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Hanoi

Hanoi[a] (Vietnamese: Hà Nội [haː˨˩ noj˧˨ʔ] ) is the capital and second-most populous city of Vietnam. It covers an area of 3,359.82 km2 (1,297.2 sq mi).[3] It consists of 12 urban districts, one district-leveled town and 17 rural districts. It is located within the Red River Delta of Northern Vietnam.

Hanoi
Hà Nội
City of Hanoi
Thành phố Hà Nội
Nicknames: 
City of Soaring Dragon
(Thành phố rồng bay)[1]
The Capital of a Millennium of Culture/Literature
(Thủ đô nghìn năm văn hiến)[2]
Motto: 
Dis lecta fortitudine prospera (historical)
Hanoi
Location within Vietnam
Hanoi
Location within Southeast Asia
Hanoi
Location within Asia
Coordinates: 21°01′42″N 105°51′15″E / 21.02833°N 105.85417°E / 21.02833; 105.85417
Country Vietnam
RegionRed River Delta
Founded257 BC
Founded byAn Dương Vương
SeatHoàn Kiếm
Subdivision12 urban districts, 17 rural districts, one district-level town
Government
 • TypeMunicipality
 • BodyHanoi People's Council [vi]
 • Secretary of the Party CommitteeĐinh Tiến Dũng
 • Chairman of People's CouncilNguyễn Ngọc Tuấn
 • Chairman of People's CommitteeTrần Sỹ Thanh
Area
 • Capital city and municipality3,359.82 km2 (1,297.23 sq mi)
 • Urban319.56 km2 (123.38 sq mi)
 • Metro24,314.7 km2 (9,388.0 sq mi)
Highest elevation1,296 m (4,252 ft)
Population
 (2022)[8]
 • Capital city and municipality8,435,700
 • Rank2nd
 • Density2,500/km2 (6,500/sq mi)
 • Urban4,138,500
 • Urban density13,000/km2 (34,000/sq mi)
 • Rural4,297,200
 • Metro20,000,000
 • Metro density820/km2 (2,100/sq mi)
DemonymHanoian
Ethnic groups
 • Vietnamese[12]98.66%
 • Mường0.77%
 • Tày0.24%
 • Thái0.09%
 • Nùng0.08%
 • Others0.16%
Time zoneUTC+07:00 (ICT)
Postal code
10000–14000
Area codes24
ISO 3166 codeVN-HN
License plate29 – 33, 40
GRP (Nominal)2019[13]
– TotalUS$42.04 billion[14]
– Per capitaUS$5,196[14]
– Growth 7.62%
HDI (2020)0.799 (1st)[15]
ClimateCwa
International airportsNội Bài International Airport
Largest district by areaBa Vì District (421.80 km2)[16]
Largest district by populationHoàng Mai District (540,732)[17]
Websitehanoi.gov.vn
Official nameCentral Sector of the Imperial Citadel of Thăng Long – Hanoi
CriteriaCultural: (ii), (iii), (vi)
Reference1328
Inscription2010 (34th Session)
Area18.395 ha (45.46 acres)
Buffer zone108 ha (270 acres)

Hanoi's history goes back to the third century BCE, when a portion of the modern-day city served as the capital of the historic Vietnamese nation of Âu Lạc. Following the collapse of Âu Lạc, the city was part of Han China. In 1010, Vietnamese emperor Lý Thái Tổ established the capital of the imperial Vietnamese nation Đại Việt in modern-day central Hanoi, naming the city Thăng Long (literally 'Ascending Dragon'). Thăng Long remained Đại Việt's political centre until 1802, when the Nguyễn dynasty, the last imperial Vietnamese dynasty, moved the capital to Huế. The city was renamed Hanoi in 1831, and served as the capital of French Indochina from 1902 to 1945. On 6 January 1946, the National Assembly of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam designated Hanoi as the capital of the newly independent country, which would last during the First Indochina War (1946–1954) and the Vietnam War (1955–1975). Hanoi has been the capital of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam since 1976.

A major tourist destination in Vietnam, Hanoi offers well-preserved French colonial architecture, religious sites dedicated to Buddhism, Catholicism, Confucianism and Taoism, several historical landmarks of Vietnamese imperial periods, and a large number of museums. The Central Sector of the Imperial Citadel of Thăng Long in Ba Dinh District was recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2010.

Hanoi has a high Human Development Index of 0.799, ranking first amongst all the municipalities and provinces of Vietnam.[18] The city hosts various venerable educational institutions and cultural venues of significance, including the Vietnam National University, the Mỹ Đình National Stadium, and the Vietnam National Museum of Fine Arts. Hanoi was the only Asia-Pacific locality to be granted the "City for Peace" title by the UNESCO on 16 July 1999, recognizing its contributions to the struggle for peace, its efforts to promote equality in the community, protect the environment, promote culture and education, and care for younger generations.[19] President of the United States, Bill Clinton, made an historic visit to Vietnam in November 2000. He was the first U.S. leader ever to officially visit Hanoi.[20] Hanoi joined UNESCO's Network of Creative Cities as a Design City on 31 October 2019, on the occasion of World Cities' Day.[21] The city has also hosted numerous political and international events, including APEC Vietnam 2006,[22] 132nd Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU-132),[23] 2019 North Korea–United States Hanoi Summit,[24] as well as 2009 Asian Indoor Games,[25] and the Southeast Asian Games in 2003 and 2021.

Names Edit

Hanoi has had various names throughout history.

  • It was known first as Long Biên (龍邊, "dragon edge"), then Tống Bình (宋平, "Song peace") and Long Đỗ (龍肚, "dragon belly"). Long Biên later gave its name to the famed Long Biên Bridge, built during French colonial times, and more recently to a new district to the east of the Red River. Several older names of Hanoi feature long (, "dragon"), linked to the curved formation of the Red River around the city, which was symbolized as a dragon.[26][27][28]
  • In 866, it was turned into a citadel and named Đại La (大羅, "big net"). This gave it the nickname La Thành (羅城, "net citadel"). Both Đại La and La Thành are names of major streets in modern Hanoi.
  • When Lý Thái Tổ established the capital in the area in 1010, it was named Thăng Long (昇龍, "rising dragon").[29][30] Thăng Long later became the name of a major bridge on the highway linking the city center to Nội Bài Airport, and the Thăng Long Boulevard expressway in the southwest of the city center. In modern time, the city is usually referred to as Thăng Long – Hà Nội, when its long history is discussed.
  • During the Hồ dynasty, it was called Đông Đô (東都, "eastern metropolis").[27][31]
  • During the Ming occupation, it was called Đông Quan (東關, "eastern gate").[27][28][31]
  • During the Lê dynasty, Hanoi was known as Đông Kinh (東京, "eastern capital").[32] This gave the name to Tonkin and Gulf of Tonkin. A square adjacent to the Hoàn Kiếm lake was named Đông Kinh Nghĩa Thục after the reformist Tonkin Free School under French colonization.[27][31]
  • After the end of the Tây Sơn had expanded further south, the city was named Bắc Thành (北城, "northern citadel").[27][28][31]
  • Minh Mạng renamed the city Hà Nội (河內, "inside the rivers") in 1831. This has remained its official name until modern times.[27][28][31]
  • Several unofficial names of Hanoi include: Kẻ Chợ (marketplace), Tràng An (long peace), Phượng Thành/Phụng Thành (phoenix city), Long Thành (short for Kinh thành Thăng Long, "citadel of Thăng Long"), Kinh kỳ (capital city), Hà Thành (short for Thành phố Hà Nội, "city of Hanoi"), Hoàng Diệu, and Thủ Đô (capital).[27][28][31]

History Edit

Pre-Thăng Long period Edit

Many vestiges of human habitation from the late Palaeolithic and early Mesolithic ages can be found in Hanoi. Between 1971 and 1972, archaeologists in Ba Vì and Đông Anh discovered pebbles with traces of carving and processing by human hands that are relics of Sơn Vi Culture, dating from 10,000 to 20,000 years ago.[33][34] In 1998–1999, the Museum of Vietnamese History (now National Museum of Vietnamese History) carried out the archaeological studies in the north of Dong Mo Lake (Son Tay, Hanoi), finding various relics and objects belonging to Sơn Vi Culture – in the Paleolithic Age, 20,000 years ago.[35] During the mid-Holocene transgression, the sea level rose and immersed low-lying areas; geological data clearly show the coastline was inundated and was located near present-day Hanoi, as is apparent from the absence of Neolithic sites across most of the Bac Bo region.[36] Consequently, from about 10,000 to approximately 4,000 years ago, Hanoi in general was completely absent.[33] It is believed that the region has been continuously inhabited for the last 4,000 years.[37][38]

Kingdom of Âu Lạc and Nanyue Edit

In around third century BCE, An Dương Vương established the capital of Âu Lạc north of present-day Hanoi, where a fortified citadel is constructed, known to history as Cổ Loa,[39] the first political center of the Vietnamese civilization pre-Sinitic era,[40] with an outer embankment covering 600 hectares. In 179 BC, the Âu Lạc Kingdom was annexed by Nanyue, which ushered in more than a thousand years of Chinese domination. Zhao Tuo subsequently incorporated the regions into his Nanyue domain, but left the indigenous chiefs in control of the population.[41][42][43] For the first time, the region formed part of a polity headed by a Chinese ruler.[44]

Hanoi under Chinese rule Edit

In 111 BC, the Han dynasty conquered Nanyue and ruled it for the next several hundred years.[45][46] Han dynasty organized Nanyue into seven commanderies of the south (Lingnan) and now included three in Vietnam alone: Giao Chỉ and Cửu Chân, and a newly established Nhật Nam.[47][48]

In March[49] of 40 AD, Trưng Trắc and Trưng Nhị, daughters of a wealthy aristocratic family of Lac ethnicity[50] in Mê Linh district (Hanoi), led the locals to rise up in rebellion against the Han.[49][51][52] It began at the Red River Delta, but quickly spread both south and north from Jiaozhi, stirring up all three Lạc Việt regions and most of Lingnan,[52][50] gaining the support of about 65 towns and settlements.[51] Trưng sisters then established their court upriver in Mê Linh.[53][54] In 42 AD, the Han emperor commissioned general Ma Yuan to suppress the uprising with 32,000 men, including 20,000 regulars and 12,000 regional auxiliaries.[51][53] The rebellion was defeated in the next year as Ma Yuan captured and decapitated Trưng Trắc and Trưng Nhị, then sent their heads to the Han court in Luoyang.[55]

By the middle of the fifth century, in the center of ancient Hanoi, a fortified settlement was founded by the Chinese Liu Song dynasty as the seat of a new district called Tống Bình (Songping) within Giao Chỉ commandery.[56] The name refers to its pacification by the dynasty. It was elevated to its own commandery at some point between AD 454 and 464.[57] The commandery included the districts of Yihuai (義懷) and Suining (綏寧) in the south of the Red River (now Từ Liêm and Hoài Đức districts) with a metropolis (the domination centre) in the present inner Hanoi.[58]

Protectorate of Annam Edit

By the year 679, the Tang dynasty changed the region's name to Annan (Pacified South), with Songping as its capital.[59]

In the latter half of the eighth century, Zhang Boyi, a viceroy from the Tang dynasty, built Luocheng to suppress popular uprisings. Luocheng, also known as La Thanh or La Citadel, extended from Thu Le to Quan Ngua in what is now known as the Ba Dinh precinct. Over time, in the first half of the ninth century, this fortification was expanded and renamed as Jincheng, also known as Kim Thanh or Kim Citadel. In 863, Nanzhao army and local people laid siege of Jincheng and defeated the Chinese armies of 150,000.[60][61] In 866, Chinese jiedushi Gao Pian recaptured the city and drove out the Nanzhao and rebels.[61] He renamed the city to Daluocheng (大羅城, Đại La thành). He built the wall, 6,344 meters around the city, which some part were more than eight meters high.[62] Đại La at the time with approximate 25,000 residents included small foreign communities and residents of Persians, Arabs, Indian, Cham, Javanese, and Nestorian Christians,[63] became an important trading center of the Tang dynasty due to the ransacking of Guangzhou by Huang Chao rebellion.[60] By early tenth century AD, modern-day Hanoi was known to the Muslim traders as Luqin.[64]

Hanoi under Independent Vietnam Edit

Thăng Long, Đông Đô, Đông Quan, Đông Kinh Edit

In 1010, Lý Thái Tổ, the first ruler of the Lý dynasty, moved the capital of Đại Việt to the site of the Đại La Citadel. Claiming to have seen a dragon ascending the Red River, he renamed the site Thăng Long (昇龍, "Soaring Dragon") – a name still used poetically to this day. Thăng Long remained the capital of Đại Việt until 1397, when it was moved to Thanh Hóa, then known as Tây Đô (西都), the "Western Capital". Thăng Long then became Đông Đô (東都), the "Eastern Capital".

In 1408, the Chinese Ming dynasty attacked and occupied Vietnam, changing Đông Đô's name to Dongguan (Chinese: 東關, Eastern Gateway), or Đông Quan in Sino-Vietnamese. In 1428, the Vietnamese overthrew the Chinese under the leadership of Lê Lợi,[65][better source needed] who later founded the Lê dynasty and renamed Đông Quan Đông Kinh (東京, "Eastern Capital") or Tonkin. During 17th century, the population of Đông Kinh was estimated by Western diplomats as about 100,000.[66] Right after the end of the Tây Sơn dynasty, it was named Bắc Thành (北城, "Northern Citadel").

During Nguyễn dynasty and the French colonial period Edit

 
Drawing of Hà Nội citadel in the Nguyễn dynasty
 
French troops leaving the Hanoi fortress in February 1874
 
French troops attacking the Hanoi fortress on 20 November 1873.

When the Nguyễn dynasty was established in 1802, Gia Long moved the capital to Huế. Thăng Long was no longer the capital, its chữ Hán was changed from 昇龍 ("Rising dragon") to 昇隆 ("Ascent and prosperity"), aiming to reduce the sentiment of Lê dynasty.[67] Emperors of Vietnam usually used dragon (龍 long) as a symbol of their imperial strength and power. In 1831, the Nguyễn emperor Minh Mạng renamed it Hà Nội (河內, "Between Rivers" or "River Interior"). Hanoi was occupied by the French in 1873 and passed to them ten years later. As Hanoï, it was located in the protectorate of Tonkin and became the capital of French Indochina after 1887.[65][better source needed]

During WWII and American War in Vietnam Edit

 
Bird-eye view of Hanoi in 1944; the Hoan Kiem lake in the middle

The city was occupied by the Imperial Japanese in 1940 and liberated in 1945, when it briefly became the seat of the Việt Minh government after Ho Chi Minh proclaimed the independence of Vietnam. However, the French returned and reoccupied the city in 1946. After nine years of fighting between the French and Viet Minh forces, Hanoi became the capital of an independent North Vietnam in 1954. The French Army withdrew that year and the People's Army of Vietnam and International Control Commission occupied the city under the terms of the 1954 Geneva Conference.[68]

During the Vietnam War, Hanoi's transportation facilities were disrupted by the bombing of bridges and railways by the U.S. Seventh Air Force and Republic of Vietnam Air Force. These were all, however, later repaired. Following the end of the war, Hanoi became the capital of a reunified Vietnam when North and South Vietnam were reunited on 2 July 1976.[69]

Modern Hanoi Edit

 
A local police station in a French Colonial building by Hoàn Kiếm lake

After the Đổi Mới economic policies were approved in 1986, the Communist Party and national and municipal governments hoped to attract international investments for urban development projects in Hanoi.[70] The high-rise commercial buildings did not begin to appear until ten years later due to the international investment community being skeptical of the security of their investments in Vietnam.[70] Rapid urban development and rising costs displaced many residential areas in central Hanoi.[70] Following a short period of economic stagnation after the 1997 Asian financial crisis, Hanoi resumed its rapid economic growth.[70]

On 29 May 2008, it was decided that Hà Tây Province, Vĩnh Phúc Province's Mê Linh District and four communes of Lương Sơn District, Hòa Bình Province be merged into the metropolitan area of Hanoi from 1 August 2008.[71] Hanoi's total area then increased to 334,470 hectares in 29 subdivisions[72] with the new population being 6,232,940.,[72] effectively tripling its size. The Hanoi Capital Region (Vùng Thủ đô Hà Nội), a metropolitan area covering Hanoi and six surrounding provinces under its administration, will have an area of 13,436 square kilometres (5,188 sq mi) with 15 million people by 2020.

Hanoi has experienced a rapid construction boom recently. Skyscrapers, appearing in new urban areas, have dramatically changed the cityscape and have formed a modern skyline outside the old city. In 2015, Hanoi is ranked 39th by Emporis in the list of world cities with most skyscrapers over 100 m; its two tallest buildings are Hanoi Landmark 72 Tower (336 m, second tallest in Vietnam after Ho Chi Minh City's Landmark 81 and third tallest in south-east Asia after Malaysia's Petronas Towers) and Hanoi Lotte Center (272 m, also, third tallest in Vietnam).

Public outcry in opposition to the redevelopment of culturally significant areas in Hanoi persuaded the national government to implement a low-rise policy surrounding Hoàn Kiếm Lake.[70] The Ba Đình District is also protected from commercial redevelopment.[70]

On 12 September 2023, at least 56 people died in a huge fire in an apartment block in Hanoi. The blaze highlighted that many newly built apartments of fast-growing Hanoi lack sufficient fire safety.[73]

Geography Edit

Location, topography Edit

Hanoi is a landlocked municipality in the northern region of Vietnam, situated in Vietnam's Red River delta, nearly 90 km (56 mi) from the coast. Hanoi contains three basic kinds of terrain, which are the delta area, the midland area and the mountainous zone. In general, the terrain becomes gradually lower from north to south and from west to east, with the average height ranging from 5 to 20 meters above sea level. Hills and mountainous zones are located in the northern and western parts of the city. The highest peak is at Ba Vi with 1281 m, located west of the city proper.

Climate Edit

Hanoi, Vietnam
Climate chart (explanation)
J
F
M
A
M
J
J
A
S
O
N
D
 
 
22
 
 
19
14
 
 
24
 
 
20
15
 
 
47
 
 
23
18
 
 
91
 
 
27
21
 
 
185
 
 
31
24
 
 
253
 
 
33
26
 
 
354
 
 
33
26
 
 
300
 
 
32
26
 
 
328
 
 
31
25
 
 
140
 
 
29
22
 
 
66
 
 
25
19
 
 
20
 
 
22
15
Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm
Source: Vietnam Institute for Building Science and Technology [74]
Imperial conversion
JFMAMJJASOND
 
 
0.9
 
 
66
57
 
 
0.9
 
 
68
59
 
 
1.9
 
 
73
64
 
 
3.6
 
 
81
70
 
 
7.3
 
 
88
75
 
 
10
 
 
91
79
 
 
14
 
 
91
79
 
 
12
 
 
90
79
 
 
13
 
 
88
77
 
 
5.5
 
 
84
72
 
 
2.6
 
 
77
66
 
 
0.8
 
 
72
59
Average max. and min. temperatures in °F
Precipitation totals in inches

When using the Köppen climate classification, the ClimaTemps.com website ranks Hanoi as a monsoon-influenced humid subtropical climate (Köppen Cwa) with plentiful precipitation like other places in Northern Vietnam.[75] The city experiences the typical climate of northern Vietnam, with four distinct seasons.[76] Summer, from May to September, is characterized by hot and humid weather with abundant rainfall, and few dry days.[77]: 40 [76] Hot, dry conditions caused by westerly winds during summer are rare.[77]: 40  From October to November comprise the fall season, characterized by a decrease in temperature and precipitation, this time in the year mostly are warm and mild.[76] Winters, from December to January, are characterized as being cool by the northeast monsoon, making Hanoi have a dry winter and large amount of sunshine. Spring, from February until the end of April, Hanoi is usually characterized with large amounts of drizzle and little sunshine due to the strong activity of the southeast monsoon blowing moisture from the sea inland.[76][77]: 40  The city is usually cloudy and foggy in this time, averaging only 1.5 hours of sunshine per day in February and March. The city has times to be influenced by cold waves from the Northeast. Hanoi is the only capital of Southeast Asia with a subtropical climate.

The region has a positive water balance (i.e. the precipitation exceeds the potential evapotranspiration).[78][79] Hanoi averages 1,612 millimetres (63.5 in) of rainfall per year, the majority falling from May to October. There are an average of 114 days with rain.[76] The average annual temperature is 23.6 °C (74 °F), with a mean relative humidity of more than 80%. The coldest month has a mean temperature of 16.4 °C (61.5 °F) and the hottest month has a mean temperature of 29.2 °C (84.6 °F). The highest recorded temperature was 42.8 °C (109 °F) in May 1926, while the lowest recorded temperature was 2.7 °C (37 °F) in January 1955.[76] The city have also experienced extremely hot weather on 4 June 2017 due to La Niña, with the temperature reached up to 42.5 °C (108.5 °F) in a week. Hanoi can sometimes experience snow in winter. The most recent snow happened on Ba Vì mountain range, and the temperature fell to 0 °C (32 °F) on January 24, 2016.[80]

Climate data for Hanoi
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 33.1
(91.6)
35.1
(95.2)
38.9
(102.0)
39.9
(103.8)
42.8
(109.0)
42.5
(108.5)
40.8
(105.4)
39.7
(103.5)
37.4
(99.3)
36.6
(97.9)
36.0
(96.8)
31.9
(89.4)
42.8
(109.0)
Average high °C (°F) 19.8
(67.6)
20.6
(69.1)
23.2
(73.8)
27.7
(81.9)
31.9
(89.4)
33.4
(92.1)
33.4
(92.1)
32.6
(90.7)
31.5
(88.7)
29.2
(84.6)
25.7
(78.3)
22.0
(71.6)
27.6
(81.7)
Daily mean °C (°F) 16.6
(61.9)
17.7
(63.9)
20.3
(68.5)
24.2
(75.6)
27.6
(81.7)
29.3
(84.7)
29.4
(84.9)
28.7
(83.7)
27.7
(81.9)
25.3
(77.5)
21.9
(71.4)
18.3
(64.9)
23.9
(75.0)
Average low °C (°F) 14.5
(58.1)
15.8
(60.4)
18.4
(65.1)
21.9
(71.4)
24.8
(76.6)
26.4
(79.5)
26.5
(79.7)
26.1
(79.0)
25.2
(77.4)
22.8
(73.0)
19.3
(66.7)
15.8
(60.4)
21.5
(70.7)
Record low °C (°F) 2.7
(36.9)
5.0
(41.0)
7.0
(44.6)
9.8
(49.6)
15.4
(59.7)
20.0
(68.0)
21.0
(69.8)
20.9
(69.6)
16.1
(61.0)
12.0
(53.6)
6.8
(44.2)
3.6
(38.5)
2.7
(36.9)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 22.5
(0.89)
24.6
(0.97)
47.0
(1.85)
91.8
(3.61)
185.4
(7.30)
253.3
(9.97)
280.1
(11.03)
309.4
(12.18)
228.3
(8.99)
140.7
(5.54)
66.7
(2.63)
20.2
(0.80)
1,670.1
(65.75)
Average rainy days 9.5 11.4 15.9 13.7 14.6 14.8 16.6 16.5 13.2 9.7 6.8 5.2 147.9
Average relative humidity (%) 79.9 82.5 84.5 84.7 81.1 80.0 80.7 82.7 81.0 78.5 77.1 76.2 80.7
Mean monthly sunshine hours 68.7 48.1 45.5 87.4 173.7 167.0 181.1 163.0 162.4 150.3 131.6 113.0 1,488.5
Average ultraviolet index 5 6 5 6 7 7 7 7 7 6 5 4 6
Source 1: Vietnam Institute for Building Science and Technology[81]
Source 2: Vietnamnet.vn (May record high and January record low only),[76] Vietnamnet.vn (June record high only),[82] Imh.ac.vn (August record high only),[83] Nchmf.gov.vn,[84] April and May record low in The Yearbook of Indochina[85] Weather Atlas (UV)[86]

Administrative divisions Edit

 
Administrative divisions of Hanoi

Hà Nội is divided into 12 urban districts, 1 district-leveled town and 17 rural districts. When Hà Tây was merged into Hanoi in 2008, Hà Đông was transformed into an urban district while Sơn Tây is demoted to a district-level town. They are further subdivided into 22 commune-level towns (or townlets), 399 communes, and 145 wards.

Administrative divisions of Hanoi
Name Area (km2) Population (2022) Population density Subdivisions
12 urban districts (Quận)
Ba Đình district 9.21 226,315 24,572 14 wards
Bắc Từ Liêm district 45.35 354,364 7,813 13 wards
Cầu Giấy district 12.26 294,235 23,999 8 wards
Đống Đa district 9.95 376,709 37,860 21 wards
Hà Đông districtHT 49.64 382,637 7,708 17 wards
Hai Bà Trưng district 10.26 304,101 29,639 18 wards
Hoàn Kiếm district 5.35 141,687 26,483 18 wards
Hoàng Mai district 40.19 540,732 13,454 14 wards
Long Biên district 60.09 337,982 5,624 14 wards
Nam Từ Liêm district 32.19 282,444 8,774 10 wards
Tây Hồ district 24.38 167,851 6,884 8 wards
Thanh Xuân district 9.17 293,292 31,983 11 wards
Subtotal 308.04 3,702,349 12,019 166 wards
1 district-level town (Thị xã)
Sơn TâyHT 117.20 151,090 1,289 9 wards, 6 communes
17 rural districts (Huyện)
Ba Vì districtHT 421.80 305,933 725 1 commune-level town, 30 communes
Chương Mỹ districtHT 237.48 347,564 1,463 2 commune-level towns, 30 communes
Đan Phượng districtHT 77.83 185,653 2,385 1 commune-level town, 15 communes
Đông Anh district 185.68 409,916 2,207 1 commune-level town, 23 communes
Gia Lâm district 116.64 292,943 2,511 2 commune-level towns, 20 communes
Hoài Đức districtHT 84.92 257,633 3,033 1 commune-level town, 19 communes
Mê Linh district 141.29 241,633 1,710 2 commune-level towns, 16 communes
Mỹ Đức districtHT 226.31 203,778 900 1 commune-level town, 21 communes
Phú Xuyên districtHT 173.56 229,847 1,324 2 commune-level towns, 25 communes
Phúc Thọ districtHT 118.50 194,754 1,643 1 commune-level town, 20 communes
Quốc Oai districtHT 151.22 203,079 1,342 1 commune-level town, 20 communes
Sóc Sơn district 305.51 357,652 1,170 1 commune-level town, 25 communes
Thạch Thất districtHT 187.53 223,844 1,193 1 commune-level town, 22 communes
Thanh Oai districtHT 124.47 227,541 1,828 1 commune-level town, 20 communes
Thanh Trì district 63.49 288,839 4,549 1 commune-level town, 15 communes
Thường Tín districtHT 130.13 262,222 2,015 1 commune-level town, 28 communes
Ứng Hòa districtHT 188.24 212,224 1,127 1 commune-level town, 28 communes
Subtotal 2934.6 4,445,055 1,514 377 communes và 21 commune-level towns
Total 3,359.84 8,298,494 2,469 175 wards, 383 communes và 21 commune-level towns
Source: Niên giám thống kê Hà Nội 2020,[87] Thông báo số 64/TB-UBND của UBND Thành Phố Hà Nội năm 2022[88]

HT – formerly an administrative subdivision unit of the defunct Hà Tây Province.

Demographics Edit

 
Vietnamese women wearing traditional costume Áo dài during APEC Summit 2006

During the French colonial period, as the capital of French Indochina, Hanoi attracted a considerable number of French, Chinese and Vietnamese from the surrounding areas. In the 1940s the population of the city was 132,145.[89] After the First Indochina War, many French and Chinese people left the city to either move south or repatriate.

Hanoi's population only started to increase rapidly in the second half 20th century. In 1954, the city had 53 thousand inhabitants, covering an area of 152 km2. By 1961, the area of the city had expanded to 584 km2, and the population was 91,000 people. In 1978, National Assembly (Vietnam) decided to expand Hanoi for the second time to 2,136 km2, with a population of 2.5 million people.[90] By 1991, the area of Hanoi continued to change, decreasing to 924 km2 (357 sq mi), but the population was still over 2 million people. During the 1990s, Hanoi's population increased steadily, reaching 2,672,122 people in 1999.[91] After the most recent expansion in August 2008, Hanoi has a population of 6.233 million and is among the 17 capitals with the largest area in the world.[92] According to the 2009 census, Hanoi's population is 6,451,909 people.[93] As of 1 April 2019, Hanoi had a population of 8,053,663, including 3,991,919 males and 4,061,744 females.[11] The population living in urban areas is 3,962,310 people, accounting for 49.2% and in rural areas is 4,091,353 people, accounting for 50.8%. Hanoi is the second most populous city in the country, after Ho Chi Minh City (8,993,082 people). The average annual population growth rate from 2009 to 2019 of Hanoi is 2.22%/year, higher than the national growth rate (1.14%/year) and is the second highest in the Red River Delta, only after Bắc Ninh Province (2.90% / year).

Nowadays, the city is both a major metropolitan area of Northern Vietnam, and also the country's cultural and political centre, putting a lot of pressure on the infrastructure, some of which is antiquated and dates back to the early 20th century. It has over eight million residents within the city proper and an estimated population of 20 million within the metropolitan area.

The number of Hanoians who have settled down for more than three generations is likely to be very small when compared to the overall population of the city. Even in the Old Quarter, where commerce started hundreds of years ago and consisted mostly of family businesses, many of the street-front stores nowadays are owned by merchants and retailers from other provinces. The original owner family may have either rented out the store and moved into the adjoining house or moved out of the neighborhood altogether. The pace of change has especially escalated after the abandonment of central-planning economic policies and relaxing of the district-based household registrar system.[94]

Hanoi's telephone numbers have been increased to 8 digits to cope with demand (October 2008). Subscribers' telephone numbers have been changed in a haphazard way; however, mobile phones and SIM cards are readily available in Vietnam, with pre-paid mobile phone credit available in all areas of Hanoi.

Religion Edit

Buddhism, Taoism, and Confucianism are the main religions of Hanoi for many years. Most people consider themselves Buddhist, though not all of them regularly follow religion.

Ethnic groups Edit

There are more than 50 ethnic groups in Hanoi, of which the Viet (Kinh) is the largest; according to official Vietnamese figures (2019 census), accounting for 98.66% of the population, followed by Mường at 0.77% and Tày at 0.24%.[11]

Economy Edit

According to a recent ranking by PricewaterhouseCoopers, Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City will be amongst the fastest-growing cities in the world in terms of GDP growth from 2008 to 2025.[95] In the year 2013, Hanoi contributed 12.6% to GDP, exported 7.5% of total exports, contributed 17% to the national budget and attracted 22% investment capital of Vietnam. The city's nominal GDP at current prices reached 451,213 billion VND (US$21.48 billion) in 2013, which made per capita GDP stand at 63.3 million VND (US$3,000).[96] Industrial production in the city has experienced a rapid boom since the 1990s, with average annual growth of 19.1 percent from 1991 to 1995, 15.9 percent from 1996 to 2000, and 20.9 percent during 2001–2003.[citation needed] In addition to eight existing industrial parks, Hanoi is building five new large-scale industrial parks and 16 small- and medium-sized industrial clusters. The non-state economic sector is expanding fast, with more than 48,000 businesses operating under the Enterprise Law (as of 3/2007).[97]

Trade is another strong sector of the city. In 2003, Hanoi had 2,000 businesses engaged in foreign trade, having established ties with 161 countries and territories. The city's export value grew by an average 11.6 percent each year from 1996 to 2000 and 9.1 percent during 2001–2003.[citation needed] The economic structure also underwent important shifts, with tourism, finance, and banking now playing an increasingly important role. Hanoi's traditional business districts are Hoàn Kiếm, Hai Bà Trưng and Đống Đa; and newly developing Cầu Giấy, Nam Từ Liêm, Bắc Từ Liêm, Thanh Xuân and Hà Đông in the west.

Similar to Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi enjoys a rapidly developing real estate market.[98] The most notable new urban areas are central Trung Hòa Nhân Chính, Mỹ Đình, the luxurious zones of The Manor, Ciputra, Royal City in the Nguyễn Trãi Street (Thanh Xuân District) and Times City in the Hai Bà Trưng District. With an estimated nominal GDP of US$42.04 billion as of 2019, it is the second most productive economic area of Vietnam (after Ho Chi Minh City)

Agriculture, previously a pillar in Hanoi's economy, has striven to reform itself, introducing new high-yield plant varieties and livestock, and applying modern farming techniques.[99]

After the economic reforms that initiated economic growth, Hanoi's appearance has also changed significantly, especially in recent years. Infrastructure is constantly being upgraded, with new roads and an improved public transportation system.[100] Hanoi has allowed many fast-food chains into the city, such as McDonald's, Lotteria, Pizza Hut, KFC, and others. Locals in Hanoi perceive the ability to purchase "fast-food" as an indication of luxury and permanent fixtures.[101] Similarly, city officials are motivated by food safety concerns and their aspirations for a "modern" city to replace the 67 traditional food markets with 1,000 supermarkets by 2025. This is likely to increase consumption of less nutritious foods, as traditional markets are key for consumption of fresh rather than processed foods.[102]

Over three-quarters of the jobs in Hanoi are state-owned. 9% of jobs are provided by collectively owned organizations. 13.3% of jobs are in the private sector.[103] The structure of employment has been changing rapidly as state-owned institutions downsize and private enterprises grow.[103] Hanoi has in-migration controls which allow the city to accept only people who add skills Hanoi's economy.[103] A 2006 census found that 5,600 rural produce vendors exist in Hanoi, with 90% of them coming from surrounding rural areas. These numbers indicate the much greater earning potential in urban rather than in rural spaces.[101] The uneducated, rural, and mostly female street vendors are depicted as participants of "microbusiness" and local grassroots economic development by business reports.[101] In July 2008, Hanoi's city government devised a policy to partially ban street vendors and side-walk based commerce on 62 streets due to concerns about public health and "modernizing" the city's image to attract foreigners.[101] Many foreigners believe that the vendors add a traditional and nostalgic aura to the city, although street vending was much less common prior to the 1986 Đổi Mới policies.[101] The vendors have not able to form effective resistance tactics to the ban and remain embedded in the dominant capitalist framework of modern Hanoi.[104]

Hanoi is part of the Maritime Silk Road that runs from the Chinese coast through the Strait of Malacca towards the southern tip of India to Mombasa, from there through the Red Sea via the Suez Canal to the Mediterranean, there to the Upper Adriatic region to the northern Italian hub of Trieste with its rail connections to Central Europe and the North Sea.[105][106][107]

Development Edit

Infrastructural development Edit

A development master plan for Hanoi was designed by Ernest Hebrard in 1924, but was only partially implemented.[103] The previous close relationship between the Soviet Union and Vietnam led to the creation of the first comprehensive plan for Hanoi with the assistance of Soviet planners between 1981 and 1984.[108] It was never realized because it appeared to be incompatible with Hanoi's existing layout.[103]

In recent years, two master plans have been created to guide Hanoi's development.[103] The first was the Hanoi Master Plan 1990–2010, approved in April 1992. It was created out of collaboration between planners from Hanoi and the National Institute of Urban and Rural Planning in the Ministry of Construction.[103] The plan's three main objectives were to create housing and a new commercial center in an area known as Nghĩa Đô, expand residential and industrial areas in the Gia Lâm District, and develop the three southern corridors linking Hanoi to Hà Đông and the Thanh Trì District.[103] The result of the land-use pattern was meant to resemble a five cornered star by 2010.[103] In 1998, a revised version of the Hanoi Master plan was approved to be completed in 2020.[103] It addressed the significant increase of population projections within Hanoi. Population densities and high rise buildings in the inner city were planned to be limited to protect the old parts of inner Hanoi.[103] A rail transport system is planned to be built to expand public transport and link the Hanoi to surrounding areas. Projects such as airport upgrading, a golf course, and cultural villages have been approved for development by the government.[103]

Hanoi is still faced with the problems associated with increasing urbanization. Although it is a major transport hub with a large network of national routes, expressways, railways, and is home to Noi Bai International Airport, the busiest airport in Vietnam, the disparity of wealth between the rich and the poor is a problem in both the capital and throughout the country.[103] Hanoi's public infrastructure was assessed as in poor condition with high amounts of pollution and congestion in 2001. The city also has air and water pollution, difficult road conditions, traffic congestion, and a rudimentary public transit system. Traffic congestion and air pollution are worsening as the number of motor cycles increases. Squatter settlements are expanding on the outer rim of the city as homelessness rises (2001).[103]

In the late 1980s, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the Vietnamese government had designed a project to develop rural infrastructure.[103] The project focused on improving roads, water supply and sanitation, and educational, health and social facilities because economic development in the communes and rural areas surrounding Hanoi is dependent on the infrastructural links between the rural and urban areas, especially for the sale of rural products.[103] The project aimed to use locally available resources and knowledge such as compressed earth construction techniques for building. It was jointly funded by the UNDP, the Vietnamese government, and resources raised by the local communities and governments. In four communes, the local communities contributed 37% of the total budget.[103] Local labor, community support, and joint funding were decided as necessary for the long-term sustainability of the project.[103]

Civil society development Edit

Part of the goals of the Đổi Mới economic reforms was to decentralize governance for purpose of economic improvement. This led to the establishment of the first issue-oriented civic organizations in Hanoi. In the 1990s, Hanoi experienced significant poverty alleviation as a result of both the market reforms and civil society movements.[109] Most of the civic organizations in Hanoi were established after 1995, at a rate much slower than in Ho Chi Minh City.[110] Organizations in Hanoi are more "tradition-bound", focused on policy, education, research, professional interests, and appealing to governmental organizations to solve social problems.[110] This marked difference from Ho Chi Minh's civic organizations, which practice more direct intervention to tackle social issues, may be attributed to the different societal identities of North and South Vietnam.[110] Hanoi-based civic organizations use more systematic development and less of a direct intervention approach to deal with issues of rural development, poverty alleviation, and environmental protection. They rely more heavily on full-time staff than volunteers. In Hanoi, 16.7% of civic organizations accept anyone as a registered member and 73.9% claim to have their own budgets, as opposed to 90.9% in Ho Chi Minh City.[110] A majority of the civic organizations in Hanoi find it difficult to work with governmental organizations. Many of the strained relations between non-governmental and governmental organizations results from statism, a bias against non-state organizations on the part of government entities.[110]

Landmarks Edit

 
One Pillar Pagoda

As the capital of Vietnam for almost a thousand years, Hanoi is considered one of the main cultural centres of Vietnam, where most Vietnamese dynasties have left their imprint. Even though some relics have not survived through wars and time, the city still has many interesting cultural and historic monuments for visitors and residents alike. Even when the nation's capital moved to Huế under the Nguyễn Dynasty in 1802, the city of Hanoi continued to flourish, especially after the French took control in 1888 and modeled the city's architecture to their tastes, lending an important aesthetic to the city's rich stylistic heritage. The city hosts more cultural sites than any other city in Vietnam,[111] and boasts more than 1,000 years of history; that of the past few hundred years has been well preserved.[112]

Old Quarter Edit

The Old Quarter, near Hoàn Kiếm Lake, maintains most of the original street layout and some of the architecture of old Hanoi. At the beginning of the 20th century Hanoi consisted of the "36 streets", the citadel, and some of the newer French buildings south of Hoàn Kiếm lake, most of which are now part of Hoàn Kiếm district.[113] Each street had merchants and households specializing in a particular trade, such as silk, jewelry or even bamboo. The street names still reflect these specializations, although few of them remain exclusively in their original commerce.[114] The area is famous for its specializations in trades such as traditional medicine and local handicrafts, including silk shops, bamboo carpenters, and tin smiths. Local cuisine specialties as well as several clubs and bars can be found here also. A night market (near Đồng Xuân Market) in the heart of the district opens for business every Friday, Saturday, and Sunday evening with a variety of clothing, souvenirs and food.

Went through more than six decades of French colonization and centuries of sociocultural influence from China, French and Chinese cultures have influenced the designs of the old houses in Hanoi. The Franco-Chinese or hybrid architecture in Vietnam have shown, the “cultural additivity” in Vietnamese architecture is reflected in the front of a house in the co-existence of French-styled columns, Confucian scrolls, the Taoist yin-yang sign, and the Buddhist lotus sculpture.[115]

Imperial sites Edit

 
Front gate of the Temple of Literature

Imperior sites are mostly in Ba Đình District and a bit of Đống Đa District. They are juxtaposed with French colonial architecture (villas, administrative buildings and tree-lined boulevards). Some prominent edifices from feudal time include the Temple of Literature (Văn Miếu), site of the oldest university in Vietnam which was started in 1010, the One Pillar Pagoda (Chùa Một Cột) which was built based on the dream of king Lý Thái Tông (1028–1054) in 1049, and the Flag Tower of Hanoi (Cột cờ Hà Nội). In 2004, a massive part of the 900-year-old Hanoi Citadel was discovered in central Hanoi, near the site of Ba Đình Square.[116]

Lakes Edit

A city between rivers built on lowlands, Hanoi has many scenic lakes and is sometimes called the "city of lakes". Among its lakes, the most famous are Hoàn Kiếm Lake, West Lake, Trúc Bạch Lake and Bảy Mẫu Lake (inside Thống Nhất Park). Hoàn Kiếm Lake, also known as Sword Lake, is the historical and cultural center of Hanoi, and is linked to the legend of the magic sword. West Lake (Hồ Tây) is a popular place for people to spend time. It is the largest lake in Hanoi, with many temples in the area. The lakeside road in the Nghi Tam – Quang Ba area is perfect for bicycling, jogging and viewing the cityscape or enjoying the lotus ponds in the summer. The best way to see the majestic beauty of a West Lake sunset is to view it from one of the many bars around the lake, especially from The Summit at Pan Pacific Hanoi (formally known as Summit Lounge at Sofitel Plaza Hanoi).

Colonial Hanoi Edit

 
The Tonkin Palace used to host the French Governor of Tonkin.
 
The Hanoi Opera House, taken in the early 20th century, from rue Paul Bert (now Trang Tien street)
 
The Hotel Metropole was opened in 1901.

Hanoi was the capital and the administrative center for French Indochina for most of the colonial period (from 1902 to 1945). The French colonial architectural style became dominant,[117] and many examples remain today: tree-lined boulevards (such as Phan Dinh Phung street, Hoang Dieu street and Tran Phu street) and many villas, mansions, and government buildings. Some notable colonial structures are an eclectic mixture of French and traditional Vietnamese architectural styles, such as the National Museum of Vietnamese History, the Vietnam National Museum of Fine Arts and the old Indochina Medical College. Gouveneur-Général Paul Doumer (1898–1902) played a crucial role in colonial Hanoi's urban planning. Under his tenure there was a major construction boom.[118]

French Colonial buildings in Hanoi are mostly in Ba Đình District and the south of Hoàn Kiếm District, the two French Quarters of the city. Notable landmarks include:

In Ba Đình district:

In Hoàn Kiếm district:

Museums Edit

 
Traditional Hanoi dwelling, Museum of Ethnology, Hanoi

Hanoi is home to a number of museums:

Suburbs Edit

 
Pilgrimage at Perfume Pagoda

Hanoi's western suburbs, previously Hà Tây Province, offers a number of important religious sites:

Tourism Edit

 
Approximation of Hanoi's Old Quarter and French Quarters

According to Mastercard’s 2019 report, Hanoi is Vietnam's most visited city (15th in Asia Pacific), with 4.8 million overnight international visitors in 2018.[123] Hanoi is sometimes dubbed the "Paris of the East" for its French influences.[124] With its tree-fringed boulevards, more than two dozen lakes and thousands of French colonial-era buildings, Hanoi is a popular tourist destination.

The tourist destinations in Hanoi are generally grouped into two main areas: the Old Quarter and the French Quarter(s). The "Old Quarter" is in the northern half of Hoàn Kiếm District with small street blocks and alleys, and a traditional Vietnamese atmosphere. Many streets in the Old Quarter have names signifying the goods ("hàng") the local merchants were or are specialized in. For example, "Hàng Bạc" (silver stores) still have many stores specializing in trading silver and jewelries.

Two areas are generally called the "French Quarters": the governmental area in Ba Đình District and the south of Hoàn Kiếm District. Both areas have distinctive French Colonial style villas and broad tree-lined avenues.

The political center of Vietnam, Ba Đình has a high concentration of Vietnamese government headquarters, including the Presidential Palace, the National Assembly Building, and several ministries and embassies, most of which used administrative buildings of colonial French Indochina. The One Pillar Pagoda, the Lycée du Protectorat and the Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum are also in Ba Dinh.

South of Hoàn Kiếm's "French Quarter" has several French-Colonial landmarks, including the Hanoi Opera House, the Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi hotel, the National Museum of Vietnamese History (formerly the École française d'Extrême-Orient), and the St. Joseph's Cathedral. Most of the French-Colonial buildings in Hoan Kiem are now used as foreign embassies.

Since 2014, Hanoi has consistently been voted in the world's top ten destinations by TripAdvisor. It ranked eighth in 2014,[125] fourth in 2015[126] and eighth in 2016.[127] Hanoi is the most affordable international destination in TripAdvisor's annual TripIndex report. In 2017, Hanoi will welcome more than 5 million international tourists.

Entertainment Edit

 
Performance of the water puppet theatre Thăng Long

A variety of options for entertainment in Hanoi can be found throughout the city. Modern and traditional theaters, cinemas, karaoke bars, dance clubs, bowling alleys, and an abundance of opportunities for shopping provide leisure activity for both locals and tourists. Hanoi has been named one of the top 10 cities for shopping in Asia by Water Puppet Tours.[128] The number of art galleries exhibiting Vietnamese art has dramatically increased in recent years, now including galleries such as "Nhat Huy" of Huynh Thong Nhat.

Nhà Triển Lãm at 29 Hang Bai street hosts regular photo, sculpture, and paint exhibitions in conjuncture with local artists and travelling international expositions.

A popular traditional form of entertainment is water puppetry, which is shown, for example, at the Thăng Long Water Puppet Theatre.

Shopping Edit

To adapt to Hanoi's rapid economic growth and high population density, many modern shopping centers and megamalls have been opened in Hanoi.

Major malls are:

  • Trang Tien Plaza, High-end Mall on Trang Tien street (right next to Hoàn Kiếm Lake), Hoàn Kiếm District
  • Vincom Center, a modern mall with hi-end CGV cineplex, Ba Trieu Street (just 2 km from Hoan Kiem lake), Hai Bà Trưng District
  • The Garden Shopping Center, Me Tri – Mỹ Đình, Nam Từ Liêm District
  • Indochina Plaza, Xuan Thuy street, Cầu Giấy District
  • Vincom Royal City Megamall, the largest underground mall in Asia with 230,000 square metres of shops, restaurants, cineplex, waterpark (formerly), cinema, ice skating rink; Nguyen Trai street (approx 6 km from Hoan Kiem Lake), Thanh Xuân District
  • Vincom Times City Megamall, another megamall of 230,000 square metres including shops, restaurants, cineplex, huge musical fountain on central square and a giant aquarium; Minh Khai street (approx 5 km from Hoan Kiem Lake), Hai Ba Trung district
  • Lotte Department Store, opened September 2014, Lieu Giai Street, Ba Đình District
  • Aeon Mall Long Bien opened last October 2015, Long Bien District
  • Aeon Mall Ha Dong opened in the end of 2019, Ha Dong district

Cuisine Edit

 
Chả cá Lã Vọng, a dish that originated in Hanoi

Hanoi has rich culinary traditions. Many of Vietnam's most famous dishes, such as phở, bún chả, chả cá Lã Vọng, bánh cuốn and cốm are believed to have originated in Hanoi. Two varieties of phở dominate the Hanoi scene: phở bò, containing beef, and phở gà, containing chicken. Bún chả, a dish consisting of charcoal roasted pork served in a sweet/salty soup with rice noodle vermicelli and lettuce, is by far the most popular food item among locals. President Barack Obama famously tried this dish at a Le Van Huu eatery with Anthony Bourdain in 2016, prompting the opening of a bún chả restaurant bearing his name in the Old Quarter.

Vietnam's national dish phở has been named as one of the Top 5 street foods in the world by globalpost.[129]

Hanoi has a number of restaurants whose menus specifically offer dishes containing snake[130][131] and various species of insects. Insect-inspired menus can be found at a number of restaurants in Khuong Thuong village, Hanoi.[132] The signature dishes at these restaurant are those containing processed ant-eggs, often in the culinary styles of Thai people or Vietnam's Muong and Tay ethnic people.[133] Dog eating used to be popular in Hanoi in 1990s and early 2000s but is now dying out quickly due to strong objections.

Education Edit

 
The Hanoi Medical University was the first modern university in Vietnam.

Hanoi, as the capital of French Indochina, was home to the first Western-style universities in Indochina, including: Indochina Medical College (1902) – now Hanoi Medical University, Indochina University (1904) – now Hanoi National University (the largest), and École Supérieure des Beaux-Arts de l'Indochine (1925) – now Hanoi University of Fine Art.

After the Communist Party of Vietnam took control of Hanoi in 1954, many new universities were built, among them, Hanoi University of Science and Technology. Recently ULIS (University of Languages and International Studies) was rated as one of the top universities in south-east Asia for languages and language studies at the undergraduate level.[134] Other universities that are not part of Vietnam National University or Hanoi University include Hanoi School for Public Health, Hanoi School of Agriculture, Electric Power University and University of Transport and Communications.

It is estimated that 62% of the scientists in the whole country are living and working in Hanoi.[135] Admissions to undergraduate study are through entrance examinations, which are conducted annually and open to everyone (who has successfully completed his/her secondary education) in the country. The majority of universities in Hanoi are public, although in recent years a number of private universities have begun operation. Thăng Long University, founded in 1988, by Vietnamese mathematics professors in Hanoi and France[136] was the first private university in Vietnam. Because many of Vietnam's major universities are located in Hanoi, students from other provinces (especially in the northern part of the country) wishing to enter university often travel to Hanoi for the annual entrance examination. Such events usually take place in June and July, during which a large number of students and their families converge on the city for several weeks around the intense examination period. In recent years, these entrance exams have been centrally coordinated by the Ministry of Education, but entrance requirements are decided independently by each university.

Although there are state owned kindergartens, there are also many private ventures that serve both local and international needs. Pre-tertiary (elementary and secondary) schools in Hanoi are generally state run, but there are also some independent schools. Education is equivalent to the K–12 system in the U.S., with elementary school between grades 1 and 5, middle school (or junior high) between grades 6 and 9, and high school from grades 10 to 12. There are several specialised school (or high school for the gifted) in Hanoi where excellent students in Hanoi attend. Some schools include:

Hanoi – Amsterdam High School

Chu Van An High School

Foreign Language Specialized School

Nguyen Hue High School for the Gifted

High School for Gifted Students, Hanoi National University of Education

High School for Gifted Students, Hanoi University of Science

Education levels are much higher within the city of Hanoi in comparison to the suburban areas outside the city. About 33.8% of the labor force in the city has completed secondary school in contrast to 19.4% in the suburbs.[103] 21% of the labor force in the city has completed tertiary education in contrast to 4.1% in the suburbs.[103]

International schools include:

Former schools:

Reform Edit

Country-wide educational change is difficult in Vietnam, due to the restrictive control of the government on social and economic development strategies.[137] According to Hanoi government publications, the national system of education was reformed in 1950, 1956 and 1970.[137] It was not until 1975 when the two separate education systems of the former North and South Vietnam territories became unified under a single national system.[137] In Hanoi in December 1996, the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Vietnam stated that: "To carry out industrialization and modernization successfully, it is necessary to develop education and training strongly [and to] maximize human resources, the key factor of fast and sustained development."[137]

Transportation Edit

 
Inside International Terminal in Noi Bai International Airport

Hanoi has 1,370 streets and roads with the total length of over 2,300 km (1,429 mi); 573 bridges, of which 483 small to middle bridges, 13 light overpasses for vehicle, 70 pedestrian overpasses and 7 main bridges (Chương Dương, Vĩnh Tuy, Thanh Trì, Nhật Tân, Đông Trù, Thăng Long, and Phùng); 115 tunnels, including 9 main tunnels, 39 pedestrian tunnels and 67 underpass. In total, the proportion of land for traffic in the city 2021 is 10.3%. The city also has 63 km (39 mi) of inland waterway, which are Yến stream, Hai stream, Cà Lồ and Đáy river.[138]

Hanoi is served by Noi Bai International Airport, located in the Soc Son District, approximately 15 km (9 mi) north of Hanoi. The new international terminal (T2), designed and built by Japanese contractors, opened in January 2015 and is a big facelift for the airport. In addition, a new highway and the new Nhat Tan cable-stay bridge connecting the airport and the city center opened at the same time, offering much more convenience than the old road (via Thang Long bridge). Taxis are plentiful and usually have meters, although it is also common to agree on the trip price before taking a taxi from the airport to the city centre.

Hanoi is also the origin or departure point for many Vietnam Railways train routes in the country with 6 national railway lines pass through the city with a total length of 162 km (101 mi).[138] The Reunification Express (tàu Thống Nhất) runs from Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh City from Hanoi station (formerly Hang Co station), with stops at cities and provinces along the line. Trains also depart Hanoi frequently for Hai Phong and other northern cities. The Reunification Express line was established during French colonial rule and was completed over a period of nearly forty years, from 1899 to 1936.[139] The Reunification Express between Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City covers a distance of 1,726 km (1,072 mi) and takes approximately 33 hours.[140] As of 2005, there were 278 stations on the Vietnamese railway network, of which 191 were located along the north–south line.

The main means of transport within Hanoi city are motorbikes, buses, taxis, and a rising number of cars. In recent decades, motorbikes have overtaken bicycles as the main form of transportation. Cars however are probably the most notable change in the past five years as many Vietnamese people purchase the vehicles for the first time. The increased number of cars are the main cause of gridlock as roads and infrastructure in the older parts of Hanoi were not designed to accommodate them.[141] On 4 July 2017, the Hanoi government voted to ban motorbikes entirely by 2030, to reduce pollution, congestion, and encourage the expansion and use of public transport.[142] Number of vehicles registered in Hanoi as of July 2022 is over 7.6 million, including more than 1 million cars, over 6.4 million motorcycles of and 179,000 electric motorbikes. This figure does not include vehicles of the armed forces, diplomatic missions and other localities's vehicles operating in Hanoi.[138]

There are two metro lines in Hanoi, one of which is under construction, as part of the master plan for the future Hanoi Metro system.[143] Line 2A opened on 6 November 2021,[144] while line 3 is expected to begin operation in 2023.

Persons on their own or traveling in a pair who wish to make a fast trip around Hanoi to avoid traffic jams or to travel at an irregular time or by way of an irregular route often use "xe ôm" (literally, "hug bike"). Motorbikes can also be rented from agents within the Old Quarter of Hanoi, although this falls inside a rather grey legal area.[145]

Sports Edit

 
Mỹ Đình National Stadium

There are several gymnasiums and stadiums throughout the city of Hanoi. The most approved ones are Mỹ Đình National Stadium (Lê Đức Thọ Boulevard), Quần Ngựa Sports Palace (Văn Cao Avenue), Hanoi Aquatics Sports Complex and Hanoi Indoor Games Gymnasium. The others include Hàng Đẫy Stadium. The third Asian Indoor Games were held in Hanoi in 2009. The others are Hai Bà Trưng Gymnasium, Trịnh Hoài Đức Gymnasium, Vạn Bảo Sports Complex.

On 6 November 2018, it was announced that in 2020, Hanoi would become the host of the first FIA Formula 1 Vietnamese Grand Prix on a street circuit on the outskirts of the city.[146] The race was initially postponed and later cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the inaugural edition of the event postponed to 2021.[147] The Grand Prix was removed from the 2021 calendar because of the arrest of Hanoi People's Committee Chairman Nguyễn Đức Chung on corruption charges unrelated to the Grand Prix. As a result, it's unclear whether the race will be held at all.[148]

Hanoi has two basketball teams that compete in the Vietnam Basketball Association (VBA), the Hanoi Buffaloes and Thang Long Warriors. Hàng Đẫy Stadium is home to three football clubs: Hanoi, Hanoi Police and Viettel, both participating in V.League 1.

Health care and other facilities Edit

Some medical facilities in Hanoi:

City for Peace Edit

On 16 July 1999, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) presented the title "City for Peace" to Hanoi because the city met the following criteria: Exemplary action against exclusion and in support of the dialogue between communities; Exemplary urban action; Exemplary environmental action; Exemplary action to promote culture; Exemplary action in the field of education and especially civic education.[149]

Hanoi is the only city in Asia-Pacific that was granted this title.

International relations Edit

Hanoi is a member of the Asian Network of Major Cities 21 and the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group.

Twin towns – sister cities Edit

Hanoi is twinned with:

Gallery Edit

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Sometime spelled as Ha Noi or Hà Nội in English by Vietnam-based media.[citation needed]

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Bibliography Edit

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  • Bielestein, Hans (1986), "Wang Mang, the restoration of the Han dynasty, and Later Han", in Twitchett, Denis C.; Fairbank, John King (eds.), The Cambridge History of China: Volume 1, The Ch'in and Han Empires, 221 BC-AD 220, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 223–290
  • Dodd, Jan; Lewis, Mark (2003). Rough Guide to Vietnam. Rough Guides. ISBN 978-1-84353-095-4.
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  • Buttinger, Joseph (1958). The Smaller Dragon: A Political History of Vietnam. Praeger Publishers.
  • Brindley, Erica (2015). Ancient China and the Yue: Perceptions and Identities on the Southern Frontier, C.400 BCE-50 CE. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-08478-0.
  • Nam C. Kim (2015). The Origins of Ancient Vietnam. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-998089-5.
  • Taylor, Keith Weller (1983). The Birth of Vietnam. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-07417-0.
  • Taylor, Keith Weller (2013). A History of the Vietnamese. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-87586-8.
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  • Park, Hyunhee (2012). Mapping the Chinese and Islamic Worlds: Cross-Cultural Exchange in Pre-Modern Asia. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-01868-6.
  • Boudarel, Georges; Nguyen, Van Ky; Nguyễn, Văn Ký (2002). Duiker, Claire (ed.). Hanoi: City of the Rising Dragon. New York: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7425-1655-7.
  • Loewe, Michael (2004), "Guangzhou: the Evidence of the Standard Histories from the Shi ji to the Chen shu, a Preliminary Survey", Guangdong: Archaeology and Early Texts (Zhou–Tang), Harrassowitz Verlag, pp. 51–80, ISBN 3-447-05060-8.
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  • Phan, Huy Lê; Nguyễn, Quang Ngọc; Nguyễn, Đình Lễ (1997). The Country Life in the Red River Delta.
  • Đào Duy Anh (2016) [First published 1964]. Đất nước Việt Nam qua các đời: nghiên cứu địa lý học lịch sử Việt Nam (in Vietnamese). Nha Nam. ISBN 978-604-94-8700-2.
  • Forbes, Andrew, and Henley, David: Vietnam Past and Present: The North (History and culture of Hanoi and Tonkin). Chiang Mai. Cognoscenti Books, 2012. ASIN: B006DCCM9Q.
  • Yü, Ying-shih (1986), "Han foreign relations", in Twitchett, Denis C.; Fairbank, John King (eds.), The Cambridge History of China: Volume 1, The Ch'in and Han Empires, 221 BC-AD 220, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 377–463
  • Logan, William S. (2001). Hanoi: Biography of a City. University of Washington Press. ISBN 978-0-295-98014-0.
  • Vann, Michael G. (2018). The Great Hanoi Rat Hunt: Empire, Disease, and Modernity in French Colonial Vietnam. New York: Oxford University Press.

External links Edit

  • Official site of Hanoi Government
  • An article in New York Times about Hanoi
  •   Hanoi travel guide from Wikivoyage
  •   Geographic data related to Hanoi at OpenStreetMap

hanoi, other, uses, disambiguation, vietnamese, nội, haː, capital, second, most, populous, city, vietnam, covers, area, consists, urban, districts, district, leveled, town, rural, districts, located, within, river, delta, northern, vietnam, nộicapital, city, m. For other uses see Hanoi disambiguation Hanoi a Vietnamese Ha Nội haː noj ʔ is the capital and second most populous city of Vietnam It covers an area of 3 359 82 km2 1 297 2 sq mi 3 It consists of 12 urban districts one district leveled town and 17 rural districts It is located within the Red River Delta of Northern Vietnam Hanoi Ha NộiCapital city and municipalityCity of HanoiThanh phố Ha NộiHanoi skylineTurtle Tower in Hoan Kiếm LakePilgrim boats toward Hương TempleHanoi Opera HouseImperial Citadel of Thăng LongTemple of LiteratureHo Chi Minh MausoleumSealNicknames City of Soaring Dragon Thanh phố rồng bay 1 The Capital of a Millennium of Culture Literature Thủ đo nghin năm văn hiến 2 Motto Dis lecta fortitudine prospera historical HanoiLocation within VietnamShow map of VietnamHanoiLocation within Southeast AsiaShow map of Southeast AsiaHanoiLocation within AsiaShow map of AsiaCoordinates 21 01 42 N 105 51 15 E 21 02833 N 105 85417 E 21 02833 105 85417Country VietnamRegionRed River DeltaFounded257 BCFounded byAn Dương VươngSeatHoan KiếmSubdivision12 urban districts 17 rural districts one district level townGovernment TypeMunicipality BodyHanoi People s Council vi Secretary of the Party CommitteeĐinh Tiến Dũng Chairman of People s CouncilNguyễn Ngọc Tuấn Chairman of People s CommitteeTrần Sỹ ThanhArea 3 Capital city and municipality3 359 82 km2 1 297 23 sq mi Urban 4 319 56 km2 123 38 sq mi Metro 5 6 24 314 7 km2 9 388 0 sq mi Highest elevation 7 1 296 m 4 252 ft Population 2022 8 Capital city and municipality8 435 700 Rank2nd Density2 500 km2 6 500 sq mi Urban 9 4 138 500 Urban density13 000 km2 34 000 sq mi Rural 10 4 297 200 Metro 6 20 000 000 Metro density820 km2 2 100 sq mi DemonymHanoianEthnic groups 11 Vietnamese 12 98 66 Mường0 77 Tay0 24 Thai0 09 Nung0 08 Others0 16 Time zoneUTC 07 00 ICT Postal code10000 14000Area codes24ISO 3166 codeVN HNLicense plate29 33 40GRP Nominal 2019 13 TotalUS 42 04 billion 14 Per capitaUS 5 196 14 Growth7 62 HDI 2020 0 799 1st 15 ClimateCwaInternational airportsNội Bai International AirportLargest district by areaBa Vi District 421 80 km2 16 Largest district by populationHoang Mai District 540 732 17 Websitehanoi gov vnUNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameCentral Sector of the Imperial Citadel of Thăng Long HanoiCriteriaCultural ii iii vi Reference1328Inscription2010 34th Session Area18 395 ha 45 46 acres Buffer zone108 ha 270 acres Hanoi s history goes back to the third century BCE when a portion of the modern day city served as the capital of the historic Vietnamese nation of Au Lạc Following the collapse of Au Lạc the city was part of Han China In 1010 Vietnamese emperor Ly Thai Tổ established the capital of the imperial Vietnamese nation Đại Việt in modern day central Hanoi naming the city Thăng Long literally Ascending Dragon Thăng Long remained Đại Việt s political centre until 1802 when the Nguyễn dynasty the last imperial Vietnamese dynasty moved the capital to Huế The city was renamed Hanoi in 1831 and served as the capital of French Indochina from 1902 to 1945 On 6 January 1946 the National Assembly of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam designated Hanoi as the capital of the newly independent country which would last during the First Indochina War 1946 1954 and the Vietnam War 1955 1975 Hanoi has been the capital of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam since 1976 A major tourist destination in Vietnam Hanoi offers well preserved French colonial architecture religious sites dedicated to Buddhism Catholicism Confucianism and Taoism several historical landmarks of Vietnamese imperial periods and a large number of museums The Central Sector of the Imperial Citadel of Thăng Long in Ba Dinh District was recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2010 Hanoi has a high Human Development Index of 0 799 ranking first amongst all the municipalities and provinces of Vietnam 18 The city hosts various venerable educational institutions and cultural venues of significance including the Vietnam National University the Mỹ Đinh National Stadium and the Vietnam National Museum of Fine Arts Hanoi was the only Asia Pacific locality to be granted the City for Peace title by the UNESCO on 16 July 1999 recognizing its contributions to the struggle for peace its efforts to promote equality in the community protect the environment promote culture and education and care for younger generations 19 President of the United States Bill Clinton made an historic visit to Vietnam in November 2000 He was the first U S leader ever to officially visit Hanoi 20 Hanoi joined UNESCO s Network of Creative Cities as a Design City on 31 October 2019 on the occasion of World Cities Day 21 The city has also hosted numerous political and international events including APEC Vietnam 2006 22 132nd Assembly of the Inter Parliamentary Union IPU 132 23 2019 North Korea United States Hanoi Summit 24 as well as 2009 Asian Indoor Games 25 and the Southeast Asian Games in 2003 and 2021 Contents 1 Names 2 History 2 1 Pre Thăng Long period 2 1 1 Kingdom of Au Lạc and Nanyue 2 1 2 Hanoi under Chinese rule 2 1 3 Protectorate of Annam 2 2 Hanoi under Independent Vietnam 2 2 1 Thăng Long Đong Đo Đong Quan Đong Kinh 2 3 During Nguyễn dynasty and the French colonial period 2 4 During WWII and American War in Vietnam 2 5 Modern Hanoi 3 Geography 3 1 Location topography 3 2 Climate 4 Administrative divisions 5 Demographics 5 1 Religion 5 2 Ethnic groups 6 Economy 7 Development 7 1 Infrastructural development 7 2 Civil society development 8 Landmarks 8 1 Old Quarter 8 2 Imperial sites 8 3 Lakes 8 4 Colonial Hanoi 8 5 Museums 8 6 Suburbs 9 Tourism 10 Entertainment 10 1 Shopping 11 Cuisine 12 Education 12 1 Reform 13 Transportation 14 Sports 15 Health care and other facilities 16 City for Peace 17 International relations 17 1 Twin towns sister cities 18 Gallery 19 See also 20 Notes 21 References 21 1 Bibliography 22 External linksNames EditHanoi has had various names throughout history It was known first as Long Bien 龍邊 dragon edge then Tống Binh 宋平 Song peace and Long Đỗ 龍肚 dragon belly Long Bien later gave its name to the famed Long Bien Bridge built during French colonial times and more recently to a new district to the east of the Red River Several older names of Hanoi feature long 龍 dragon linked to the curved formation of the Red River around the city which was symbolized as a dragon 26 27 28 In 866 it was turned into a citadel and named Đại La 大羅 big net This gave it the nickname La Thanh 羅城 net citadel Both Đại La and La Thanh are names of major streets in modern Hanoi When Ly Thai Tổ established the capital in the area in 1010 it was named Thăng Long 昇龍 rising dragon 29 30 Thăng Long later became the name of a major bridge on the highway linking the city center to Nội Bai Airport and the Thăng Long Boulevard expressway in the southwest of the city center In modern time the city is usually referred to as Thăng Long Ha Nội when its long history is discussed During the Hồ dynasty it was called Đong Đo 東都 eastern metropolis 27 31 During the Ming occupation it was called Đong Quan 東關 eastern gate 27 28 31 During the Le dynasty Hanoi was known as Đong Kinh 東京 eastern capital 32 This gave the name to Tonkin and Gulf of Tonkin A square adjacent to the Hoan Kiếm lake was named Đong Kinh Nghĩa Thục after the reformist Tonkin Free School under French colonization 27 31 After the end of the Tay Sơn had expanded further south the city was named Bắc Thanh 北城 northern citadel 27 28 31 Minh Mạng renamed the city Ha Nội 河內 inside the rivers in 1831 This has remained its official name until modern times 27 28 31 Several unofficial names of Hanoi include Kẻ Chợ marketplace Trang An long peace Phượng Thanh Phụng Thanh phoenix city Long Thanh short for Kinh thanh Thăng Long citadel of Thăng Long Kinh kỳ capital city Ha Thanh short for Thanh phố Ha Nội city of Hanoi Hoang Diệu and Thủ Đo capital 27 28 31 History EditFor a chronological guide see Timeline of Hanoi Pre Thăng Long period Edit Many vestiges of human habitation from the late Palaeolithic and early Mesolithic ages can be found in Hanoi Between 1971 and 1972 archaeologists in Ba Vi and Đong Anh discovered pebbles with traces of carving and processing by human hands that are relics of Sơn Vi Culture dating from 10 000 to 20 000 years ago 33 34 In 1998 1999 the Museum of Vietnamese History now National Museum of Vietnamese History carried out the archaeological studies in the north of Dong Mo Lake Son Tay Hanoi finding various relics and objects belonging to Sơn Vi Culture in the Paleolithic Age 20 000 years ago 35 During the mid Holocene transgression the sea level rose and immersed low lying areas geological data clearly show the coastline was inundated and was located near present day Hanoi as is apparent from the absence of Neolithic sites across most of the Bac Bo region 36 Consequently from about 10 000 to approximately 4 000 years ago Hanoi in general was completely absent 33 It is believed that the region has been continuously inhabited for the last 4 000 years 37 38 Kingdom of Au Lạc and Nanyue Edit In around third century BCE An Dương Vương established the capital of Au Lạc north of present day Hanoi where a fortified citadel is constructed known to history as Cổ Loa 39 the first political center of the Vietnamese civilization pre Sinitic era 40 with an outer embankment covering 600 hectares In 179 BC the Au Lạc Kingdom was annexed by Nanyue which ushered in more than a thousand years of Chinese domination Zhao Tuo subsequently incorporated the regions into his Nanyue domain but left the indigenous chiefs in control of the population 41 42 43 For the first time the region formed part of a polity headed by a Chinese ruler 44 Hanoi under Chinese rule Edit In 111 BC the Han dynasty conquered Nanyue and ruled it for the next several hundred years 45 46 Han dynasty organized Nanyue into seven commanderies of the south Lingnan and now included three in Vietnam alone Giao Chỉ and Cửu Chan and a newly established Nhật Nam 47 48 In March 49 of 40 AD Trưng Trắc and Trưng Nhị daughters of a wealthy aristocratic family of Lac ethnicity 50 in Me Linh district Hanoi led the locals to rise up in rebellion against the Han 49 51 52 It began at the Red River Delta but quickly spread both south and north from Jiaozhi stirring up all three Lạc Việt regions and most of Lingnan 52 50 gaining the support of about 65 towns and settlements 51 Trưng sisters then established their court upriver in Me Linh 53 54 In 42 AD the Han emperor commissioned general Ma Yuan to suppress the uprising with 32 000 men including 20 000 regulars and 12 000 regional auxiliaries 51 53 The rebellion was defeated in the next year as Ma Yuan captured and decapitated Trưng Trắc and Trưng Nhị then sent their heads to the Han court in Luoyang 55 By the middle of the fifth century in the center of ancient Hanoi a fortified settlement was founded by the Chinese Liu Song dynasty as the seat of a new district called Tống Binh Songping within Giao Chỉ commandery 56 The name refers to its pacification by the dynasty It was elevated to its own commandery at some point between AD 454 and 464 57 The commandery included the districts of Yihuai 義懷 and Suining 綏寧 in the south of the Red River now Từ Liem and Hoai Đức districts with a metropolis the domination centre in the present inner Hanoi 58 Protectorate of Annam Edit By the year 679 the Tang dynasty changed the region s name to Annan Pacified South with Songping as its capital 59 In the latter half of the eighth century Zhang Boyi a viceroy from the Tang dynasty built Luocheng to suppress popular uprisings Luocheng also known as La Thanh or La Citadel extended from Thu Le to Quan Ngua in what is now known as the Ba Dinh precinct Over time in the first half of the ninth century this fortification was expanded and renamed as Jincheng also known as Kim Thanh or Kim Citadel In 863 Nanzhao army and local people laid siege of Jincheng and defeated the Chinese armies of 150 000 60 61 In 866 Chinese jiedushi Gao Pian recaptured the city and drove out the Nanzhao and rebels 61 He renamed the city to Daluocheng 大羅城 Đại La thanh He built the wall 6 344 meters around the city which some part were more than eight meters high 62 Đại La at the time with approximate 25 000 residents included small foreign communities and residents of Persians Arabs Indian Cham Javanese and Nestorian Christians 63 became an important trading center of the Tang dynasty due to the ransacking of Guangzhou by Huang Chao rebellion 60 By early tenth century AD modern day Hanoi was known to the Muslim traders as Luqin 64 Hanoi under Independent Vietnam Edit Thăng Long Đong Đo Đong Quan Đong Kinh Edit In 1010 Ly Thai Tổ the first ruler of the Ly dynasty moved the capital of Đại Việt to the site of the Đại La Citadel Claiming to have seen a dragon ascending the Red River he renamed the site Thăng Long 昇龍 Soaring Dragon a name still used poetically to this day Thăng Long remained the capital of Đại Việt until 1397 when it was moved to Thanh Hoa then known as Tay Đo 西都 the Western Capital Thăng Long then became Đong Đo 東都 the Eastern Capital nbsp Map of Đong Kinh Hanoi in 1490 painted by Emperor Le Thanh Tong nbsp A view of Hanoi from the Red River in 1685 manuscript from Royal Society s archiveIn 1408 the Chinese Ming dynasty attacked and occupied Vietnam changing Đong Đo s name to Dongguan Chinese 東關 Eastern Gateway or Đong Quan in Sino Vietnamese In 1428 the Vietnamese overthrew the Chinese under the leadership of Le Lợi 65 better source needed who later founded the Le dynasty and renamed Đong Quan Đong Kinh 東京 Eastern Capital or Tonkin During 17th century the population of Đong Kinh was estimated by Western diplomats as about 100 000 66 Right after the end of the Tay Sơn dynasty it was named Bắc Thanh 北城 Northern Citadel During Nguyễn dynasty and the French colonial period Edit nbsp Drawing of Ha Nội citadel in the Nguyễn dynasty nbsp French troops leaving the Hanoi fortress in February 1874 nbsp French troops attacking the Hanoi fortress on 20 November 1873 When the Nguyễn dynasty was established in 1802 Gia Long moved the capital to Huế Thăng Long was no longer the capital its chữ Han was changed from 昇龍 Rising dragon to 昇隆 Ascent and prosperity aiming to reduce the sentiment of Le dynasty 67 Emperors of Vietnam usually used dragon 龍 long as a symbol of their imperial strength and power In 1831 the Nguyễn emperor Minh Mạng renamed it Ha Nội 河內 Between Rivers or River Interior Hanoi was occupied by the French in 1873 and passed to them ten years later As Hanoi it was located in the protectorate of Tonkin and became the capital of French Indochina after 1887 65 better source needed During WWII and American War in Vietnam Edit nbsp Bird eye view of Hanoi in 1944 the Hoan Kiem lake in the middleThe city was occupied by the Imperial Japanese in 1940 and liberated in 1945 when it briefly became the seat of the Việt Minh government after Ho Chi Minh proclaimed the independence of Vietnam However the French returned and reoccupied the city in 1946 After nine years of fighting between the French and Viet Minh forces Hanoi became the capital of an independent North Vietnam in 1954 The French Army withdrew that year and the People s Army of Vietnam and International Control Commission occupied the city under the terms of the 1954 Geneva Conference 68 During the Vietnam War Hanoi s transportation facilities were disrupted by the bombing of bridges and railways by the U S Seventh Air Force and Republic of Vietnam Air Force These were all however later repaired Following the end of the war Hanoi became the capital of a reunified Vietnam when North and South Vietnam were reunited on 2 July 1976 69 Modern Hanoi Edit nbsp A local police station in a French Colonial building by Hoan Kiếm lakeAfter the Đổi Mới economic policies were approved in 1986 the Communist Party and national and municipal governments hoped to attract international investments for urban development projects in Hanoi 70 The high rise commercial buildings did not begin to appear until ten years later due to the international investment community being skeptical of the security of their investments in Vietnam 70 Rapid urban development and rising costs displaced many residential areas in central Hanoi 70 Following a short period of economic stagnation after the 1997 Asian financial crisis Hanoi resumed its rapid economic growth 70 On 29 May 2008 it was decided that Ha Tay Province Vĩnh Phuc Province s Me Linh District and four communes of Lương Sơn District Hoa Binh Province be merged into the metropolitan area of Hanoi from 1 August 2008 71 Hanoi s total area then increased to 334 470 hectares in 29 subdivisions 72 with the new population being 6 232 940 72 effectively tripling its size The Hanoi Capital Region Vung Thủ đo Ha Nội a metropolitan area covering Hanoi and six surrounding provinces under its administration will have an area of 13 436 square kilometres 5 188 sq mi with 15 million people by 2020 Hanoi has experienced a rapid construction boom recently Skyscrapers appearing in new urban areas have dramatically changed the cityscape and have formed a modern skyline outside the old city In 2015 Hanoi is ranked 39th by Emporis in the list of world cities with most skyscrapers over 100 m its two tallest buildings are Hanoi Landmark 72 Tower 336 m second tallest in Vietnam after Ho Chi Minh City s Landmark 81 and third tallest in south east Asia after Malaysia s Petronas Towers and Hanoi Lotte Center 272 m also third tallest in Vietnam Public outcry in opposition to the redevelopment of culturally significant areas in Hanoi persuaded the national government to implement a low rise policy surrounding Hoan Kiếm Lake 70 The Ba Đinh District is also protected from commercial redevelopment 70 On 12 September 2023 at least 56 people died in a huge fire in an apartment block in Hanoi The blaze highlighted that many newly built apartments of fast growing Hanoi lack sufficient fire safety 73 Geography EditLocation topography Edit Hanoi is a landlocked municipality in the northern region of Vietnam situated in Vietnam s Red River delta nearly 90 km 56 mi from the coast Hanoi contains three basic kinds of terrain which are the delta area the midland area and the mountainous zone In general the terrain becomes gradually lower from north to south and from west to east with the average height ranging from 5 to 20 meters above sea level Hills and mountainous zones are located in the northern and western parts of the city The highest peak is at Ba Vi with 1281 m located west of the city proper Climate Edit Hanoi VietnamClimate chart explanation J F M A M J J A S O N D 22 19 14 24 20 15 47 23 18 91 27 21 185 31 24 253 33 26 354 33 26 300 32 26 328 31 25 140 29 22 66 25 19 20 22 15 Average max and min temperatures in C Precipitation totals in mmSource Vietnam Institute for Building Science and Technology 74 Imperial conversionJFMAMJJASOND 0 9 66 57 0 9 68 59 1 9 73 64 3 6 81 70 7 3 88 75 10 91 79 14 91 79 12 90 79 13 88 77 5 5 84 72 2 6 77 66 0 8 72 59 Average max and min temperatures in F Precipitation totals in inchesWhen using the Koppen climate classification the ClimaTemps com website ranks Hanoi as a monsoon influenced humid subtropical climate Koppen Cwa with plentiful precipitation like other places in Northern Vietnam 75 The city experiences the typical climate of northern Vietnam with four distinct seasons 76 Summer from May to September is characterized by hot and humid weather with abundant rainfall and few dry days 77 40 76 Hot dry conditions caused by westerly winds during summer are rare 77 40 From October to November comprise the fall season characterized by a decrease in temperature and precipitation this time in the year mostly are warm and mild 76 Winters from December to January are characterized as being cool by the northeast monsoon making Hanoi have a dry winter and large amount of sunshine Spring from February until the end of April Hanoi is usually characterized with large amounts of drizzle and little sunshine due to the strong activity of the southeast monsoon blowing moisture from the sea inland 76 77 40 The city is usually cloudy and foggy in this time averaging only 1 5 hours of sunshine per day in February and March The city has times to be influenced by cold waves from the Northeast Hanoi is the only capital of Southeast Asia with a subtropical climate The region has a positive water balance i e the precipitation exceeds the potential evapotranspiration 78 79 Hanoi averages 1 612 millimetres 63 5 in of rainfall per year the majority falling from May to October There are an average of 114 days with rain 76 The average annual temperature is 23 6 C 74 F with a mean relative humidity of more than 80 The coldest month has a mean temperature of 16 4 C 61 5 F and the hottest month has a mean temperature of 29 2 C 84 6 F The highest recorded temperature was 42 8 C 109 F in May 1926 while the lowest recorded temperature was 2 7 C 37 F in January 1955 76 The city have also experienced extremely hot weather on 4 June 2017 due to La Nina with the temperature reached up to 42 5 C 108 5 F in a week Hanoi can sometimes experience snow in winter The most recent snow happened on Ba Vi mountain range and the temperature fell to 0 C 32 F on January 24 2016 80 Climate data for HanoiMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 33 1 91 6 35 1 95 2 38 9 102 0 39 9 103 8 42 8 109 0 42 5 108 5 40 8 105 4 39 7 103 5 37 4 99 3 36 6 97 9 36 0 96 8 31 9 89 4 42 8 109 0 Average high C F 19 8 67 6 20 6 69 1 23 2 73 8 27 7 81 9 31 9 89 4 33 4 92 1 33 4 92 1 32 6 90 7 31 5 88 7 29 2 84 6 25 7 78 3 22 0 71 6 27 6 81 7 Daily mean C F 16 6 61 9 17 7 63 9 20 3 68 5 24 2 75 6 27 6 81 7 29 3 84 7 29 4 84 9 28 7 83 7 27 7 81 9 25 3 77 5 21 9 71 4 18 3 64 9 23 9 75 0 Average low C F 14 5 58 1 15 8 60 4 18 4 65 1 21 9 71 4 24 8 76 6 26 4 79 5 26 5 79 7 26 1 79 0 25 2 77 4 22 8 73 0 19 3 66 7 15 8 60 4 21 5 70 7 Record low C F 2 7 36 9 5 0 41 0 7 0 44 6 9 8 49 6 15 4 59 7 20 0 68 0 21 0 69 8 20 9 69 6 16 1 61 0 12 0 53 6 6 8 44 2 3 6 38 5 2 7 36 9 Average precipitation mm inches 22 5 0 89 24 6 0 97 47 0 1 85 91 8 3 61 185 4 7 30 253 3 9 97 280 1 11 03 309 4 12 18 228 3 8 99 140 7 5 54 66 7 2 63 20 2 0 80 1 670 1 65 75 Average rainy days 9 5 11 4 15 9 13 7 14 6 14 8 16 6 16 5 13 2 9 7 6 8 5 2 147 9Average relative humidity 79 9 82 5 84 5 84 7 81 1 80 0 80 7 82 7 81 0 78 5 77 1 76 2 80 7Mean monthly sunshine hours 68 7 48 1 45 5 87 4 173 7 167 0 181 1 163 0 162 4 150 3 131 6 113 0 1 488 5Average ultraviolet index 5 6 5 6 7 7 7 7 7 6 5 4 6Source 1 Vietnam Institute for Building Science and Technology 81 Source 2 Vietnamnet vn May record high and January record low only 76 Vietnamnet vn June record high only 82 Imh ac vn August record high only 83 Nchmf gov vn 84 April and May record low in The Yearbook of Indochina 85 Weather Atlas UV 86 Administrative divisions Edit nbsp Administrative divisions of HanoiHa Nội is divided into 12 urban districts 1 district leveled town and 17 rural districts When Ha Tay was merged into Hanoi in 2008 Ha Đong was transformed into an urban district while Sơn Tay is demoted to a district level town They are further subdivided into 22 commune level towns or townlets 399 communes and 145 wards Administrative divisions of HanoiName Area km2 Population 2022 Population density Subdivisions12 urban districts Quận Ba Đinh district 9 21 226 315 24 572 14 wardsBắc Từ Liem district 45 35 354 364 7 813 13 wardsCầu Giấy district 12 26 294 235 23 999 8 wardsĐống Đa district 9 95 376 709 37 860 21 wardsHa Đong districtHT 49 64 382 637 7 708 17 wardsHai Ba Trưng district 10 26 304 101 29 639 18 wardsHoan Kiếm district 5 35 141 687 26 483 18 wardsHoang Mai district 40 19 540 732 13 454 14 wardsLong Bien district 60 09 337 982 5 624 14 wardsNam Từ Liem district 32 19 282 444 8 774 10 wardsTay Hồ district 24 38 167 851 6 884 8 wardsThanh Xuan district 9 17 293 292 31 983 11 wardsSubtotal 308 04 3 702 349 12 019 166 wards1 district level town Thị xa Sơn TayHT 117 20 151 090 1 289 9 wards 6 communes17 rural districts Huyện Ba Vi districtHT 421 80 305 933 725 1 commune level town 30 communesChương Mỹ districtHT 237 48 347 564 1 463 2 commune level towns 30 communesĐan Phượng districtHT 77 83 185 653 2 385 1 commune level town 15 communesĐong Anh district 185 68 409 916 2 207 1 commune level town 23 communesGia Lam district 116 64 292 943 2 511 2 commune level towns 20 communesHoai Đức districtHT 84 92 257 633 3 033 1 commune level town 19 communesMe Linh district 141 29 241 633 1 710 2 commune level towns 16 communesMỹ Đức districtHT 226 31 203 778 900 1 commune level town 21 communesPhu Xuyen districtHT 173 56 229 847 1 324 2 commune level towns 25 communesPhuc Thọ districtHT 118 50 194 754 1 643 1 commune level town 20 communesQuốc Oai districtHT 151 22 203 079 1 342 1 commune level town 20 communesSoc Sơn district 305 51 357 652 1 170 1 commune level town 25 communesThạch Thất districtHT 187 53 223 844 1 193 1 commune level town 22 communesThanh Oai districtHT 124 47 227 541 1 828 1 commune level town 20 communesThanh Tri district 63 49 288 839 4 549 1 commune level town 15 communesThường Tin districtHT 130 13 262 222 2 015 1 commune level town 28 communesỨng Hoa districtHT 188 24 212 224 1 127 1 commune level town 28 communesSubtotal 2934 6 4 445 055 1 514 377 communes va 21 commune level townsTotal 3 359 84 8 298 494 2 469 175 wards 383 communes va 21 commune level townsSource Nien giam thống ke Ha Nội 2020 87 Thong bao số 64 TB UBND của UBND Thanh Phố Ha Nội năm 2022 88 HT formerly an administrative subdivision unit of the defunct Ha Tay Province Demographics Edit nbsp Vietnamese women wearing traditional costume Ao dai during APEC Summit 2006During the French colonial period as the capital of French Indochina Hanoi attracted a considerable number of French Chinese and Vietnamese from the surrounding areas In the 1940s the population of the city was 132 145 89 After the First Indochina War many French and Chinese people left the city to either move south or repatriate Hanoi s population only started to increase rapidly in the second half 20th century In 1954 the city had 53 thousand inhabitants covering an area of 152 km2 By 1961 the area of the city had expanded to 584 km2 and the population was 91 000 people In 1978 National Assembly Vietnam decided to expand Hanoi for the second time to 2 136 km2 with a population of 2 5 million people 90 By 1991 the area of Hanoi continued to change decreasing to 924 km2 357 sq mi but the population was still over 2 million people During the 1990s Hanoi s population increased steadily reaching 2 672 122 people in 1999 91 After the most recent expansion in August 2008 Hanoi has a population of 6 233 million and is among the 17 capitals with the largest area in the world 92 According to the 2009 census Hanoi s population is 6 451 909 people 93 As of 1 April 2019 Hanoi had a population of 8 053 663 including 3 991 919 males and 4 061 744 females 11 The population living in urban areas is 3 962 310 people accounting for 49 2 and in rural areas is 4 091 353 people accounting for 50 8 Hanoi is the second most populous city in the country after Ho Chi Minh City 8 993 082 people The average annual population growth rate from 2009 to 2019 of Hanoi is 2 22 year higher than the national growth rate 1 14 year and is the second highest in the Red River Delta only after Bắc Ninh Province 2 90 year Nowadays the city is both a major metropolitan area of Northern Vietnam and also the country s cultural and political centre putting a lot of pressure on the infrastructure some of which is antiquated and dates back to the early 20th century It has over eight million residents within the city proper and an estimated population of 20 million within the metropolitan area The number of Hanoians who have settled down for more than three generations is likely to be very small when compared to the overall population of the city Even in the Old Quarter where commerce started hundreds of years ago and consisted mostly of family businesses many of the street front stores nowadays are owned by merchants and retailers from other provinces The original owner family may have either rented out the store and moved into the adjoining house or moved out of the neighborhood altogether The pace of change has especially escalated after the abandonment of central planning economic policies and relaxing of the district based household registrar system 94 Hanoi s telephone numbers have been increased to 8 digits to cope with demand October 2008 Subscribers telephone numbers have been changed in a haphazard way however mobile phones and SIM cards are readily available in Vietnam with pre paid mobile phone credit available in all areas of Hanoi Religion Edit Buddhism Taoism and Confucianism are the main religions of Hanoi for many years Most people consider themselves Buddhist though not all of them regularly follow religion Ethnic groups Edit See also List of ethnic groups in Vietnam There are more than 50 ethnic groups in Hanoi of which the Viet Kinh is the largest according to official Vietnamese figures 2019 census accounting for 98 66 of the population followed by Mường at 0 77 and Tay at 0 24 11 Economy EditAccording to a recent ranking by PricewaterhouseCoopers Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City will be amongst the fastest growing cities in the world in terms of GDP growth from 2008 to 2025 95 In the year 2013 Hanoi contributed 12 6 to GDP exported 7 5 of total exports contributed 17 to the national budget and attracted 22 investment capital of Vietnam The city s nominal GDP at current prices reached 451 213 billion VND US 21 48 billion in 2013 which made per capita GDP stand at 63 3 million VND US 3 000 96 Industrial production in the city has experienced a rapid boom since the 1990s with average annual growth of 19 1 percent from 1991 to 1995 15 9 percent from 1996 to 2000 and 20 9 percent during 2001 2003 citation needed In addition to eight existing industrial parks Hanoi is building five new large scale industrial parks and 16 small and medium sized industrial clusters The non state economic sector is expanding fast with more than 48 000 businesses operating under the Enterprise Law as of 3 2007 97 Trade is another strong sector of the city In 2003 Hanoi had 2 000 businesses engaged in foreign trade having established ties with 161 countries and territories The city s export value grew by an average 11 6 percent each year from 1996 to 2000 and 9 1 percent during 2001 2003 citation needed The economic structure also underwent important shifts with tourism finance and banking now playing an increasingly important role Hanoi s traditional business districts are Hoan Kiếm Hai Ba Trưng and Đống Đa and newly developing Cầu Giấy Nam Từ Liem Bắc Từ Liem Thanh Xuan and Ha Đong in the west Similar to Ho Chi Minh City Hanoi enjoys a rapidly developing real estate market 98 The most notable new urban areas are central Trung Hoa Nhan Chinh Mỹ Đinh the luxurious zones of The Manor Ciputra Royal City in the Nguyễn Trai Street Thanh Xuan District and Times City in the Hai Ba Trưng District With an estimated nominal GDP of US 42 04 billion as of 2019 it is the second most productive economic area of Vietnam after Ho Chi Minh City Agriculture previously a pillar in Hanoi s economy has striven to reform itself introducing new high yield plant varieties and livestock and applying modern farming techniques 99 After the economic reforms that initiated economic growth Hanoi s appearance has also changed significantly especially in recent years Infrastructure is constantly being upgraded with new roads and an improved public transportation system 100 Hanoi has allowed many fast food chains into the city such as McDonald s Lotteria Pizza Hut KFC and others Locals in Hanoi perceive the ability to purchase fast food as an indication of luxury and permanent fixtures 101 Similarly city officials are motivated by food safety concerns and their aspirations for a modern city to replace the 67 traditional food markets with 1 000 supermarkets by 2025 This is likely to increase consumption of less nutritious foods as traditional markets are key for consumption of fresh rather than processed foods 102 Over three quarters of the jobs in Hanoi are state owned 9 of jobs are provided by collectively owned organizations 13 3 of jobs are in the private sector 103 The structure of employment has been changing rapidly as state owned institutions downsize and private enterprises grow 103 Hanoi has in migration controls which allow the city to accept only people who add skills Hanoi s economy 103 A 2006 census found that 5 600 rural produce vendors exist in Hanoi with 90 of them coming from surrounding rural areas These numbers indicate the much greater earning potential in urban rather than in rural spaces 101 The uneducated rural and mostly female street vendors are depicted as participants of microbusiness and local grassroots economic development by business reports 101 In July 2008 Hanoi s city government devised a policy to partially ban street vendors and side walk based commerce on 62 streets due to concerns about public health and modernizing the city s image to attract foreigners 101 Many foreigners believe that the vendors add a traditional and nostalgic aura to the city although street vending was much less common prior to the 1986 Đổi Mới policies 101 The vendors have not able to form effective resistance tactics to the ban and remain embedded in the dominant capitalist framework of modern Hanoi 104 Hanoi is part of the Maritime Silk Road that runs from the Chinese coast through the Strait of Malacca towards the southern tip of India to Mombasa from there through the Red Sea via the Suez Canal to the Mediterranean there to the Upper Adriatic region to the northern Italian hub of Trieste with its rail connections to Central Europe and the North Sea 105 106 107 Development EditInfrastructural development Edit A development master plan for Hanoi was designed by Ernest Hebrard in 1924 but was only partially implemented 103 The previous close relationship between the Soviet Union and Vietnam led to the creation of the first comprehensive plan for Hanoi with the assistance of Soviet planners between 1981 and 1984 108 It was never realized because it appeared to be incompatible with Hanoi s existing layout 103 In recent years two master plans have been created to guide Hanoi s development 103 The first was the Hanoi Master Plan 1990 2010 approved in April 1992 It was created out of collaboration between planners from Hanoi and the National Institute of Urban and Rural Planning in the Ministry of Construction 103 The plan s three main objectives were to create housing and a new commercial center in an area known as Nghĩa Đo expand residential and industrial areas in the Gia Lam District and develop the three southern corridors linking Hanoi to Ha Đong and the Thanh Tri District 103 The result of the land use pattern was meant to resemble a five cornered star by 2010 103 In 1998 a revised version of the Hanoi Master plan was approved to be completed in 2020 103 It addressed the significant increase of population projections within Hanoi Population densities and high rise buildings in the inner city were planned to be limited to protect the old parts of inner Hanoi 103 A rail transport system is planned to be built to expand public transport and link the Hanoi to surrounding areas Projects such as airport upgrading a golf course and cultural villages have been approved for development by the government 103 Hanoi is still faced with the problems associated with increasing urbanization Although it is a major transport hub with a large network of national routes expressways railways and is home to Noi Bai International Airport the busiest airport in Vietnam the disparity of wealth between the rich and the poor is a problem in both the capital and throughout the country 103 Hanoi s public infrastructure was assessed as in poor condition with high amounts of pollution and congestion in 2001 The city also has air and water pollution difficult road conditions traffic congestion and a rudimentary public transit system Traffic congestion and air pollution are worsening as the number of motor cycles increases Squatter settlements are expanding on the outer rim of the city as homelessness rises 2001 103 In the late 1980s the United Nations Development Programme UNDP and the Vietnamese government had designed a project to develop rural infrastructure 103 The project focused on improving roads water supply and sanitation and educational health and social facilities because economic development in the communes and rural areas surrounding Hanoi is dependent on the infrastructural links between the rural and urban areas especially for the sale of rural products 103 The project aimed to use locally available resources and knowledge such as compressed earth construction techniques for building It was jointly funded by the UNDP the Vietnamese government and resources raised by the local communities and governments In four communes the local communities contributed 37 of the total budget 103 Local labor community support and joint funding were decided as necessary for the long term sustainability of the project 103 Civil society development Edit Part of the goals of the Đổi Mới economic reforms was to decentralize governance for purpose of economic improvement This led to the establishment of the first issue oriented civic organizations in Hanoi In the 1990s Hanoi experienced significant poverty alleviation as a result of both the market reforms and civil society movements 109 Most of the civic organizations in Hanoi were established after 1995 at a rate much slower than in Ho Chi Minh City 110 Organizations in Hanoi are more tradition bound focused on policy education research professional interests and appealing to governmental organizations to solve social problems 110 This marked difference from Ho Chi Minh s civic organizations which practice more direct intervention to tackle social issues may be attributed to the different societal identities of North and South Vietnam 110 Hanoi based civic organizations use more systematic development and less of a direct intervention approach to deal with issues of rural development poverty alleviation and environmental protection They rely more heavily on full time staff than volunteers In Hanoi 16 7 of civic organizations accept anyone as a registered member and 73 9 claim to have their own budgets as opposed to 90 9 in Ho Chi Minh City 110 A majority of the civic organizations in Hanoi find it difficult to work with governmental organizations Many of the strained relations between non governmental and governmental organizations results from statism a bias against non state organizations on the part of government entities 110 Landmarks Edit nbsp One Pillar PagodaAs the capital of Vietnam for almost a thousand years Hanoi is considered one of the main cultural centres of Vietnam where most Vietnamese dynasties have left their imprint Even though some relics have not survived through wars and time the city still has many interesting cultural and historic monuments for visitors and residents alike Even when the nation s capital moved to Huế under the Nguyễn Dynasty in 1802 the city of Hanoi continued to flourish especially after the French took control in 1888 and modeled the city s architecture to their tastes lending an important aesthetic to the city s rich stylistic heritage The city hosts more cultural sites than any other city in Vietnam 111 and boasts more than 1 000 years of history that of the past few hundred years has been well preserved 112 Old Quarter Edit Main article Old Quarter The Old Quarter near Hoan Kiếm Lake maintains most of the original street layout and some of the architecture of old Hanoi At the beginning of the 20th century Hanoi consisted of the 36 streets the citadel and some of the newer French buildings south of Hoan Kiếm lake most of which are now part of Hoan Kiếm district 113 Each street had merchants and households specializing in a particular trade such as silk jewelry or even bamboo The street names still reflect these specializations although few of them remain exclusively in their original commerce 114 The area is famous for its specializations in trades such as traditional medicine and local handicrafts including silk shops bamboo carpenters and tin smiths Local cuisine specialties as well as several clubs and bars can be found here also A night market near Đồng Xuan Market in the heart of the district opens for business every Friday Saturday and Sunday evening with a variety of clothing souvenirs and food Went through more than six decades of French colonization and centuries of sociocultural influence from China French and Chinese cultures have influenced the designs of the old houses in Hanoi The Franco Chinese or hybrid architecture in Vietnam have shown the cultural additivity in Vietnamese architecture is reflected in the front of a house in the co existence of French styled columns Confucian scrolls the Taoist yin yang sign and the Buddhist lotus sculpture 115 Imperial sites Edit nbsp Front gate of the Temple of LiteratureImperior sites are mostly in Ba Đinh District and a bit of Đống Đa District They are juxtaposed with French colonial architecture villas administrative buildings and tree lined boulevards Some prominent edifices from feudal time include the Temple of Literature Văn Miếu site of the oldest university in Vietnam which was started in 1010 the One Pillar Pagoda Chua Một Cột which was built based on the dream of king Ly Thai Tong 1028 1054 in 1049 and the Flag Tower of Hanoi Cột cờ Ha Nội In 2004 a massive part of the 900 year old Hanoi Citadel was discovered in central Hanoi near the site of Ba Đinh Square 116 Lakes Edit A city between rivers built on lowlands Hanoi has many scenic lakes and is sometimes called the city of lakes Among its lakes the most famous are Hoan Kiếm Lake West Lake Truc Bạch Lake and Bảy Mẫu Lake inside Thống Nhất Park Hoan Kiếm Lake also known as Sword Lake is the historical and cultural center of Hanoi and is linked to the legend of the magic sword West Lake Hồ Tay is a popular place for people to spend time It is the largest lake in Hanoi with many temples in the area The lakeside road in the Nghi Tam Quang Ba area is perfect for bicycling jogging and viewing the cityscape or enjoying the lotus ponds in the summer The best way to see the majestic beauty of a West Lake sunset is to view it from one of the many bars around the lake especially from The Summit at Pan Pacific Hanoi formally known as Summit Lounge at Sofitel Plaza Hanoi Colonial Hanoi Edit nbsp The Tonkin Palace used to host the French Governor of Tonkin nbsp The Hanoi Opera House taken in the early 20th century from rue Paul Bert now Trang Tien street nbsp The Hotel Metropole was opened in 1901 Hanoi was the capital and the administrative center for French Indochina for most of the colonial period from 1902 to 1945 The French colonial architectural style became dominant 117 and many examples remain today tree lined boulevards such as Phan Dinh Phung street Hoang Dieu street and Tran Phu street and many villas mansions and government buildings Some notable colonial structures are an eclectic mixture of French and traditional Vietnamese architectural styles such as the National Museum of Vietnamese History the Vietnam National Museum of Fine Arts and the old Indochina Medical College Gouveneur General Paul Doumer 1898 1902 played a crucial role in colonial Hanoi s urban planning Under his tenure there was a major construction boom 118 French Colonial buildings in Hanoi are mostly in Ba Đinh District and the south of Hoan Kiếm District the two French Quarters of the city Notable landmarks include In Ba Đinh district Presidential Palace Cửa Bắc Church Ministry of Foreign Affairs building Several ministries government agencies and foreign embassiesIn Hoan Kiếm district Grand Opera House St Joseph s Cathedral Long Bien Bridge Grand Palais French School of the Far East Hotel Metropole Tonkin Palace State Guest House Hỏa Lo Prison Supreme Court building Indochina Medical College Museum of Revolution Central Station State Bank of Vietnam Several foreign embassiesMuseums Edit nbsp Traditional Hanoi dwelling Museum of Ethnology HanoiHanoi is home to a number of museums National Museum of Vietnamese History Vietnam National Museum of Fine Arts Vietnam Museum of Ethnology Vietnam Museum of Revolution Hỏa Lo Prison Ho Chi Minh Museum Hanoi Contemporary Arts Centre Vietnam Military History Museum Hanoi MuseumSuburbs Edit nbsp Pilgrimage at Perfume PagodaHanoi s western suburbs previously Ha Tay Province offers a number of important religious sites The Thầy Pagoda in Quốc Oai District was established in the 11th century and dedicated to Vietnamese Thiền master Từ Đạo Hạnh 119 120 It is one of the oldest Buddhist temples in Vietnam 121 122 The Perfume Pagoda is a vast complex of Buddhist temples and shrines built into the limestone Huong Tich mountains It has a long pilgrimage route along the Yen river Tourism Edit nbsp Approximation of Hanoi s Old Quarter and French QuartersAccording to Mastercard s 2019 report Hanoi is Vietnam s most visited city 15th in Asia Pacific with 4 8 million overnight international visitors in 2018 123 Hanoi is sometimes dubbed the Paris of the East for its French influences 124 With its tree fringed boulevards more than two dozen lakes and thousands of French colonial era buildings Hanoi is a popular tourist destination The tourist destinations in Hanoi are generally grouped into two main areas the Old Quarter and the French Quarter s The Old Quarter is in the northern half of Hoan Kiếm District with small street blocks and alleys and a traditional Vietnamese atmosphere Many streets in the Old Quarter have names signifying the goods hang the local merchants were or are specialized in For example Hang Bạc silver stores still have many stores specializing in trading silver and jewelries Two areas are generally called the French Quarters the governmental area in Ba Đinh District and the south of Hoan Kiếm District Both areas have distinctive French Colonial style villas and broad tree lined avenues The political center of Vietnam Ba Đinh has a high concentration of Vietnamese government headquarters including the Presidential Palace the National Assembly Building and several ministries and embassies most of which used administrative buildings of colonial French Indochina The One Pillar Pagoda the Lycee du Protectorat and the Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum are also in Ba Dinh South of Hoan Kiếm s French Quarter has several French Colonial landmarks including the Hanoi Opera House the Sofitel Legend Metropole Hanoi hotel the National Museum of Vietnamese History formerly the Ecole francaise d Extreme Orient and the St Joseph s Cathedral Most of the French Colonial buildings in Hoan Kiem are now used as foreign embassies Since 2014 Hanoi has consistently been voted in the world s top ten destinations by TripAdvisor It ranked eighth in 2014 125 fourth in 2015 126 and eighth in 2016 127 Hanoi is the most affordable international destination in TripAdvisor s annual TripIndex report In 2017 Hanoi will welcome more than 5 million international tourists Entertainment Edit nbsp Performance of the water puppet theatre Thăng LongA variety of options for entertainment in Hanoi can be found throughout the city Modern and traditional theaters cinemas karaoke bars dance clubs bowling alleys and an abundance of opportunities for shopping provide leisure activity for both locals and tourists Hanoi has been named one of the top 10 cities for shopping in Asia by Water Puppet Tours 128 The number of art galleries exhibiting Vietnamese art has dramatically increased in recent years now including galleries such as Nhat Huy of Huynh Thong Nhat Nha Triển Lam at 29 Hang Bai street hosts regular photo sculpture and paint exhibitions in conjuncture with local artists and travelling international expositions A popular traditional form of entertainment is water puppetry which is shown for example at the Thăng Long Water Puppet Theatre Shopping Edit To adapt to Hanoi s rapid economic growth and high population density many modern shopping centers and megamalls have been opened in Hanoi Major malls are Trang Tien Plaza High end Mall on Trang Tien street right next to Hoan Kiếm Lake Hoan Kiếm District Vincom Center a modern mall with hi end CGV cineplex Ba Trieu Street just 2 km from Hoan Kiem lake Hai Ba Trưng District The Garden Shopping Center Me Tri Mỹ Đinh Nam Từ Liem District Indochina Plaza Xuan Thuy street Cầu Giấy District Vincom Royal City Megamall the largest underground mall in Asia with 230 000 square metres of shops restaurants cineplex waterpark formerly cinema ice skating rink Nguyen Trai street approx 6 km from Hoan Kiem Lake Thanh Xuan District Vincom Times City Megamall another megamall of 230 000 square metres including shops restaurants cineplex huge musical fountain on central square and a giant aquarium Minh Khai street approx 5 km from Hoan Kiem Lake Hai Ba Trung district Lotte Department Store opened September 2014 Lieu Giai Street Ba Đinh District Aeon Mall Long Bien opened last October 2015 Long Bien District Aeon Mall Ha Dong opened in the end of 2019 Ha Dong districtCuisine Edit nbsp Chả ca La Vọng a dish that originated in HanoiHanoi has rich culinary traditions Many of Vietnam s most famous dishes such as phở bun chả chả ca La Vọng banh cuốn and cốm are believed to have originated in Hanoi Two varieties of phở dominate the Hanoi scene phở bo containing beef and phở ga containing chicken Bun chả a dish consisting of charcoal roasted pork served in a sweet salty soup with rice noodle vermicelli and lettuce is by far the most popular food item among locals President Barack Obama famously tried this dish at a Le Van Huu eatery with Anthony Bourdain in 2016 prompting the opening of a bun chả restaurant bearing his name in the Old Quarter Vietnam s national dish phở has been named as one of the Top 5 street foods in the world by globalpost 129 Hanoi has a number of restaurants whose menus specifically offer dishes containing snake 130 131 and various species of insects Insect inspired menus can be found at a number of restaurants in Khuong Thuong village Hanoi 132 The signature dishes at these restaurant are those containing processed ant eggs often in the culinary styles of Thai people or Vietnam s Muong and Tay ethnic people 133 Dog eating used to be popular in Hanoi in 1990s and early 2000s but is now dying out quickly due to strong objections Education Edit nbsp The Hanoi Medical University was the first modern university in Vietnam Hanoi as the capital of French Indochina was home to the first Western style universities in Indochina including Indochina Medical College 1902 now Hanoi Medical University Indochina University 1904 now Hanoi National University the largest and Ecole Superieure des Beaux Arts de l Indochine 1925 now Hanoi University of Fine Art After the Communist Party of Vietnam took control of Hanoi in 1954 many new universities were built among them Hanoi University of Science and Technology Recently ULIS University of Languages and International Studies was rated as one of the top universities in south east Asia for languages and language studies at the undergraduate level 134 Other universities that are not part of Vietnam National University or Hanoi University include Hanoi School for Public Health Hanoi School of Agriculture Electric Power University and University of Transport and Communications It is estimated that 62 of the scientists in the whole country are living and working in Hanoi 135 Admissions to undergraduate study are through entrance examinations which are conducted annually and open to everyone who has successfully completed his her secondary education in the country The majority of universities in Hanoi are public although in recent years a number of private universities have begun operation Thăng Long University founded in 1988 by Vietnamese mathematics professors in Hanoi and France 136 was the first private university in Vietnam Because many of Vietnam s major universities are located in Hanoi students from other provinces especially in the northern part of the country wishing to enter university often travel to Hanoi for the annual entrance examination Such events usually take place in June and July during which a large number of students and their families converge on the city for several weeks around the intense examination period In recent years these entrance exams have been centrally coordinated by the Ministry of Education but entrance requirements are decided independently by each university Although there are state owned kindergartens there are also many private ventures that serve both local and international needs Pre tertiary elementary and secondary schools in Hanoi are generally state run but there are also some independent schools Education is equivalent to the K 12 system in the U S with elementary school between grades 1 and 5 middle school or junior high between grades 6 and 9 and high school from grades 10 to 12 There are several specialised school or high school for the gifted in Hanoi where excellent students in Hanoi attend Some schools include Hanoi Amsterdam High School Chu Van An High School Foreign Language Specialized School Nguyen Hue High School for the Gifted High School for Gifted Students Hanoi National University of Education High School for Gifted Students Hanoi University of ScienceEducation levels are much higher within the city of Hanoi in comparison to the suburban areas outside the city About 33 8 of the labor force in the city has completed secondary school in contrast to 19 4 in the suburbs 103 21 of the labor force in the city has completed tertiary education in contrast to 4 1 in the suburbs 103 International schools include British International School Hanoi British Vietnamese International School Hanoi Hanoi International School Japanese School of Hanoi Korean International School in Hanoi Lycee francais Alexandre Yersin United Nations International School of Hanoi Vietnam Australia School HanoiFormer schools Lycee Albert SarrautReform Edit Country wide educational change is difficult in Vietnam due to the restrictive control of the government on social and economic development strategies 137 According to Hanoi government publications the national system of education was reformed in 1950 1956 and 1970 137 It was not until 1975 when the two separate education systems of the former North and South Vietnam territories became unified under a single national system 137 In Hanoi in December 1996 the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Vietnam stated that To carry out industrialization and modernization successfully it is necessary to develop education and training strongly and to maximize human resources the key factor of fast and sustained development 137 Transportation EditSee also Buses in Hanoi nbsp Inside International Terminal in Noi Bai International AirportHanoi has 1 370 streets and roads with the total length of over 2 300 km 1 429 mi 573 bridges of which 483 small to middle bridges 13 light overpasses for vehicle 70 pedestrian overpasses and 7 main bridges Chương Dương Vĩnh Tuy Thanh Tri Nhật Tan Đong Tru Thăng Long and Phung 115 tunnels including 9 main tunnels 39 pedestrian tunnels and 67 underpass In total the proportion of land for traffic in the city 2021 is 10 3 The city also has 63 km 39 mi of inland waterway which are Yến stream Hai stream Ca Lồ and Đay river 138 Hanoi is served by Noi Bai International Airport located in the Soc Son District approximately 15 km 9 mi north of Hanoi The new international terminal T2 designed and built by Japanese contractors opened in January 2015 and is a big facelift for the airport In addition a new highway and the new Nhat Tan cable stay bridge connecting the airport and the city center opened at the same time offering much more convenience than the old road via Thang Long bridge Taxis are plentiful and usually have meters although it is also common to agree on the trip price before taking a taxi from the airport to the city centre Hanoi is also the origin or departure point for many Vietnam Railways train routes in the country with 6 national railway lines pass through the city with a total length of 162 km 101 mi 138 The Reunification Express tau Thống Nhất runs from Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh City from Hanoi station formerly Hang Co station with stops at cities and provinces along the line Trains also depart Hanoi frequently for Hai Phong and other northern cities The Reunification Express line was established during French colonial rule and was completed over a period of nearly forty years from 1899 to 1936 139 The Reunification Express between Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City covers a distance of 1 726 km 1 072 mi and takes approximately 33 hours 140 As of 2005 there were 278 stations on the Vietnamese railway network of which 191 were located along the north south line The main means of transport within Hanoi city are motorbikes buses taxis and a rising number of cars In recent decades motorbikes have overtaken bicycles as the main form of transportation Cars however are probably the most notable change in the past five years as many Vietnamese people purchase the vehicles for the first time The increased number of cars are the main cause of gridlock as roads and infrastructure in the older parts of Hanoi were not designed to accommodate them 141 On 4 July 2017 the Hanoi government voted to ban motorbikes entirely by 2030 to reduce pollution congestion and encourage the expansion and use of public transport 142 Number of vehicles registered in Hanoi as of July 2022 is over 7 6 million including more than 1 million cars over 6 4 million motorcycles of and 179 000 electric motorbikes This figure does not include vehicles of the armed forces diplomatic missions and other localities s vehicles operating in Hanoi 138 There are two metro lines in Hanoi one of which is under construction as part of the master plan for the future Hanoi Metro system 143 Line 2A opened on 6 November 2021 144 while line 3 is expected to begin operation in 2023 Persons on their own or traveling in a pair who wish to make a fast trip around Hanoi to avoid traffic jams or to travel at an irregular time or by way of an irregular route often use xe om literally hug bike Motorbikes can also be rented from agents within the Old Quarter of Hanoi although this falls inside a rather grey legal area 145 Sports Edit nbsp Mỹ Đinh National StadiumThere are several gymnasiums and stadiums throughout the city of Hanoi The most approved ones are Mỹ Đinh National Stadium Le Đức Thọ Boulevard Quần Ngựa Sports Palace Văn Cao Avenue Hanoi Aquatics Sports Complex and Hanoi Indoor Games Gymnasium The others include Hang Đẫy Stadium The third Asian Indoor Games were held in Hanoi in 2009 The others are Hai Ba Trưng Gymnasium Trịnh Hoai Đức Gymnasium Vạn Bảo Sports Complex On 6 November 2018 it was announced that in 2020 Hanoi would become the host of the first FIA Formula 1 Vietnamese Grand Prix on a street circuit on the outskirts of the city 146 The race was initially postponed and later cancelled due to the COVID 19 pandemic and the inaugural edition of the event postponed to 2021 147 The Grand Prix was removed from the 2021 calendar because of the arrest of Hanoi People s Committee Chairman Nguyễn Đức Chung on corruption charges unrelated to the Grand Prix As a result it s unclear whether the race will be held at all 148 Hanoi has two basketball teams that compete in the Vietnam Basketball Association VBA the Hanoi Buffaloes and Thang Long Warriors Hang Đẫy Stadium is home to three football clubs Hanoi Hanoi Police and Viettel both participating in V League 1 Health care and other facilities EditSome medical facilities in Hanoi Bạch Mai Hospital Viet Duc Hospital Saint Paul General Hospital 108 Military Central Hospital Hopital Francais de Hanoi International SOS Hanoi Medical University Hospital Thanh Nhan Hospital Vinmec International Hospital Thu Cuc General Hospital K Hospital Medlatech HospitalCity for Peace EditOn 16 July 1999 the United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization UNESCO presented the title City for Peace to Hanoi because the city met the following criteria Exemplary action against exclusion and in support of the dialogue between communities Exemplary urban action Exemplary environmental action Exemplary action to promote culture Exemplary action in the field of education and especially civic education 149 Hanoi is the only city in Asia Pacific that was granted this title International relations EditHanoi is a member of the Asian Network of Major Cities 21 and the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group Twin towns sister cities Edit See also List of twin towns and sister cities in Vietnam Hanoi is twinned with nbsp Phnom Penh Cambodia 150 nbsp Jakarta Indonesia 151 nbsp Fukuoka Prefecture Japan 152 nbsp Astana Kazakhstan 153 nbsp Seoul South Korea 154 nbsp Warsaw Poland 155 nbsp Moscow Russia 156 nbsp Victoria Seychelles 157 nbsp Bangkok Thailand 158 nbsp Beijing China 159 nbsp Ankara Turkey 160 nbsp Minsk Belarus 161 nbsp Palermo Italy 162 nbsp Pretoria South Africa 163 Gallery Edit nbsp Life on the streets of the Old Quarter nbsp Thien Tru Pagoda in the Perfume Pagoda complex nbsp Thap But Pen Tower with a phrase Tả thanh thien meaning Write on the sky next to Hoan Kiếm Lake 2007 nbsp The Huc Bridge on Hoan Kiếm Lake nbsp Presidential Palace Hanoi formerly Place of The Governor General of French Indochina nbsp Hanoi Opera House modelled on the Palais Garnier in Paris nbsp Long Bien Bridge nbsp Museum of Vietnamese History in Hanoi formerly the first Ecole francaise d Extreme Orient nbsp Tonkin Palace serves as State Guest House nbsp Vietnam National Museum of Fine Arts nbsp National Assembly building nbsp Vietnam National Convention Center nbsp Lotte Center Hanoi in western Ba Đinh nbsp AON Landmark 72 in Nam Từ Liem nbsp Inspiration of French Colonial architecture in Hanoi s modern buildingsSee also Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hanoi category Gioi Market Đồng Xuan Market North South Railway Vietnam List of historical capitals of Vietnam Ho Chi Minh CityAll pages with titles containing HanoiNotes Edit Sometime spelled as Ha Noi or Ha Nội in English by Vietnam based media citation needed References Edit Thăng Long Ha Nội thanh phố rồng bay Archived 5 June 2022 at the Wayback Machine tuoitre vn 2010 10 10 Từ Thủ đo nghin năm văn hiến đến thanh phố vi hoa binh 20 July 2019 Archived from the original on 25 November 2020 Retrieved 25 December 2020 a b Phe duyệt va cong bố kết quả thống ke diện tich đất đai năm 2020 Announcements of area statistics for the whole country in 2020 Decision No 387 QĐ BTNMT of 2 March 2022 in Vietnamese Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment Vietnam Phạm Đinh Tuyển 2019 Khu cong vien đổi mới sang tạo phia Tay Ha Nội Tạp chi kiến truc Architecture Magazine No 9 Hội Kiến truc sư Việt Nam Vietnam Association of Architects Archived from the original on 30 July 2022 Retrieved 30 July 2022 Nguyễn Tố Lăng 28 January 2021 Nhận diện vấn đề đo thị va quản ly phat triển đo thị khi đất nước dần trở thanh nước cong nghiệp theo hướng hiện đại kỳ 1 Tạp chi Cộng sản ISSN 2734 9071 Archived from the original on 30 July 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October 2021 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link The Associated Press 3 July 1976 2 Parts of Vietnam Officially Reunited Leadership Chosen The Independent Bangkok pp 1 2 ProQuest 122960360 Archived from the original on 30 July 2022 Retrieved 26 October 2021 a b c d e f Logan William S 2005 The Cultural Role of Capital Cities Hanoi and Hue Vietnam Pacific Affairs 78 4 559 575 doi 10 5509 2005784559 JSTOR 40022968 Country files GNS National Geospatial Intelligence Agency Archived from the original on 4 May 2012 Retrieved 6 April 2007 a b Hơn 90 đại biểu Quốc hội tan thanh mở rộng Ha Nội Dantri Archived from the original on 24 September 2008 Retrieved 29 May 2008 Vietnam fire 56 dead and dozens injured in Hanoi apartment blaze BBC News 13 September 2023 Vietnam Building Code Natural Physical amp Climatic Data for Construction PDF ibst vn Archived from the original PDF on 22 July 2018 Retrieved 25 May 2022 Peel M C Finlayson B L McMahon T A 2007 Updated world map of the Koppen Geiger climate classification PDF Hydrol Earth Syst Sci 11 5 1633 1644 Bibcode 2007HESS 11 1633P doi 10 5194 hess 11 1633 2007 ISSN 1027 5606 Archived PDF from the original on 3 February 2012 a b c d e f g KHAI QUAT VỀ HA NỘI in Vietnamese Hanoi gov vn Archived from the original on 21 February 2009 Retrieved 17 October 2015 a b c Viet Nam Assessment Report on Climate Change VARCC PDF Institute of Strategy and Policy on Natural Resources and Environment p 31 Archived from the original PDF on 13 January 2011 Retrieved 9 November 2018 Chuc N Singh Piara Komuravelly Srinivas Akkinapally Ramakrishna Chinh N Thang N Wani Suhas Long T 2006 Yield Gap Analysis of Major Rainfed Crops of Northern Vietnam Using Simulation Modeling Global Theme on Agroecosystems Report No 26 Report International Crops Research Institute for the Semi Arid Tropics pp 9 10 Thi Phuong Quynh Le Christina Seidler Matthias Kandler Thi Bich Nga Tran 19 September 2011 Proposed methods for potential evapotranspiration calculation of the Red River basin North Vietnam Hydrological Processes 26 18 2782 2790 doi 10 1002 hyp 8315 S2CID 140693137 VnExpress Tuyết rơi tren nui Ba Vi Ha Nội vnexpress net in Vietnamese Archived from the original on 29 April 2022 Retrieved 29 April 2022 Vietnam Institute for Building Science and Technology PDF Ha Nội nong kỷ lục 41 5 độ in Vietnamese danviet vn Archived from the original on 3 June 2017 Retrieved 4 June 2017 THONG BAO VA DỰ BAO KHI HẬU MUA X XI XII NĂM 2019 PDF in Vietnamese imh ac vn Archived PDF from the original on 5 August 2022 Retrieved 6 August 2022 THỜI TIẾT HA NỘI in Vietnamese nchmf gov vn Archived from the original on 29 September 2018 Retrieved 30 September 2018 VIỆT NAM NIEN GIAM THỐNG KE PDF Southeast Asian Development Archived 10 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine Hanoi Vietnam Detailed climate information and monthly weather forecast Weather Atlas Retrieved 1 August 2022 Cục thống ke 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Beijing Archived from the original on 4 March 2021 Retrieved 21 July 2021 Ankaranin Kardes Sehirleri ankara bel tr in Turkish Ankara Archived from the original on 20 May 2021 Retrieved 21 July 2021 Twin towns of Minsk minsk gov by Minsk Archived from the original on 9 September 2020 Retrieved 8 January 2021 Comune di Palermo comune italia it in Italian Comune Italia Archived from the original on 1 February 2020 Retrieved 8 January 2021 SA grows ties with Vietnam as ally vukuzenzele gov za Vuk uzenzele September 2013 Archived from the original on 16 September 2021 Retrieved 8 January 2021 Bibliography Edit See also Bibliography of the history of Hanoi Boudarel Georges 2002 Hanoi City Of The Rising Dragon Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers Inc ISBN 978 0 7425 1655 7 Bielestein Hans 1986 Wang Mang the restoration of the Han dynasty and Later Han in Twitchett Denis C Fairbank John King eds The Cambridge History of China Volume 1 The Ch in and Han Empires 221 BC AD 220 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 223 290 Dodd Jan Lewis Mark 2003 Rough Guide to Vietnam Rough Guides ISBN 978 1 84353 095 4 Drummond Lisa Thomas Mandy 5 June 2003 Consuming Urban Culture in Contemporary Vietnam Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 203 98794 0 Jamieson Neil L 1995 Understanding Vietnam University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 20157 6 Buttinger Joseph 1958 The Smaller Dragon A Political History of Vietnam Praeger Publishers Brindley Erica 2015 Ancient China and the Yue Perceptions and Identities on the Southern Frontier C 400 BCE 50 CE Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 08478 0 Nam C Kim 2015 The Origins of Ancient Vietnam Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 998089 5 Taylor Keith Weller 1983 The Birth of Vietnam University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 07417 0 Taylor Keith Weller 2013 A History of the Vietnamese Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 87586 8 Miksic John Norman Yian Go Geok 2016 Ancient Southeast Asia Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 317 27903 7 Kiernan Ben 2019 Việt Nam a history from earliest time to the present Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 005379 6 Purton Peter Fraser 2009 A History of the Late Medieval Siege 450 1220 Boydell amp Brewer ISBN 978 1 84383 448 9 Park Hyunhee 2012 Mapping the Chinese and Islamic Worlds Cross Cultural Exchange in Pre Modern Asia Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 01868 6 Boudarel Georges Nguyen Van Ky Nguyễn Văn Ky 2002 Duiker Claire ed Hanoi City of the Rising Dragon New York Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers ISBN 978 0 7425 1655 7 Loewe Michael 2004 Guangzhou the Evidence of the Standard Histories from the Shi ji to the Chen shu a Preliminary Survey Guangdong Archaeology and Early Texts Zhou Tang Harrassowitz Verlag pp 51 80 ISBN 3 447 05060 8 Rutherford Scott 1 December 2002 Vietnam Langenscheidt Publishing Group ISBN 978 981 234 984 2 Tran Quoc Vuong amp al et al 1977 Hanoi From the Origins to the 19th Century Vietnamese Studies Hanoi Xunhasaba Phan Huy Le Nguyễn Quang Ngọc Nguyễn Đinh Lễ 1997 The Country Life in the Red River Delta Đao Duy Anh 2016 First published 1964 Đất nước Việt Nam qua cac đời nghien cứu địa ly học lịch sử Việt Nam in Vietnamese Nha Nam ISBN 978 604 94 8700 2 Forbes Andrew and Henley David Vietnam Past and Present The North History and culture of Hanoi and Tonkin Chiang Mai Cognoscenti Books 2012 ASIN B006DCCM9Q Yu Ying shih 1986 Han foreign relations in Twitchett Denis C Fairbank John King eds The Cambridge History of China Volume 1 The Ch in and Han Empires 221 BC AD 220 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 377 463 Logan William S 2001 Hanoi Biography of a City University of Washington Press ISBN 978 0 295 98014 0 Vann Michael G 2018 The Great Hanoi Rat Hunt Empire Disease and Modernity in French Colonial Vietnam New York Oxford University Press External links EditOfficial site of Hanoi Government An article in New York Times about Hanoi nbsp Hanoi travel guide from Wikivoyage nbsp Geographic data related to Hanoi at OpenStreetMap Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hanoi amp oldid 1177128100, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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