Jiaozhi Province
| Jiaozhi Province 交趾 Giao Chỉ | |||||||||||
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| Province of the Ming dynasty | |||||||||||
| 1407–1427 | |||||||||||
Map of Jiaozhi Province | |||||||||||
Jiaozhi when it was under Ming occupation (1407–1427) | |||||||||||
| Capital | Dongguan (known as Đông Quan in Vietnamese; present day Hà Nội) | ||||||||||
| Government | |||||||||||
| • Type | Provincial | ||||||||||
| Provincial administrator | |||||||||||
• 1407–1424 | Huang Fu (first) | ||||||||||
• 1424–1426 | Chen Qia (last) | ||||||||||
| Regional chief commander | |||||||||||
• 1407–1417 | Zhang Fu (first) | ||||||||||
• 1408–1415 | Mu Sheng | ||||||||||
• 1427 | Liu Sheng (last) | ||||||||||
| History | |||||||||||
• Military defeat of Đại Ngu | 1407 | ||||||||||
• Trần princes's revolts suppressed | 1413 | ||||||||||
• End of the Lam Sơn uprising | 1427 | ||||||||||
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| Chinese name | |||||||||||
| Traditional Chinese | 交趾等處承宣布政使司 | ||||||||||
| Simplified Chinese | 交趾等处承宣布政使司 | ||||||||||
| Literal meaning | "Administrative bodies responsible for Jiaozhi and neighboring areas" | ||||||||||
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| Vietnamese name | |||||||||||
| Vietnamese | Giao Chỉ đẳng xứ Thừa tuyên Bố chính sứ ty | ||||||||||
| History of Vietnam (by names of Vietnam) |
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Jiaozhi Provincial Administration Commission (交趾等處承宣布政使司), commonly abbreviated as Jiaozhi (交趾), was a provincial-level administrative body established by the Ming dynasty in Vietnam during the Fourth Era of Northern Domination, following the conquest of the Hồ dynasty in 1407. The institution was tasked with implementing administrative policies, managing taxation, and overseeing governance in the occupied territory. The Ming administration applied a bureaucratic and legal system similar to that used in other interior Chinese provinces, dividing the region into 15 prefectures and 5 independent prefectures, covering most of the area north of the present-day Central–Annamite Range.
During this period, the Ming dynasty introduced various cultural and administrative policies aimed at integrating the region into its imperial system, which provoked widespread resentment among the local population and sparked numerous uprisings. Following the Lam Sơn uprising (1418–1427), led by Lê Lợi, Ming forces eventually withdrew. In 1428, with the establishment of the Lê dynasty, the Jiaozhi Provincial Administration was formally abolished, marking the end of direct Chinese administration in the region.