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Kien Trung Palace (Vietnamese: Điện Kiến Trung; chữ Hán:建中殿) is a palace within the Imperial City of Huế, the former imperial capital of Vietnam. It was the residence of the last two emperors of the Nguyễn dynasty. [1] It was destroyed by the Viet Minh in 1947 during the Indochina Wars. Reconstruction started in 2019 and was ...
Kien Trung Palace is a palace of the Nguyen Dynasty in the Forbidden City (Hue) built by Emperor Khai Dinh in 1921-1923 at the same time as his tomb was built to serve as the emperor's living space in the royal palace. It was later also the place where his son - Emperor Bao Dai and the royal family lived and worked.
The complex consists of Hoàng thành (the Imperial City), Kinh thành (the Citadel), and the Tử Cấm Thành (Purple Forbidden City), as well as associated monuments outside of the city, including the tombs of the emperors Gia Long, Minh Mạng, Thiệu Trị, Tự Đức, Dục Đức, Đồng Khánh, and Khải Định, and a string of ...
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Kien Trung Palace; N. Meridian Gate (Huế) T. Thế Miếu This page was last edited on 1 September 2024, at 11:19 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
Kien Trung Palace; P. Presidential Palace, Hanoi; S. Saigon Governor's Palace; T. The Complex of Huế Monuments This page was last edited on 30 March 2013, at ...
Huế, Kiến Trung Palace, 25 August 1945" Original Vietnamese: "Vì hạnh phúc của dân tộc Việt Nam, Vì nền độc lập của Việt Nam, Để đạt hai mục đích ấy, Trẫm tuyên bố sẵn sàng hy sinh tất cả, và ước mong rằng sự hy sinh của Trẫm đem lại lợi ích cho Tổ quốc.
Khải Định working at Kien Trung Palace. Because of this, Khải Định was very unpopular with the Vietnamese people. The nationalist leader Phan Châu Trinh accused him of selling out his country to the French and living in imperial luxury while the people were exploited by France.