Lý Nhân Tông

Lý Nhân Tông
李仁宗
Emperor of Đại Việt
A statue of emperor Lý Nhân Tông
Emperor of Đại Việt
Reign3 February 1072 –
15 January 1128
PredecessorLý Thánh Tông
SuccessorLý Thần Tông
Monarch of Lý dynasty
Reign10721128
PredecessorLý Thánh Tông
SuccessorLý Thần Tông
Born22 February 1066
Long Đức palace, Thăng Long
Died15 January 1128 (aged 61)
Vĩnh Quang palace, Thăng Long
Burial
Thọ Tomb
SpouseEmpress Lan Anh (蘭英皇后)
Empress Khâm Thiên (欽天皇后)
Empress Chấn Bảo (震寶皇后)
Empress Thánh Cực (聖極皇后, ?–1095)
Empress Chiêu Thánh (昭聖皇后. ?–1108).
IssuePrince Lý Dương Hoán(adoptive)
Prince Lý Dương Côn(adoptive)
Names
Lý Càn Đức (李乾德)
Era dates
Thái Ninh (1072–1076)
Anh Vũ Chiêu Thắng (1076–1084)
Quảng Hựu (1085–1092)
Hội Phong (1092–1100)
Long Phù (1101–1109)
Hội Tường Đại Khánh (1110–1119)
Thiên Phù Duệ Vũ (1120–1126)
Thiên Phù Khánh Thọ (1127).
Regnal name
Hiếu Thiên Thể Đạo Thánh Văn Thần Vũ Sùng Nhân Ý Nghĩa Hiếu Từ Thuần Thành Minh Hiếu Hoàng Đế (憲天體道聖文神武崇仁懿義孝慈純誠明孝皇帝)
Posthumous name
Hiếu Từ Thánh Thần Văn Vũ Hoàng Đế (孝慈聖神文武皇帝)
Temple name
Nhân Tông (仁宗)
House
FatherLý Thánh Tông
MotherEmpress Ỷ Lan
ReligionBuddhism
Lý Nhân Tông
VietnamesePosthumous name
Chữ Hán
Personal name
Vietnamese alphabetLý Càn Đức
Chữ Hán

Lý Nhân Tông (22 February 1066 – 15 January 1128), personal name Lý Càn Đức, temple name Nhân Tông was the fourth emperor of the Lý dynasty, ruling the empire of Đại Việt from 1072 until his death in 1128. Succeeding his father Lý Thánh Tông at the age of 7, during his early reign Lý Nhân Tông ruled with the assistance of his mother Ỷ Lan and the chancellor Lý Đạo Thành who were both considered competent regents and were able to help the emperor maintain the country's prosperity. Appreciated as a great emperor of the Lý dynasty, Lý Nhân Tông made important contributions to the development of Đại Việt, especially for establishing Confucianism as the official philosophy of the state, creating Confucian-based imperial exams, and creating schools based on the Confucian system of learning. During his 56-year reign, which was the longest reign for any Vietnamese monarch, Lý Nhân Tông also experienced several wars against Đại Việt's neighbours, the Song dynasty and the kingdom of Champa in which the Sino–Vietnamese War (10751076) was the fiercest. After his death, the royal family lost their control over the court to the chancellors and the bureaucracies.