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Vietnam Travel News - Latest Travel News: Pocket guide to Hanoi's Old Quarter - Thursday, 04 October 2012 09:47
Vietnam Travel News - Latest Travel News: Vietnam Classic Tour - Thursday, 23 August 2012 10:19
Vietnam Travel News - Latest Travel News: Dining like the local what you need to know in Vietnam - Thursday, 26 July 2012 10:30
Vietnam Travel News - Latest Travel News: Why People call Hanoi as Paris in Asia? - Friday, 22 June 2012 06:56
Vietnam Travel News - Latest Travel News: What Breakfast should you try in Vietnam? - Monday, 04 June 2012 02:38
Vietnam Travel News - Latest Travel News: New destination in Vietnam for adventure tourists - Wednesday, 02 May 2012 02:07
Vietnam Tours - Vietnam Tours: Heritages Exploration - Monday, 06 February 2012 03:22
Vietnam Tours - Vietnam Tours: Ultimate Vietnam - Friday, 03 February 2012 10:02
Vietnam Tours - Vietnam Tours: Inside Vietnam - Friday, 03 February 2012 08:59
Vietnam Tours - Vietnam Tours: The Mystical Vietnam - Friday, 03 February 2012 07:43
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Travel Agent in Vietnam

Travel Agent in Vietnam Travel Agent in Vietnam

Travel Agent in Vietnam

Travel Agent in Vietnam Travel Agent in Vietnam

Travel Agent in Vietnam

Travel Agent in Vietnam Travel Agent in Vietnam

Travel Agent in Vietnam

Travel Agent in Vietnam Travel Agent in Vietnam

Vietnam History

The Vietnamese people represent a fusion of races, languages, and cultures, the elements of which are still being sorted out by ethnologists, linguists, and archaeologists. As was true for most areas of Southeast Asia, the Indochina Peninsula was a crossroads for many migrations of peoples, including speakers of Austronesian, Mon-Khmer, and Tai languages. The Vietnamese language provides some clues to the cultural mixture of the Vietnamese people. Although a separate and distinct language, Vietnamese borrows much of its basic vocabulary from Mon-Khmer, tonality from the Tai languages, and some grammatical features from both Mon-Khmer and Tai. Vietnamese also exhibits some influence from Austronesian languages, as well as large infusions of Chinese literary, political, and philosophical terminology of a later period.
The area now known as Vietnam has been inhabited since Paleolithic times, with some archaeological sites in Thanh Hoa Province reportedly dating back several thousand years. Archaeologists link the beginnings of Vietnamese civilization to the late Neolithic, early Bronze Age, Phung-nguyen culture, which was centered in Vinh Phu Province of contemporary Vietnam from about 2000 to 1400 B.C.. By about 1200 B.C., the development of wet-rice cultivation and bronze casting in the Ma River and Red River plains led to the development of the Dong Son culture, notable for its elaborate bronze drums. The bronze weapons, tools, and drums of Dong Sonian sites show a Southeast Asian influence that indicates an indigenous origin for the bronze-casting technology. Many small, ancient copper mine sites have been found in northern Vietnam. Some of the similarities between the Dong Sonian sites and other Southeast Asian sites include the presence of boat-shaped coffins and burial jars, stilt dwellings, and evidence of the customs of betel-nut-chewing and teeth-blackening.
According to the earliest Vietnamese traditions, the founder of the Vietnamese nation was Hung Vuong, the first ruler of the semilegendary Hung dynasty (2879-258 B.C., mythological dates) of the kingdom of Van Lang. Hung Vuong, in Vietnamese mythology, was the oldest son of Lac Long Quan (Lac Dragon Lord), who came to the Red River Delta from his home in the sea, and Au Co, a Chinese immortal. Lac Long Quan, a Vietnamese cultural hero, is credited with teaching the people how to cultivate rice. The Hung dynasty, which according to tradition ruled Van Lang for eighteen generations, is associated by Vietnamese scholars with Dong Sonian culture. An important aspect of this culture by the sixth century B.C. was the tidal irrigation of rice fields through an elaborate system of canals and dikes. The fields were called Lac fields, and Lac, mentioned in Chinese annals, is the earliest recorded name for the Vietnamese people.
The Hung kings ruled Van Lang in feudal fashion with the aid of the Lac lords, who controlled the communal settlements around each irrigated area, organized construction and maintenance of the dikes, and regulated the supply of water. Besides cultivating rice, the people of Van Lang grew other grains and beans and raised stock, mainly buffaloes, chickens, and pigs. Potterymaking and bamboo-working were highly developed crafts, as were basketry, leather-working, and the weaving of hemp, jute, and silk. Both transport and communication were provided by dugout canoes, which plied the network of rivers and canals.
The last Hung king was overthrown in the third century B.C. by An Duong Vuong, the ruler of the neighboring upland kingdom of Thuc. An Duong Vuong united Van Lang with Thuc to form Au Lac, building his capital and citadel at Co Loa, thirty-five kilometers north of present-day Hanoi. An Duong's kingdom was short-lived, however, being conquered in 208 B.C. by the army of the Chinese Qin dynasty (221-207 B.C.) military commander Trieu Da (Zhao Tuo in Chinese). Reluctant to accept the rule of the Qin dynasty's successor, the new Han dynasty (206 B.C.-A.D. 220), Trieu Da combined the territories under his control in southern China and northern Vietnam and established the kingdom of Nam Viet (Nan Yue in Chinese), meaning Southern Viet. Viet (Yue) was the term applied by the Chinese to the various peoples on the southern fringes of the Han empire, including the people of the Red River Delta. Trieu Da divided his kingdom of Nam Viet into nine military districts; the southern three (Giao Chi, Cuu Chan, and Nhat Nam) included the northern part of present-day Vietnam. The Lac lords continued to rule in the Red River Delta, but as vassals of Nam Viet.

Vietnam History in Brief
The Final Campaign
Peace Negotiations
The Tet Offensive
Escalation of the War
The Fall of Ngo Dinh Diem
Second Indochina War
The Aftermath of Geneva
Dien Bien Phu
First Indochina War
The General Uprising and Independence
Establishment of the Viet Minh
World War II and Japanese Occupation
Ho Chi Minh and the Communist Movement
Phan Boi Chau and the Rise of Nationalism
Colonial Administration
Under French Rule
The Nguyen Dynasty and Expanding French Influence
The Tay Son Rebellion
Partition and the Advent of the Europeans
The Tran Dynasty and the Defeat of the Mongols
The Ly Dynasty and the Flowering of Buddhism
Nine Centuries of Independence
Political Resistance to the Chinese
Chinese Cultural Impact
The Chinese Millennium
Vietnam Early History

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Welcome Dinner Menu

1. Crab & sweet corn soup
2. Hanoi spring rolls
3. Fives spices salad with prawn, pork, pickle, red cabbage & lotus roots
4. Grilled fish tikka in pandanus leaves with tartar & sweet chili sauce
5. Grilled chicken with lemon leaves
6. Sauteed beef and capsicum with sweet & sour sauce
7. Sauteed vegetables
8. Steamed rice
9. Fresh fruit platter
10. Tea or Coffee