Vietnam | History, Population, Map, Flag, Government, & Facts
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- Introduction & Quick Facts
- Land
- Relief
- Drainage
- Soils
- Climate
- Plant and animal life
- People
- Ethnic groups
- Languages
- Religion
- Settlement patterns
- Demographic trends
- Economy
- Agriculture, forestry, and fishing
- Resources and power
- Manufacturing
- Finance
- Trade
- Services
- labor and taxation
- Transportation and telecommunications
- Government and society
- Constitutional framework
- Local government
- Justice
- Political process
- Security
- Health and welfare
- Education
- Cultural life
- Daily life and social customs
- The arts
- Literature
- Theater
- Music
- Visual arts
- Cultural institutions
- Sports and recreation
- Media and publishing
- History
- Origins of the Vietnamese people
- Legends and early history of Vietnam
- Legendary kingdoms
- Nam Viet
- Early society
- Vietnam under Chinese rule
- The first period of independence
- The Ly dynasty
- The Tran dynasty
- Expansion, division, and reunification
- The Later Le dynasty
- Two divisions of Dai Viet
- State and society in precolonial Vietnam
- Western penetration of Vietnam
- The conquest of Vietnam by France
- Colonial Vietnam
- French administration
- Effects of French colonial rule
- Movements of national liberation
- Modern nationalism
- Vietnamese communism
- World War II and independence
- The First Indochina War
- The two Vietnams (1954–65)
- The Second Indochina War
- Growing U.S. involvement in the war
- Withdrawal of U.S. troops
- The Socialist Republic of Vietnam
- Reunification and early challenges
- Vietnam since c. 1990
- How did Vietnam’s geography influence its historical development?
- How was Vietnam shaped by its relationships with neighboring countries?
- What is the legacy of French colonization in Vietnam?
- How did the Vietnam War affect the country, and what challenges did Vietnam face after reunification in 1976?
- What role does the Vietnamese Communist Party play in the country’s political system?
- Table Of Contents
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External Websites- GlobalSecurity.org - Vietnam - Introduction
- Official Tourism Site of Vietnam
- Central Intelligence Agency - The World Factbook - Vietnam
- Vietnam - Children's Encyclopedia (Ages 8-11)
- Vietnam - Student Encyclopedia (Ages 11 and up)
How did Vietnam’s geography influence its historical development?
Vietnam’s main geographic features include the mountains of the Annamese Cordillera, the Red River delta in the north, the Mekong River delta in the south, a long coastal plain along the eastern coast, and dense forests throughout the country. These natural features shaped settlement and agricultural patterns while also making the country highly defensible against external forces, including those from China, the Mongol empire, France, and the United States.
How was Vietnam shaped by its relationships with neighboring countries?
Vietnam’s interactions with neighboring countries, especially China, deeply influenced its history. After achieving independence from China in 938 ce, Vietnam maintained a tributary relationship in which it exchanged goods for Chinese philosophical, administrative, and literary influence. Meanwhile, Vietnam expanded its territory southward, conquering Champa in 1471 and later parts of the Khmer empire, including the Mekong River delta. By 1757 Vietnam had largely reached its present size, with Soc Trang annexed in 1840.
What is the legacy of French colonization in Vietnam?
French rule exploited Vietnam’s resources and led to widespread poverty. In response, the Vietnamese engaged in a long and determined struggle to expel the French, culminating in their victory at the Battle of Dien Bien Phu in 1954 and the subsequent Geneva Accords, which reaffirmed the country’s independence. This anti-colonial resistance, along with Vietnam’s victory against the United States in the Vietnam War two decades later, has become a key part of Vietnam’s national identity.
How did the Vietnam War affect the country, and what challenges did Vietnam face after reunification in 1976?
The Vietnam War began as a civil war but escalated into a massively destructive international conflict. North Vietnam, led by the forces that had expelled the French, sought unification under communism, whereas South Vietnam aligned with Western-style capitalism. U.S. military support for South Vietnam intensified the war, but North Vietnam ultimately succeeded. After reunification in 1976 the country struggled with rebuilding, partially because of a communist economic policy that hindered growth. Economic hardships persisted until the market-oriented doi moi reforms, beginning in 1986, spurred recovery.
What role does the Vietnamese Communist Party play in the country’s political system?
The Vietnamese Communist Party, once led by Ho Chi Minh, is the dominant political institution in Vietnam, having led the country to victory against France and the United States. It maintains control over political processes, though recent reforms have delegated more authority to the president and cabinet. In Vietnam, communism is largely ideological and does not fully dictate economic or foreign policy.
What are the main ethnic groups of Vietnam?
The main ethnic group in Vietnam is the Vietnamese, who primarily inhabit the lowlands. The highlands are home to various smaller ethnic groups, including those speaking Tai languages in the north and Mon-Khmer and Austronesian languages in the south.
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Tribal Viets inhabiting the Red River delta entered written history when China’s southward expansion reached them in the 3rd century bce. From that time onward, a dominant theme of Vietnam’s history has been interaction with China, the source of most of Vietnam’s high culture. As a tribute-paying state after throwing off Chinese rule in 938 ce, Vietnam sent lacquerware, animal skins, ivory, and tropical products to the Chinese emperor and received scrolls on philosophy, administration, and literature in return. Sinic culture seeped deeply into society, but it shaped the aristocracy and mandarinal families more than it did the peasantry, which preserved distinctive customs, beliefs, vocabulary, lifeways, and gender relations. Modeling themselves on Chinese emperors, Vietnam’s kings exacted tribute from ethnic minorities on the periphery of the Vietnamese state and called themselves emperors when not addressing the Chinese court. Although cultural and spatial gaps between the Vietnamese court and the farthest reaches of society were not as great as they were in China (Vietnam is about the size of a Chinese province, with a comparable population), the Vietnamese state’s capacity to rule diminished with distance from the capital. The refractory character of bamboo-hedged peasant communes was captured in the cliché, "The emperor’s writ stops at the village gate."
Vietnam has a long history of affiliating with a dominant civilization and adapting that civilization’s ideas, institutions, and technology to Vietnamese purposes. This pattern of affiliating and adapting was already evident in Vietnam’s historical relations with China, and it reappeared as descendants of mandarins responded to the challenge of the West by rejecting tradition and becoming communists to combat colonialism. The pattern was evident again as it animated 20th-century artistic movements that employed Western forms to promote social renovation; and since the 1980s it has been the driving force behind the Vietnam Communist Party’s embrace of economic liberalization and integration into the world economy. Such strategic absorption and adaptation have helped propel Vietnam to become one of the world’s most populous countries, with one of the most rapidly expanding market economies.
The capital, Hanoi, is located in the north, while the country’s largest city, Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon), is in the south. Vietnam experienced a period of prolonged warfare in the mid-20th century, and a partitioning (1954–75), first militarily and later politically, into the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, better known as North Vietnam, and the Republic of Vietnam, usually called South Vietnam. Following reunification in April 1975, the Socialist Republic of Vietnam was established in July 1976.
Land
With an area and configuration similar to those of Norway, Vietnam extends about 1,025 miles (1,650 km) from north to south and is about 30 miles (50 km) wide east to west at its narrowest part. It is bordered by China to the north, the South China Sea to the east and south, the Gulf of Thailand (Gulf of Siam) to the southwest, and Cambodia and Laos to the west.
Relief
Vietnam’s principal physiographic features are the Annamese Cordillera (French: Chaîne Annamitique; Vietnamese: Nui Truong Son), extending generally from northwest to southeast in central Vietnam and dominating the interior, and two extensive alluvial deltas formed by the Red (Hong) River in the north and the Mekong (Cuu Long) River in the south. Between these two deltas is a long, relatively narrow coastal plain.
From north to south the uplands of northern Vietnam can be divided into two distinct regions—the area north of the Red River and the massif that extends south of the Red River into neighboring Laos. The Red River forms a deep, relatively wide valley that runs in a straight northwest-southeast direction for much of its course from the Chinese border to the edge of its delta. North of the Red River the relief is moderate, with the highest elevations occurring between the Red and Lo (Clear) rivers; there is a marked depression from Cao Bang to the sea. In the Red River delta and in the valleys of the region’s other major rivers are found wide limestone terraces, extensive alluvial plains, and low hills. The northeast coast is dotted with hundreds of islands composed mostly of limestone.
Compared with the area north of the Red River, the vast massif extending southwest across Laos to the Mekong River is of considerably higher elevation. Among its outstanding topographic features is Fan Si Peak, which at 10,312 feet (3,143 meters) is the highest point in Vietnam. South of the Black (Da) River are the Ta P’ing, Son La, and Moc Chau plateaus, which are separated by deep valleys.
In central Vietnam the Annamese Cordillera runs parallel to the coast, with several peaks rising to elevations above 6,000 feet (1,800 meters). Several spurs jut into the South China Sea, forming sections of the coast isolated from one another. Communication across the central ranges is difficult. The southern portion of the Annamese Cordillera has two identifiable regions. One consists of plateaus of approximately 1,700 feet (520 meters) in elevation that have experienced little erosion, as in the Dac Lac Plateau near Buon Me Thuot. The second region is characterized by heavily eroded plateaus: in the vicinity of Pleiku, the Kontum Plateau is about 2,500 feet (760 meters) above sea level; and in the Da Lat area, the Di Linh Plateau is about 4,900 feet (1,500 meters).
Drainage
Roughly triangular in shape, with its northeast and southwest sides bounded by the northern uplands, the Red River delta extends inland some 150 miles (240 km) and runs some 75 miles (120 km) along the Gulf of Tonkin. The delta can be divided into four subregions. The northwestern section has the highest and most broken terrain, and its extensive natural levees invite settlement despite frequent flooding. The low-lying eastern portion is less than seven feet (two meters) above sea level in the vicinity of Bac Ninh. Rivers there form small valleys only slightly lower than the general surface level, and they are subject to flooding by the area’s unusually high tides. The third and fourth subregions consist, respectively, of the poorly drained lowlands in the west and the coastal area, which is marked by the remains of former beach ridges left as the delta expanded.
The Annamese Cordillera forms a drainage divide, with rivers to the east flowing to the South China Sea and those to the west to the Mekong River. South of the mountain range there is an identifiable terrace region that gives way to the Mekong delta. The terrace region includes the alluvial plains along the Saigon and Dong Nai rivers. The lowlands of southern Vietnam are dominated by alluvial plains, the most extensive of which is the Mekong delta, covering an area of 15,400 square miles (39,900 square km) in Vietnam. Smaller deltaic plains also occur along the south-central coast facing the South China Sea.
Soils
In northern Vietnam the heavy monsoonal rains wash away rich humus from the highlands, leaving slow-dissolving alumina and iron oxides that give the soil its characteristic reddish color. The soils of the Red River delta vary: some are fertile and suitable for intense cultivation, while others lack soluble bases. Nonetheless, the delta soils are easily worked. The diking of the Red River to prevent flooding has deprived the delta’s rice fields of enriching silts they once received, and it has been necessary to apply chemical fertilizers.
There are some two dozen soil associations, but certain soil types predominate. Among these are red and yellow podzolic soils (i.e., soils that are heavily leached in their upper layers, with a resulting accumulation of materials in the lower layers), which occupy nearly half of the land area, and lateritic soils (reddish brown, leached tropical soils), which constitute another one-tenth more. These soil types dominate the central highlands.
Alluvial soils account for about one-fourth of the land in the south and are concentrated in the Mekong delta, as are peat and muck soils. Gray podzolic soils are found in parts of the central highlands and in old terraces along the Mekong, while regurs (rich black loams) and lateritic soils occur in both the central highlands and the terrace zone. Along the coast of central Vietnam are regosols (soft, undeveloped soils) and noncalcic brown soils.
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