Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The provinces of Vietnam are subdivided into second-level administrative units, namely districts (Vietnamese: huyện), provincial cities (thành phố trực thuộc tỉnh), and district-level towns (thị xã).
Quảng Nam–Đà Nẵng/Quảng Đà – administrative grouping of Quảng Nam provinces and Đà Nẵng city, between 1975 and 1996. Quảng Tín – existed from 1962 until the Vietnamese reunification of 1976. Sa Đéc – existed from 1900 until the Vietnamese reunification of 1976.
In spiritu et veritate / Trong tinh thần và chân lí (In spirit and truth) Dăm Săn: Long chair, communal house, coffea: Province as of 22 November 1904. Đắk Nông: Audacibus annue coeptis (Look with favor upon a bold beginning) N'trang Lơng: Nelumbo lutea, communal house: Province as of 1 January 2004. Lâm Đồng: Dat aliis ...
In 1175, the emperor was seriously ill and decided to entrust the regentship of his son Lý Long Trát to Tô Hiến Thành. The regent was appointed to the position of chancellor of the Lý dynasty (Thái phó bình chương quân quốc trọng sự) [15] and granted the title Prince (Vương) — an unprecedented act of a Lý emperor for a title that was reserved exclusively for members of ...
Administration map of Tam Kỳ. The town was established in 1906 under the Nguyễn dynasty as an administrative and tax post. [2] During the Republic of Vietnam, the city was the main base of the US military in Quảng Nam Province (what was then Quảng Tín Province) for the war in Vietnam.
Thanh Hóa 40 Đồi Quyết Thắng, TP Thanh Hóa Nghệ An 43 Đài PTTH Nghệ An Hà Tĩnh 9 Núi Thiên Tương Thừa Thiên Huế 41 Trung tâm THVN tại Thừa Thiên Huế Đà Nẵng 47 Trạm phát sóng Sơn Trà Bình Định 10 Núi Vũng Chua, Bình Định Phú Yên 41 Núi Chóp Chài, TP Tuy Hòa [37] Đắk Nông 12
Nguyễn Thị Hinh was born in Nghi Tàm ward, Vĩnh Thuận district, near Hồ Tây (now Quảng An ward, Tây Hồ district), Hanoi. [3] Her father, Nguyễn Lý (1755-1837), was the valedictorian in 1783, during the reign of Emperor Lê Hiển Tông.
Tản Viên Sơn Thánh (Chữ Hán: 傘圓山聖, 304 BCE - ?), or Sơn Tinh (山精) is one of The Four Immortals in traditional Vietnamese mythology. He is the god of Ba Vì mountain range [ 2 ] and figures also in the romance of Sơn Tinh - Thủy Tinh ("the God of the Mountain and the God of the Water").