Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Tạ Phong Tần (born 15 September 1968 in Vĩnh Lợi District, Bạc Liêu Province [2] [3] [4]) is a Vietnamese dissident blogger. A former policewoman and a member of the Communist Party of Vietnam , she was arrested in September 2011 on anti-state propaganda charges.
14. I go looking for me (Tôi đi tìm tôi) 15. I met the Buddha in three sinking seven floats (Tôi gặp Phật trong ba chìm bảy nổi) 16. Because the Buddha loves me (Vì Phật thương con) 17. Innocent Novices (Chú tiểu hồn nhiên) 18. I follow Buddha to save humanity (Con theo Phật cứu đời) 19. Kathina offering (Dâng y ...
Tutelary Deities or deified ancestors or progenitors (nhân thần), originally either consecrated by villagers or installed by the Vietnamese or Chinese rulers. They include heroes, founding patriarchs, able men and founders of arts and crafts. This category can include impure spirits (dâm thần).
The three main avenues in the district, Lạc Long Quân, Âu Cơ, and An Dương Vương, were names of leaders of early Vietnamese civilization.The smaller streets in the district are named after renowned Vietnamese poets, artists and music composers, such as Xuân Diệu, Tô Ngọc Vân, Trịnh Công Sơn, Nguyễn Đình Thi and Đặng Thai Mai.
Taï Phong is a French progressive rock band formed by two Vietnamese brothers, Khanh Maï (guitar, voice) and Taï Sinh (bass, guitar, voice, keyboards), in 1975. [1] They were joined by Jean-Alain Gardet (keyboards), Stephan Caussarieu (drums, percussion), and Jean-Jacques Goldman (guitar, voice, violin).
Thích Quảng Độ was born Đặng Phúc Tuệ in Thanh Chau village [3] in Thái Bình Province in northern Vietnam, [4] and became a monk at age 14. During the Vietnamese famine of 1945, he walked for two days from Thanh Sam Temple, where he was training to his home village, where he carried his gravely-malnourished oldest brother from the home to the local temple and nursed him back to ...
Thánh Tông di thảo (chữ Hán: 聖宗遺草; lit. ' Thánh Tông's Posthumous Manuscript ') is a Vietnamese short story collection written in Literary Chinese, attributed to Lê Thánh Tông (1442–1497), emperor of the Lê dynasty who actively promoted Confucian learning and the Chinese bureaucratic system in his state, in addition to having authored several books in Literary Chinese.
As with other choral pieces the composer, Vivaldi, wrote many introduzioni (introductory motets) that were to be performed before the Gloria itself. Four introduzioni exist for these Glorias: Cur Sagittas (RV 637), Jubilate, o amoeni cori (RV 639) (the last movement of which is compositionally tied with the first movement of RV 588), Longe Mala, Umbrae, Terrores (RV 640), and Ostro Picta (RV 642).