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  2. Culture of Vietnam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_Vietnam

    The culture of Vietnam (Vietnamese: Văn hoá Việt Nam, chữ Hán: 文化越南) are the customs and traditions of the Kinh people and the other ethnic groups of Vietnam. Vietnam is part of Southeast Asia and the Sinosphere due to the influence of Chinese culture on Vietnamese culture.

  3. Vietnamization (cultural assimilation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnamization_(cultural...

    Although the South Vietnamese and the Degars were both allies of the United States and opposed the growing threat from the communist North, the South Vietnamese, composed mainly of ethnic Vietnamese and Vietnamized minorities like Khmers, distrusted its Degar allies and had hardly promote Degar identity. Rather, the South Vietnamese government ...

  4. Vietnamese nationalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnamese_nationalism

    The historiography of Vietnam under Chinese rule has had substantial influence from French colonial scholarship and Vietnamese postcolonial national history writing. During the 19th century, the French promoted the view that Vietnam had little of its own culture and borrowed it almost entirely from China, which was mostly wrong as Vietnamese culture emerged initially Austroasiatic.

  5. History of Vietnam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Vietnam

    Vietnam's ethnic mosaic results from the peopling process in which various peoples came and settled the territory, leading to the modern state of Vietnam by many stages, often separated by thousands of years over a duration of tens of thousands of years. Vietnam's entire history, thus, is an embroidery of polyethnicity. [11]

  6. Vietnam under Chinese rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnam_under_Chinese_rule

    Context refers to the downplaying of similarities between Vietnam and China while emphasizing Vietnam's Southeast Asian identity in the postcolonial period. Cultural continuity refers to an intrinsic Vietnamese "cultural core" that has always existed in the Red River Plain since time immemorial.

  7. Women in Vietnam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Vietnam

    The French narrative in the late 19th century employed the oppressed Vietnamese women image to justify French control over Vietnam as a mean to emancipate Vietnamese women from Vietnamese patriarchal institutions that the French identified as "stemmed out from Chinese cultural domination", thus serving the boarder goal of modernizing Vietnam ...

  8. Timeline of Vietnamese history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Vietnamese_history

    This is a timeline of Vietnamese history, comprising important legal and territorial changes and political events in Vietnam and its predecessor states. To read about the background to these events, see History of Vietnam. This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources. Prehistory ...

  9. First Era of Northern Domination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Era_of_Northern...

    The argument for an intrinsic, intractable, and distinctly Southeast Asian Vietnamese identity proposes that there was an intrinsic Vietnamese "cultural core" that has always existed in the Red River Plain and that they resisted foreign aggressors in a national struggle. This characterizes Vietnamese history under Chinese rule as a "steadfast ...