State and Culture in Early Ða[under dot]i Viê[under dot]t

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 February 2006

John K. Whitmore
Affiliation:
University of Michigan. His e-mail contact is johnkw@umich.edu

Abstract

The surge in Song foreign trade affected Ða[under dot]i Viê[under dot]t greatly, helping to integrate the upper and lower valley of the Red River first economically in the twelfth century, then politically with the rise of the Trâ[grave accent above]n dynasty in the thirteenth, and finally culturally in the fourteenth. Coastal wealth, power and classical Chinese scholarship entered the inland capital of Thăng Long (Hanoi) and strongly influenced it, leading to major changes across the land.

Type
Articles
Copyright
2006 The National University of Singapore

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Footnotes

This paper is dedicated to the late O. W. Wolters. My thanks to Li Tana and Momoki Shiro for their excellent work that has helped this study, and to the latter and Victor Lieberman for their most helpful comments. This paper was originally presented at the 50th Anniversary meeting of the Toho Gakkai, Tokyo, 20 May 2005.