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The history of JIAOZHOU
From the Qin Dynasty to the Southern Dynasties, in 222 BC, after Ying Zheng, king of Qin, unified the six countries, he sent Tu Youyou to lead 500,000 Qin Jun to attack Lingnan. In 2 14 BC, Qin Jun basically occupied Lingnan. Immediately, Qin Shihuang set up three counties of "Guilin, Elephant and Nanhai" in the Lingnan area he captured.

Nanhai County governs the Southeast South China Sea, Hezhou, Guangxi, and Bei Nanling, including parts of eastern Guangdong, northern Guangdong, central Guangdong and western Guangdong. It governs Panyu, Longchuan, Boluo and Sihui (according to Hanshu), and the county governs Panyu.

After the destruction of Nanyue State by Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty, it was divided into seven counties: Nanhai, Cangwu, Yulin, Hepu, Jiaozhi, Old Town and Rinan, including most of today's Guangdong and Guangxi, with Jiangyong County in Hunan in the north and Hue in Vietnam in the south. During the chaos in the Central Plains at the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, Jiaozhou became a relatively peaceful and stable region under the rule of Shi Xie, including Guangdong, Guangxi and northern Vietnam today. Many people moved from the Central Plains, such as Xu Jing, Yuan Pei, Deng Xiaoxiao, Xu, Zhang Ziyun, Xu Ci, Liu Ba, Liu Xi, Cheng Bing, Yan Xue, Yuan Zhong and Huan Shao. This is of great help to the introduction of Han Central Plains culture into Jiaozhou. Many of these talents who established diplomatic relations with the country later held important positions in the three regimes. As the southern neighbors of Yizhou, Jingzhou and Yangzhou, Jiaozhou was contested by Cao Cao, Liu Biao, Liu Bei and Sun Quan.

At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, after Battle of Red Cliffs, Wei, Shu and Wu gradually formed a tripartite confrontation.

In AD 2 10 (the 15th year of Jian 'an of Emperor Xian of Han Dynasty), Wu Sunquan appointed Bu Zhi as the secretariat of Jiaozhou and led his troops to Panyu. In 2 17 (the 22nd year of Jian 'an), Buzhi moved the state administration of Jiaozhou from Guangxin to Panyu. .

In 2 1 1 year (the 16th year of Jian 'an of Emperor Xian of Han Dynasty), while Liu Bei was exploring Yizhou in the west, Buzhi, a general of Dongwu School, was the secretariat of Jiaozhou. Jiaozhou became the sphere of influence of Soochow. Shi Xie took his son as a hostage to Wu Dong and donated local treasures every year to maintain his regime. Sun Quan named him General Zuo.

In 220 (the first year of Han Yankang), Lv Dai replaced Buzhi as the secretariat of Jiaozhou. After Liu Bei's death in 223, Shi Xie induced Lv Yong of Haoshi in Yizhou to rebel and join Dongwu. After Zhuge Liang's uprising occupied Nanzhong, he sent Li Huiling as the secretariat of Jiaozhou in an attempt to get his hands on Jiaozhou. After the death of Shi Xie in 226, Wu divided the county south of Nanling into Hepu, Beihai City, Guangxi, Guangzhou in the north and Jiaozhou in the south. Guangzhou ruled Panyu and Jiaozhou ruled Dragon (east of Hanoi, Vietnam today). It governs the Leizhou Peninsula and Qinzhou area in northern Vietnam and Guangdong.

Lv Dai and Dai Liang are the secretariat of Guangzhou and Jiaozhou respectively, and Shi Xie's son is the prefect of Jiuzhen. Lv Dai led troops into Jiaozhou and the old town, and merged Guangzhou into Jiaozhou.

In 263, the year after the death of Shu Han (the first year of Wei Yuanxian), Lu Xing and others in Jiaozhou rebelled and tried to get the support of Cao Wei, but they were quickly suppressed. After the Western Jin Dynasty inherited Cao Wei, Yang Ji and others were sent to Jiaozhou through Yizhou and Nanzhong, and defeated Wu Jun. Xie Xue, the governor of Wu Dong, and Tao Sulu, the satrap of Cangwu, led the troops to defeat the Western Jin Dynasty and regain control of Jiaozhou.

In 264 (the seventh year of Emperor Yongan's reign), Soochow divided four counties (Nanhai, Cangwu, Yulin and Gaoliang) from Jiaozhou, and set up Guangzhou to govern Panyu, hence the name. During the period of Wu Dong, Guangdong Province now includes Shixing County and Hainan Island in Jingzhou, in addition to the four counties under the jurisdiction of Guangzhou. Since then, the name Jiaozhou or Jiaotoe has appeared several times. In 939, during the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period, Wu Quan, a local soldier, set out to defeat the weak southern Han army in China. In 968, Ding Buling, the leader of emerging forces, established "Daqu Yueguo". Two years later, he claimed to be the emperor and used his title to gain de facto independence.

In the Yuan Dynasty, the Mongolian army went south, met with fierce resistance and ended in failure.

During the Ming Dynasty, the monarch of the Chen Dynasty in Vietnam was usurped by his consort Hu, and the country fell into chaos. At the request of the adherents of the Chen Dynasty, the Ming Dynasty overthrew the Hu regime. From 1407 to 1428, the Ming army regained Vietnam. Later, Ming ruled directly here, set up counties, entrusted the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Communications (province), and adopted the policy of changing customs and promoting Confucianism, which caused Vietnam's resistance. Shortly after Cheng Zu's death, the Li Dynasty defeated the Ming army in Yue State in 1428 and regained its independence, but it still maintained a vassal relationship with the Central Plains regime.

After several splits, mergers and expansions, the Vietnamese regime annexed Champa and Lower Khmer, and obtained the Mekong Delta in south-central Vietnam except the former Jiaozhou.

/kloc-At the beginning of the 9th century, Nguyn Phuc Anh of Ruan Dynasty was canonized as the "King of Yue" by Emperor Jiaqing of Qing Dynasty.

Today's "Socialist Republic of Vietnam" was established after the colonial rule of France and the Vietnam War with the United States.