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The name of Việt Tân is based on the fusion of "Việt Nam" and "Canh Tân", which means comprehensive reform. In 1981, Hoàng Cơ Minh met with Thai government officials and received their agreement to open offices along the border with Laos. From these operating bases, Vietnamese from the diaspora linked up with compatriots inside the ...
Names; Lê Tư Thành (黎思誠) Era name and dates; Quang Thuận (光順)(lit. Follower of Light): 1460–1469 Hồng Đức (洪德)(lit. Great Virtue): 1470–1497
Nguyễn Tấn Dũng (Vietnamese pronunciation: [ŋwiən˦ˀ˥ tən˧˦ zʊwŋ͡m˦ˀ˥]; born 17 November 1949) is a Vietnamese politician who served as the Prime Minister of Vietnam from 2006 to 2016.
The arrests included Pham Minh Hoang, a 55-year-old French-educated lecturer in applied mathematics at the Ho Chi Minh City Institute of Technology. [ 18 ] After the Australian consulate in Vietnam intervened in the case, Hong Vo was released from prison on October 21, 2010, and immediately expelled from the country without the possibility for ...
Phan Boi Chau (1999), Overturned Chariot: The Autobiography of Phan Bội Châu, trans. by Vĩnh Sính and Nicholas Wickenden, Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, ISBN 0-8248-1875-X. Chapuis, Oscar (2000), The Last Emperors of Vietnam: From Tu Duc to Bao Dai , Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, ISBN 0-313-31170-6 .
Huỳnh Thúc Kháng (chữ Hán: 黃 叔 抗; 1 October 1876 – 21 April 1947), courtesy name Giới Sanh, pen name Mính Viên (also written as Minh Viên), also known as Cụ Huỳnh (lit: 'Great-grandfather' Huỳnh), was a Vietnamese anti-colonial activist, statesman and journalist, most notably serving as Acting President of Vietnam and President of the Annamese House of Representatives.
Trần Cảnh (陳 煚) was born in 1218 in modern-day Nam Định province during the last years of the Lý. Trần Thủ Độ , his uncle, prepared the way for his marriage to Empress Lý Chiêu Hoàng , the last empress of the House of Lý, who later abdicated to make him the founder of the Trần dynasty in 1226.
Tolerance continued until the death of the emperor and the new emperor, Minh Mang, succeeding to the throne in 1820. Converts began to be harassed by local governments without official edicts in the late 1820s. In 1831, the emperor passed new laws on regulations for religious groupings in Viet Nam, and Catholicism was then officially prohibited.