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[5] [6] A tầm (尋) was an ancient unit of measurement used in China, Korea, Japan, and Vietnam, equivalent to an arm span. According to Vũ Trung Tùy Bút, the ba tầm hat is a combination of the styles of the dậu, mền giải, and viên cơ hats. The hat has been mentioned in literature since the 18th century, but its origin may be ...
Nón lá and nón ba tầm (nón quai thao) - traditional hats worn in the south and north of Vietnam. Khăn vấn – a type of turban worn by the Vietnamese people from Nguyễn dynasty to the present day. Áo tràng Phật tử – typically shortened to "áo tràng" it is a robe worn by Upāsaka and Upāsikā in Vietnamese Buddhist temples. [c]
nón rơm, a hat made of hard-pressed straw; nón cời, a type of hat with tassels at the edge of the hat; nón lá sen or nón liên diệp; nón thúng, a round conical hat similar to the basket's basket, from the idiom "nón thúng quai thao" nón chảo, with a cone that is round on the top like an upside-down pan [4] A man's nón ngựa ...
English terms for the hat include sedge hat, rice hat, paddy hat, bamboo hat, and—historically but now only offensively [1] [2] —coolie hat. [3]In Southeast Asia, it is known as do'un (ដួន) in Cambodia; caping or seraung in Indonesia; koup (ກຸບ) in Laos; terendak in Malaysia; ngop in Thailand; khamauk (ခမောက်) in Myanmar; salakót (ᜐᜎᜃᜓᜆ᜔), sarók ...
The following year, the Statistics Office created a new census category, "Nguoi Viet goc Hoa" (Vietnamese people of Chinese origin), whereby Vietnamese citizens of Chinese heritage were identified as such in all official documents. [154] No further major measures were implemented to integrate or assimilate the Chinese after 1964. [155]
The district is subdivided into 20 commune-level subdivisions, including the townships of: Hậu Nghĩa, Đức Hòa and Hiệp Hòa, and the rural communes of: Lộc Giang, An Ninh Đông, An Ninh Tây, Tân Mỹ, Hiệp Hòa, Tân Phú, Hoà Khánh Tây, Hoà Khánh Đông, Hoà Khánh Nam, Đức Lập Thượng, Đức Lập Hạ, Đức Hoà Thượng, Đức Hoà Đông, Đức Hoà Hạ ...
Hòa Hảo is a new religious movement [1] and it was named after the founder Huỳnh Phú Sổ's native village of Hoa Hao [1] (Hòa Hảo; [2] Vietnamese: [hwaː˨˩ haːw˧˩] ⓘ; chữ Hán: 和好; literally "peace and amicability"), [15] in what is now Thốt Nốt District of An Giang Province, Vietnam. [16] The name is also spelled as ...
Xoan singing or hát xoan (Vietnamese for 'spring singing', Chữ Nôm: 咭春) is a genre of Vietnamese folk music performed in spring during the first two months of the Tết Nguyên Đán in Phú Thọ Province. [1]