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  2. Phan Khôi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phan_Khôi

    In 1912, his grandmother died, Phan Khôi came home for the funeral and stayed at his village, opened his own school and started teaching. 1913, Phan Khôi married the daughter of Lương Thúc Ký (1873–1947). Lương Thúc Ký was a teacher at Dục Anh school at Phan Thiêt. Dục Anh school was founded by Mr. Nguyễn Trọng Lợi, who ...

  3. Phú Xuân - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phú_Xuân

    Phú Xuân (富春) was the historic capital of the Nguyễn lords, the Tây Sơn dynasty, and later became the Nguyễn dynasty's capital (renamed Huế). [ 1 ] History

  4. Hồ Xuân Hương - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hồ_Xuân_Hương

    Hồ Xuân Hương (胡春香; 1772–1822) was a Vietnamese poet born at the end of the Lê dynasty. She grew up in an era of political and social turmoil – the time of the Tây Sơn rebellion and a three-decade civil war that led to Nguyễn Ánh seizing power as Emperor Gia Long and starting the Nguyễn dynasty .

  5. Đinh Bộ Lĩnh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Đinh_Bộ_Lĩnh

    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.

  6. Xuân Diệu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xuân_Diệu

    Ngô Xuân Diệu (Vietnamese: [swən˧˧ ziəw˧˨ʔ]; February 2, 1916 – December 18, 1985) was a Vietnamese poet, journalist, short-story writer, and literary critic, best known as one of the prominent figures of the twentieth-century Thơ mới (New Poetry) Movement.

  7. Mai Hữu Xuân - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mai_Hữu_Xuân

    Xuân served under Prime Minister Nguyễn Văn Tâm during the French-backed State of Vietnam era in the 1950s in military security. [1] When Diệm became Prime Minister of the State of Vietnam, Xuân fought for him as an officer in the Vietnamese National Army (VNA) in the Battle for Saigon in May 1955, against the Bình Xuyên organised crime syndicate that sought to take over the capital. [2]

  8. Phan Trần - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phan_Trần

    Phan Trần (Vietnamese: Phan Trần truyện, chữ Hán: 潘陳傳) is an anonymous Vietnamese language epic poem in lục bát verse originally written in chữ Nôm. [1] It was first transcribed into the Latin-based modern Vietnamese alphabet in 1889.

  9. Phan Thanh Giản - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phan_Thanh_Giản

    Phan Thanh Giản was one of the foremost mandarins of the Nguyễn court. He played a key role in negotiating the Treaty of Saigon with the French in 1862. [2] [3] The negotiations led to the formal cession of Vietnamese territory that the French Expeditionary Corps had occupied in 1861 (the first parts of the future colony of Cochinchina): the provinces of Già Dinh, Mỹ Tho, Biên Hòa ...