Later Lê dynasty
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Later Lê dynasty
Summary
Later Lê dynasty is a dynasty[1]. It draws 18 Wikipedia views per month (dynasty category, ranking #277 of 549).[2]
Key Facts
- Later Lê dynasty's religion is recorded as Buddhism[3].
- Later Lê dynasty's religion is recorded as Taoism[4].
- Later Lê dynasty's religion is recorded as Catholicism[5].
- Later Lê dynasty's religion is recorded as Sunni Islam[6].
- Later Lê dynasty is on the continent of Asia[7].
- Later Lê dynasty's instance of is recorded as dynasty[8].
- Later Lê dynasty's instance of is recorded as historical country[9].
- Later Lê dynasty's capital is recorded as Đông Kinh[10].
- Later Lê dynasty's capital is recorded as Xijing[11].
- Later Lê dynasty's capital is recorded as Đông Kinh[12].
- Later Lê dynasty's official language is recorded as Vietnamese[13].
- Later Lê dynasty's currency is recorded as Vietnamese cash[14].
- Later Lê dynasty's currency is recorded as Japanese mon[15].
- Later Lê dynasty's shares border with is recorded as Ming dynasty[16].
- Later Lê dynasty's shares border with is recorded as Qing dynasty[17].
- Later Lê dynasty's shares border with is recorded as Siam[18].
- Later Lê dynasty's shares border with is recorded as Taungoo dynasty[19].
- Later Lê dynasty's shares border with is recorded as Cambodia[20].
- Later Lê dynasty followed Fourth Chinese domination of Vietnam[21].
- Later Lê dynasty was followed by Tây Sơn dynasty[22].
- Later Lê dynasty's Commons category is recorded as Later Lê dynasty[23].
- Later Lê dynasty's located in time zone is recorded as UTC+07:30[24].
- April 29, 1428 marks the founding of Later Lê dynasty[25].
- Later Lê dynasty was dissolved in February 3, 1789[26].
- Later Lê dynasty's coordinate location is recorded as {'globe': 'http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q2', 'altitude': None, 'latitude': 21.016666666666666, 'longitude': 105.85, 'precision': 0.016666666666666666}[27].
Body
Founding
April 29, 1428 marks the founding of Later Lê dynasty[25].
Identity
Later Lê dynasty's official name is recorded as 黎朝[28]. It followed Fourth Chinese domination of Vietnam[21]. It was followed by Tây Sơn dynasty[22].
Dissolution
Later Lê dynasty was dissolved in February 3, 1789[26].
Why It Matters
Later Lê dynasty draws 18 Wikipedia views per month (dynasty category, ranking #277 of 549).[2]