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The postal code system of Vietnam has officially been changed from 6 digits to 5 digits. Each country has its own separate postal code or zip code system. The postal code of Vietnam is composed of 5 digits, with the following meanings: [2] [3] The first digit determines the area code.
The provinces of Vietnam are subdivided into second-level administrative units, namely districts (Vietnamese: huyện), provincial cities (thành phố trực thuộc tỉnh), and district-level towns (thị xã).
This is a list of district-level subdivisions (Vietnamese: đơn vị hành chính cấp huyện) of Vietnam. This level includes: district-level cities ( thành phố thuộc Thành phố trực thuộc trung ương , thành phố thuộc Tỉnh ), towns ( thị xã ), rural districts ( huyện ) and urban districts ( quận ).
Postal code of a given location can be found on the side of Thai postal box there. In the picture, this is 82220. Postal codes in Thailand are five digit numbers. The first two digits of the postal code denote the province or special administrative area (e.g., 43120 Phon Phisai, Nong Khai), while the last 3 digits represent the post office within the province. [1]
Đại Từ is a rural district of Thái Nguyên province in the Northeast region of Vietnam. As of 2003 the district had a population of 163,637 . [ 1 ] The district covers an area of 578 km².
Before 1975, the area of the ward now was belong to wards of Bến Nghé, 1st District (Quận Nhứt) and Cầu Ông Lãnh, 2nd District (Quận Nhì) of the City of Saigon, with the boundary was the Công Lý Street (now is Nam Kỳ Khởi Nghĩa Street).
According to An Nam chí lược, An Nam chí nguyên and Đại Việt sử ký toàn thư, [1] from the Tang to the Revival Lê Dynasty, the area of Kiến Xương was originally the Northern part of Chân Định rural district (真定縣, Chân Định huyện), [note 2] which was separated from the Southern part by the downstream of the Red River.
Li Tana, Towards an environmental history of the eastern Red River Delta, Vietnam, c.900–1400, Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 2014. Samuel Baron, Christoforo Borri, Olga Dror, Keith W. Taylor (2018). Views of Seventeenth-Century Vietnam : Christoforo Borri on Cochinchina and Samuel Baron on Tonkin. Cornell University Press.