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Hòa Xuân Stadium (Vietnamese: Sân Vận Động Hòa Xuân) is a football-specific stadium in Da Nang, Vietnam. It is located in Cam Le District, just outside of the main city centre. The stadium has been the home of football team SHB Da Nang since 2016. The stadium has a capacity of 20,500. [1]
Huỳnh Tấn Phát (Vietnamese pronunciation: [hwïŋ̟˨˩ tən˧˦ faːt̚˧˦]; 15 February 1913 – 30 September 1989) [1] was a Vietnamese architect, politician and revolutionary. He was the Prime Minister and de facto leader of the Provisional Revolutionary Government of South Vietnam during the Vietnam War .
At this time, Đính was pursuing a policy of reconciliation Đà Nẵng and negotiation with the dissident I Corps units, and making contact with the Struggle Movement. [78] Kỳ decided to attack and sent his forces to overrun Đính's headquarters on May 15, forcing the latter to abandon his post and flee to the headquarters of U.S. General ...
Long became the Chairman of Hòa Phát group in 1996. In March 2019, Long was listed in the real-time list of billionaires by Forbes magazine – with a fortune of 1 billion USD, making him the 1756th richest man in the world at that time.
The official name of the South Vietnamese state was the "Republic of Vietnam" (Vietnamese: Việt Nam Cộng hòa; French: République du Viêt Nam). The North was known as the " Democratic Republic of Vietnam ".
Đà Nẵng City — Kinh: Male [26] 27 Trần Sâm: New: Not: 1918 1939 Quảng Trị province: Military science: Kinh: Male [27] 28 Phan Ngọc Sến: New: Not: 1919 1946 Bạc Liêu provinc€ — Kinh: Male [28] 29 Lê Văn Hiền: New: Reelected: Kinh: Male 30 Nguyễn Thị Thập: Old: Not: 1908 1931 Mỹ Tho province — Kinh: Female ...
Nguyễn Khánh ([ŋwiəŋ˨˩˦ kʰan˦˥]; 8 November 1927 – 11 January 2013) was a South Vietnamese military dictator and Army of the Republic of Vietnam general who served in various capacities as head of state and prime minister of South Vietnam while at the head of a military junta from January 1964 until February 1965.
The name Phan Rang or in modern Cham Pan(da)rang is an indigenous Chamized form of the original Sanskrit Pāṇḍuraṅga (another epithet for the Hindu god Vithoba). [3] It first appeared on Cham inscriptions around the tenth century as Paṅrauṅ or Panrāṅ, [4] and after that, it has been Vietnamese transliterated into Phan Rang. [5]