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Tao Dan Park (Vietnamese: Công viên Tao Đàn) is an urban park in District 1, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam behind the Independence Palace. [1] [2] It is of the largest parks in the city, covering 10 hectares. [3] Part of the park will be used for the Ho Chi Minh City Metro Line 2's Tao Dan Station. [4] [5]
Halberd (dao dài, "long knife") Rope dart/chain whip (nhuyễn tiên, different from Chinese rope dart) Khăn rằn - The khăn rằn is a southern scarf that originated from the Khmer krama scarf. [5] The khan ran can be used to lock the enemy's arm, lock the enemy's wrist, lock the enemy's leg, pull the enemy's leg and to attack the enemy's ...
Thành đồng tổ quốc (1960), Bronze castle (poème symphonique), N°1. Điện Biên Phủ, symphonie with choral (2004), Reminiscence II or 5th symphony, 3 mouvements, N°4
Xanh SM electric motorcycle on the streets of Hanoi. GSM was founded by Phạm Nhật Vượng with a charter capital of 3,000 billion VND, of which Phạm Nhật Vượng holds 95% of the shares. [2]
A group of 28 poets were formally recognized by the court (the Tao Dan). Lê Thánh Tông himself was a poet and some of his poems have survived. He wrote the following at the start of his campaign against the Champa: One hundred thousand officers and men, Start out on a distant journey. Falling on the sails, the rain . Softens the sounds of ...
Hoang, Chung Van (2017), New Religions and State's Response to Religious Diversification in Contemporary Vietnam: Tensions from the Reinvention of the Sacred, Springer, ISBN 9783319584997; Mai, Cuong T. (2021). "The Karma of Love: Buddhist Karmic Discourses in Confucian and Daoist Voices in Vietnamese Tales of the Marvelous and Uncanny".
Đạo is a Sino-Vietnamese word for "religion," similar to the Chinese term dao meaning "path," while Mẫu means "mother" and is loaned from Middle Chinese /məuX/. While scholars like Ngô Đức Thịnh propose that it represents a systematic worship of mother goddesses, Đạo Mẫu draws together fairly disparate beliefs and practices.
A noted cải lương singer, Ngọc Huyền Popular artist Mộng Tuyền performs the leading role in a Cải lương Presentation Tuồng cải lương (Vietnamese: [tûəŋ ka᷉ːj lɨəŋ], Hán-Nôm: 從改良) often referred to as Cải lương (Chữ Hán: 改良), roughly "reformed theater") is a form of modern folk opera in Vietnam.