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Lan Xang ([lâːn sâːŋ]) or Lancang was a Lao kingdom that held the area of present-day Laos from 1353 to 1707. [1] [2] For three and a half centuries, Lan Xang was one of the largest kingdoms in Southeast Asia. The kingdom is the basis for Laos's national historic and cultural identity. [3] [4]
In July 1480, the Yunnan authorities, upon learning that Lan Xang was attacked by the Viet, sent spies to reconnoiter the latter. The spies, who returned via Sipsong Panna by September 1480, reported that Đại Việt took more than twenty stockades from Lan Xang and killed over 20,000 people, and attempted to invade Lan Na.
Đại La was known as the city that the Tang general Gao Pian had built in the 860s after the ravages of the Nanzhao War. In 1010, Lý Công Uẩn published the edict explaining why he move his capital to Dai La. Lý Công Uẩn chose the site because it had been an earlier capital in the rich Red River Delta. He saw Đại La as a place ...
Bảo Hân, Thiên Kim, Trúc Lam, Trúc Linh, Châu Ngọc, Như Loan 2001 48 Paris By Night 62 Tuổi Đá Buồn (Trịnh Công Sơn) Như Quỳnh, Thiên Kim, Trúc Lam, Trúc Linh, Châu Ngọc, Bảo Hân, Như Loan, Loan Châu, Tracy Phạm 2001 49 Paris By Night 62 Sky Tommy Ngô 2001 50 Paris By Night 63 Dance For Me (Lời: Tommy Ngô)
The Order was founded on 1 May 1909 by King Sisavang Vong. [1]The name of the order reflected an old name of Laos, Lan Xang Hom Khao which means "million elephants and white umbrella".
Hải Dương bánh đậu xanh Beijing lüdou gao. Bánh đậu xanh (chữ Nôm: 餅豆靑, mung bean pastry) is a type of bánh in Vietnamese and Chinese cuisine. [1] It is a specialty of Hải Dương province.
Da Lat is also well known for a series of three Mansions of the Vietnamese Last Emperor. The First Mansion was built in 1940 by the French millionaire Robert Clément Bourgery and was bought by Emperor Bao Dai in 1949. It was used as a summer mansion for President Ngo Dinh Diem and following presidents of the Republic of Vietnam until 1975. The ...
(Thăng Long/ Đông Kinh) (1010–1398, 1428–1789) Tây Đô (1398–1407) Phú Xuân (1789–1804) Official languages: Vietnamese Văn ngôn (official script since 1174) [1] Common languages: Viet–Muong (Northern Vietic) languages Kra–Dai languages Other Southeast Asian Languages: Religion