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Vua in Ancient Vietnamese (10th–15th centuries) is attested in the 14th-century Buddhist literature Việt Điện U Linh Tập as bùgài (布蓋) in Chinese or vua cái (great sovereign in Vietnamese), [3] in 15th-century Buddhist scripture Phật thuyết đại báo phụ mẫu ân trọng kinh as sībù (司布); in Middle Vietnamese ...
On 1 November 1963, Conein donned his military uniform and stuffed three million Vietnamese piastres into a bag to be given to General Minh. Conein then called the CIA station and gave a signal indicating that the planned coup against Diệm was about to start. [164] Minh and his co-conspirators swiftly overthrew the government.
During Phan Bội Châu's career as a teacher, he strongly emphasised Phan's deeds to his students. [51] In 1941, after returning to Vietnam after decades in exile, the Marxist revolutionary Hồ Chí Minh , then using the name Nguyễn Ái Quốc ( Nguyễn the Patriot ), invoked the memory of Phan in appealing to the public for support for ...
Trần Nhân Tông was born on 11 November 1258 as Trần Khâm, [3] the first son of Emperor Trần Thánh Tông, who had ceded the throne by Trần Thái Tông for only eight months, and Empress Thiên Cảm Trần Thị Thiều. It was said that the newborn Trần Khâm was so becoming in appearance that his grandfather Thái Tông and ...
Việt Điện U Linh Tập (chữ Hán: 粵甸幽靈集 or 越甸幽靈集 lit. ' Collection of Stories on the Shady and Spiritual World of the Viet Realm ' ) is a collection of Vietnamese history written in chữ Nho compiled by Lý Tế Xuyên in 1329 .
Thích Trí Quang (chữ Hán: 釋智光) (21 December 1923 – 8 November 2019) was a Vietnamese Mahayana Buddhist monk best known for his role in leading South Vietnam's Buddhist population during the Buddhist crisis in 1963, and in later Buddhist protests against subsequent South Vietnamese military regimes until the Buddhist Uprising of 1966 was crushed.
Đinh Bộ Lĩnh was born in 924 in Hoa Lư (south of the Red River Delta, in what is today Ninh Bình Province).Growing up in a local village during the disintegration of the Chinese Tang dynasty that had dominated Vietnam for centuries, Đinh Bộ Lĩnh became a local military leader at a very young age.
Hoàng Cao Khải. Hoàng Cao Khải (Vietnamese: [hwâːŋ kaːw xa᷉ːj], 黃 高 啟; 1850, in Đức Thọ District – 1933) was a viceroy of Tonkin (locally known as Bắc Kỳ), the northernmost of the three parts of Vietnam under French colonial rule.