The Catholic Church in Vietnam is part of the worldwide Catholic Church, under the spiritual leadership of bishops in Vietnam who are in communion with the Pope in Rome. Vietnam has the fifth largest Catholic population in Asia, after the Philippines, India, China and Indonesia. There are about 7 million Catholics in Vietnam, representing 7.4% of the total population.[1] There are 27 dioceses (including three archdioceses) with 2,228 parishes and 2,668 priests.[2] The main liturgical rites employed in Vietnam are those of the Latin Church.
History
Early periods
The first Catholic missionaries visited Vietnam from Portugal and Spain in the 16th century. The early Catholic missions in Vietnam achieved modest success among local populations. Only after the arrival of Jesuits in the first decades of the 17th century did Christianity began to gain converts within the local populations in both domains of Đàng Ngoài (Tonkin) and Đàng Trong (Cochinchina).[3] These missionaries were mainly Italians, Portuguese, and Japanese. Two priests, Francesco Buzomi and Diogo Carvalho, established the first Catholic community in Hội An in 1615. Between 1627 and 1630, Avignonese Alexandre de Rhodes and Portuguese Pero Marques converted more than 6,000 people in Tonkin.[4]
In the 17th century, Jesuit missionaries including Francisco de Pina, Gaspar do Amaral, Antonio Barbosa, and de Rhodes developed an alphabet for the Vietnamese language, using the Latin script with added diacritic marks.[5] This writing system continues to be used today, and is called chữ Quốc ngữ (literally "national language script"). Meanwhile, the traditional chữ Nôm, in which Girolamo Maiorica was an expert, was the main script conveying Catholic faith to Vietnamese until the late 19th century.[6]
Since the late 17th century, French missionaries of the Foreign Missions Society and Spanish missionaries of the Dominican Order were gradually became active in evangelization in Vietnam. Other missionaries active in pre-modern Vietnam were Franciscans (in Cochinchina), Italian Dominicans & Discalced Augustinians (in Eastern Tonkin), and those sent by the Propaganda Fide.
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (April 2020)
The French missionary priest and Bishop of AdraaPigneau de Behaine had a significant influence in Vietnamese history towards the end of the 18th century. He had come to southern Vietnam to evangelize. In 1777, the Tây Sơn brothers killed the ruling Nguyễn lords. Nguyễn Ánh was the most senior member of the family to have survived, and he fled into the Mekong Delta region in the far south, where he met Pigneau.[7] Pigneau became Nguyễn Ánh's advisor.[8][9] Pigneau reportedly hoped that by playing a role in assisting Ánh attain victory, he would be in position to gain important concessions for the Catholic Church in Vietnam and helping its expansion throughout Southeast Asia. From then on he became a political and military advisor.[10]
At one stage during the civil war, the Nguyễn were in trouble, so Pigneau was dispatched to seek French aid. He was able to recruit a band of French volunteers.[11] Pigneau and other missionaries acted as procurement agents for Nguyễn Ánh, purchasing munitions and other military supplies.[12] Pigneau also served as a military advisor and de facto foreign minister until his death in 1799.[13][14] From 1794, Pigneau took part in all campaigns. He organized the defense of Diên Khánh when it was besieged by a numerically vastly superior Tây Sơn army in 1794.[15] Upon Pigneau's death,[16] Gia Long's funeral oration described the Frenchman as "the most illustrious foreigner ever to appear at the court of Cochinchina".[17][18]
By 1802, when Nguyễn Ánh conquered all of Vietnam and declared himself Emperor Gia Long, the Catholic Church in Vietnam had three dioceses as follows:
Diocese of Eastern Tonkin: 140,000 members, 41 Vietnamese priests, 4 missionary priests and 1 bishop.
Diocese of Western Tonkin: 120,000 members, 65 Vietnamese priests, 46 missionary priests and 1 bishop.
Diocese of Central and Southern Cochinchina: 60,000 members, 15 Vietnamese priests, 5 missionary priests and 1 bishop.[19]
Gia Long tolerated the Catholic faith of his French allies and permitted unimpeded missionary activities out of respect to his benefactors.[20] The missionary activities were dominated by the Spanish in Tonkin and the French in the central and southern regions.[21] At the time of his death, there were six European bishops in Vietnam.[21] The population of Christians was estimated at 300,000 in Tonkin and 60,000 in Cochinchina.[22]
The peaceful coexistence of Catholicism alongside the classical Confucian system of Vietnam was not to last. Gia Long himself was Confucian in outlook. As Crown Prince Nguyễn Phúc Cảnh had already died, it was assumed that Cảnh's son would succeed Gia Long as emperor, but, in 1816, Nguyễn Phúc Đảm, the son of Gia Long's second wife, was appointed instead.[23] Gia Long chose him for his strong character and his deeply conservative aversion to Westerners, whereas Cảnh's lineage had converted to Catholicism and were reluctant to maintain their Confucian traditions such as ancestor worship.[24]
Lê Văn Duyệt, the Vietnamese general who helped Nguyễn Ánh—the future Emperor Gia Long—put down the Tây Sơn rebellion, unify Vietnam and establish the Nguyễn dynasty, and many of the high-ranking mandarins opposed Gia Long's succession plan.[25] Duyệt and many of his southern associates tended to be favourable to Christianity, and supported the installation of Nguyễn Cảnh's descendants on the throne. As a result, Duyệt was held in high regard by the Catholic community.[26] According to the historian Mark McLeod, Duyệt was more concerned with military rather than social needs, and was thus more interested in maintaining strong relations with Europeans so that he could acquire weapons from them, rather than worrying about the social implications of westernization.[26] Gia Long was aware that Catholic clergy were opposed to the installation of Minh Mạng because they favored a Catholic monarch (Cảnh's son) who would grant them favors.[26]
Minh Mạng began to place restrictions on Catholicism.[27] He enacted "edicts of interdiction of the Catholic religion" and condemned Christianity as a "heterodox doctrine". He saw the Catholics as a possible source of division,[27] especially as the missionaries were arriving in Vietnam in ever-increasing numbers.[28] Duyệt protected Vietnamese Catholic converts and westerners from Minh Mạng's policies by disobeying the emperor's orders.[29]
Minh Mạng issued an imperial edict, that ordered missionaries to leave their areas and move to the imperial city, ostensibly because the palace needed translators, but in order to stop the Catholics from evangelizing.[30] Whereas the government officials in central and northern Vietnam complied, Duyệt disobeyed the order and Minh Mạng was forced to bide his time.[30] The emperor began to slowly wind back the military powers of Duyệt, and increased this after his death.[31] Minh Mạng ordered the posthumous humiliation of Duyệt, which resulted in the desecration of his tomb, the execution of sixteen relatives, and the arrests of his colleagues.[32] Duyệt's son, Lê Văn Khôi, along with the southerners who had seen their and Duyệt's power curtailed, revolted against Minh Mạng.
Khôi declared himself in favour of the restoration of the line of Prince Cảnh.[33] This choice was designed to obtain the support of Catholic missionaries and Vietnamese Catholics, who had been supporting the Catholic line of Prince Cảnh. Lê Văn Khôi further promised to protect Catholicism.[33] In 1833, the rebels took over southern Vietnam,[33][34] with Catholics playing a large role.[35] 2,000 Vietnamese Catholic troops fought under the command of Father Nguyễn Văn Tâm.[36]
The rebellion was suppressed after three years of fighting. The French missionary Father Joseph Marchand, of the Paris Foreign Missions Society was captured in the siege, and had been supporting Khôi, and asked for the help of the Siamese army, through communications to his counterpart in Siam, Father Jean-Louis Taberd. This showed the strong Catholic involvement in the revolt and Father Marchand was executed.[34]
The failure of the revolt had a disastrous effect on the Christians of Vietnam.[35] New restrictions against Christians followed, and demands were made to find and execute remaining missionaries.[36] Anti-Catholic edicts to this effect were issued by Minh Mạng in 1836 and 1838. In 1836–37 six missionaries were executed: Ignacio Delgado, Dominico Henares, José Fernández, François Jaccard, Jean-Charles Cornay, and Bishop Pierre Borie.[37][38] The villages of Christians were destroyed and their possessions confiscated. Families were broken apart. Christians were branded on the forehead with tà đạo, “heterodox religion.” It is believed that between 130,000 and 300,000 Christians died in the various persecutions. The 117 proclaimed saints represent the many unknown martyrs.
From 1954 to 1975, Vietnam was split into North and South Vietnam. During a 300-day period where the border between the two sides was temporarily open, many North Vietnamese Catholics fled southward out of fear that they would be persecuted by the Viet Minh.
In a country where Buddhists were the majority,[39][40][41][42][43][44][45][excessive citations] President Ngô Đình Diệm's policies generated claims of religious bias even though he sponsored and supported many Buddhist organizations, and Buddhism flourished under his regime.[46] As a member of the Catholic minority, he pursued policies which antagonized the Buddhist majority.[neutrality is disputed] The government was biased towards Catholics in public service and military promotions, and the allocation of land, business favors and tax concessions.[47] Diệm once told a high-ranking officer, forgetting the man was from a Buddhist background, "Put your Catholic officers in sensitive places. They can be trusted."[48] Many officers in the Army of the Republic of Vietnam converted to Catholicism to better their prospects.[48] The distribution of firearms to village self-defense militias intended to repel Việt Cộng guerrillas saw weapons only given to Catholics.[49] Some Catholic priests ran their own private armies,[50] and in some areas[which?] forced conversions, looting, shelling and demolition of pagodas occurred.[when?][how?][why?][51][better source needed]
Some villages converted en masse in order to receive aid or avoid being forcibly resettled by Diệm's regime.[52] The Catholic Church was the largest landowner in the country, and its holdings were exempt from reform and given extra property acquisition rights, while restrictions against Buddhism remained in force.[53][54] Catholics were also de facto exempt from the corvée labor that the government obliged all citizens to perform; U.S. aid was disproportionately distributed to Catholic majority villages. In 1959, Diem dedicated his country to the Virgin Mary.[55]
The white and gold "Vatican flag" was regularly flown at all major public events in South Vietnam.[56] The newly constructed Huế and Đà Lạt universities were placed under Catholic authority to foster a Catholic-influenced academic environment.[57]
In May 1963, in the central city of Huế, where Diệm's elder brother Pierre Martin Ngô Đình Thục was archbishop, Buddhists were prohibited from displaying the Buddhist flag during the sacred Buddhist Vesak celebrations.[58] A few days earlier, Catholics were encouraged to fly religious—that is, papal—flags at the celebration in honour of Thục's anniversary as bishop.[59] Both actions technically violated a rarely enforced law which prohibited the flying of any flag other than the national one, but only the Buddhist flags were prohibited in practice.[59] This prompted a protest against the government, which was violently suppressed by Diệm's forces, resulting in the killing of nine civilians. This in turn led to a mass campaign against Diệm's government during what became known as the Buddhist crisis. Diệm was later deposed and assassinated on 2 November 1963.[60][61] Recent scholarships reveal significant understandings about Diệm's own independent agenda and political philosophy.[62] The Personalist Revolution under his regime promoted religious freedom and diversity to oppose communism's atheism. However, this policy itself ultimately enabled religious activists to threaten the state that supported their religious liberty.[63]
There have been meetings between leaders of Vietnam and the Vatican, including a visit by Vietnam's Prime Minister Nguyễn Tấn Dũng to the Vatican to meet Pope Benedict XVI on 25 January 2007. Official Vatican delegations have been traveling to Vietnam almost every year since 1990 for meetings with its government authorities and to visit Catholic dioceses. In March 2007, a Vatican delegation visited Vietnam and met with local officials.[64] In October 2014, Pope Francis met with Prime Minister Nguyễn Tấn Dũng in Rome. The sides continued discussions about the possibility of establishing normal diplomatic relations, but have not provided a specific schedule for the exchange of ambassadors.[65] The Pope would again meet Vietnamese leader Trần Đại Quang and his associates in Vatican in 2016.[66]
Vietnam remains as the only Asian communist country to have an unofficial representative of the Vatican in the country and has held official to unofficial meetings with the Vatican's representatives both in Vietnam and the Holy See—which does not exist in China, North Korea and Laos—due to long and historical relations between Vietnam and the Catholic Church dating to before the period of French colonization in Southeast Asia. These relations have improved in recent years, as the Holy See announced they will have a permanent representative in Vietnam in 2018.[67][68]
Restrictions on Catholic life in Vietnam and the government's desired involvement in the nomination of bishops challenges to dialogue. In March 2007, Thaddeus Nguyễn Văn Lý (b. 1946), a dissident Catholic priest, was sentenced by Vietnamese court in Huế to eight years in prison on grounds of "anti-government activities". Nguyen, who had already spent 14 of the past 24 years in prison, was accused of being a founder of a pro-democracy movement Bloc 8406 and a member of the Progression Party of Vietnam.[69]
On 16 September 2007, the fifth anniversary of the Cardinal Nguyễn Văn Thuận's death, the Catholic Church began the beatification process for him.[70] Benedict XVI expressed "profound joy" at the news of the official opening of the beatification cause.[71] Vietnamese Catholics reacted positively to the news of the beatification. In December 2007, thousands of Vietnamese Catholics marched in procession to the former apostolic nunciature in Hanoi and prayed there twice aiming to return the property to the local church.[72] The building was located at a historic Buddhist site until it was confiscated by the French authorities and given to Catholics, before the communist North Vietnamese government confiscated it from the Catholic Church in 1959.[73] This was the first mass civil action by Vietnamese Catholics since the 1970s. Later the protests were supported by Catholics in Hồ Chí Minh City and Hà Đông, who made the same demands for their respective territories.[74] In February 2008, the governments promised to return the building to the Catholic Church.[75] However, in September 2008, the authorities changed their position and decided to demolish the building to create a public park.[76]
^Nguyen, Phi-Vân (2018). "A Secular State for a Religious Nation: The Republic of Vietnam and Religious Nationalism, 1946–1963". The Journal of Asian Studies. 77 (3): 741–771. doi:10.1017/S0021911818000505. hdl:1993/34017. The spiritual dimension of the Republic's Personalist Revolution did not involve state interference in all religious activities. Instead, it promoted religious freedom and diversity, provided that the spiritual values they propagated opposed communism's atheism. ... The Republic pledged to defend freedom of religion—at least initially—and promoted religious diversity. Ironically, it was precisely because the state could guarantee neither religious equality nor absolute noninterference in religious affairs that religious groups started to challenge its authority.
Jacobs, Seth (2006), Cold War Mandarin: Ngo Dinh Diem and the Origins of America's War in Vietnam, 1950–1963, Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield, ISBN0-7425-4447-8
Jones, Howard (2003), Death of a Generation, New York: Oxford University Press, ISBN0-19-505286-2
McLeod, Mark W. (1991), The Vietnamese Response to French Intervention, 1862–1874, Praeger, ISBN0-275-93562-0
McLeod, Mark W. (1992). "Nationalism and Religion in Vietnam: Phan Boi Chau and the Catholic Question". The International History Review. 14 (4): 661–680. doi:10.1080/07075332.1992.9640628.
Shaw, Geoffrey (2015). The Lost Mandate of Heaven: The American Betrayal of Ngo Dinh Diem, President of Vietnam. Ignatius Press.
Tucker, Spencer C. (2000), Encyclopedia of the Vietnam War, Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, ISBN1-57607-040-9
Cao, Huy Thuan (1969). Christianisme et colonialisme au Vietnam (1857–1914) (PhD). Faculté de droit et des sciences économiques de Paris.
Lê, Nicole-Dominique (1975). Les Missions-Étrangères et la pénétration française au Viêt-Nam. Mouton. ISBN2719306118.
Tuck, Patrick J. N. (1987). French Catholic Missionaries and the Politics of Imperialism in Vietnam, 1857–1914: A Documentary Survey. Liverpool University Press. ISBN0853231362.
Alberts, Tara (2013). "Priests of a Foreign God: Catholic Religious Leadership and Sacral Authority in Seventeenth-Century Tonkin and Cochinchina". In Alberts, Tara; Irving, D. R. M. (eds.). Intercultural Exchange in Southeast Asia: History and Society in the Early Modern World. I.B. Tauris. pp. 84–117. ISBN9780857722836.
Alberts, Tara (2018). "Missions in Vietnam". In Hsia, Ronnie Po-chia (ed.). A Companion to the Early Modern Catholic Global Missions. Brill. pp. 269–302. ISBN9789004355286.
Cooke, Nola (2013). "Early Christian Conversion in Seventeenth-Century Cochinchina". In Young, Richard Fox; Seitz, Jonathan A. (eds.). Asia in the Making of Christianity: Conversion, Agency, and Indigeneity, 1600s to the Present. Brill. pp. 29–52. ISBN9789004251298.
Daughton, James P. (2006). "Recasting Pigneau de Béhaine: Missionaries and the Politics of French Colonial History, 1894–1914". In Tran, Nhung Tuyet; Reid, Anthony (eds.). Viêt Nam: Borderless Histories. University of Wisconsin Press. pp. 290–322. ISBN9780299217747.
Dutton, George (2006). "Christians and Christianity in the Tây Sơn Era". The Tay Son Uprising: Society and Rebellion in Eighteenth-Century Vietnam. University of Hawaiʻi Press. pp. 175–196. ISBN9780824829841.
Goscha, Christopher E. (2011). "Catholics in Vietnam and the War; Lê Hữu Từ; Vatican". Historical Dictionary of the Indochina War (1945–1954): An International and Interdisciplinary Approach. NIAS Press. pp. 90–91, 262–263, 481–482. ISBN9788776940638. Online resource.
Makino, Motonori (2009). "The Vietnamese Written Languages and European Missionaries: From the Society of Jesus to the Société des Missions Étrangères de Paris". In Shinzo, Kawamura; Veliath, Cyril (eds.). Beyond Borders: A Global Perspective of Jesuit Mission History. Sophia University Press. pp. 342–349. ISBN9784324086100.
Marr, David G. (2013). "Catholics: Allies or Enemies?". Vietnam: State, War, and Revolution (1945–1946). University of California Press. pp. 428–441. ISBN9780520274150.
Nguyen, Phi-Vân (2023). "A Decolonization Gone Too Far? The Vietnamese Catholics' Search for Independence, 1941–1963". In Foster, Elizabeth A.; Greenberg, Udi (eds.). Decolonization and the Remaking of Christianity. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN9781512824964.
Ostrowski, Brian (2010). "The Rise of Christian Nôm Literature in Seventeenth-Century Vietnam: Fusing European Content and Local Expression". In Wilcox, Wynn (ed.). Vietnam and the West: New Approaches. Cornell University Press. pp. 19–39. ISBN9780877277828.
Ramsay, Jacob (2007). "Miracles and Myths: Vietnam Seen through Its Catholic History". In Taylor, Philip (ed.). Modernity and Re-Enchantment: Religion in Post-Revolutionary Vietnam. ISEAS Publishing. pp. 371–398. ISBN9789812304568.
Trân, Claire Thi Liên (2004). "Les catholiques et la République démocratique du Viêt Nam (1945–1954): une approche biographique". In Goscha, Christopher E.; de Tréglodé, Benoît (eds.). Naissance d'un État-Parti: Le Viêt Nam depuis 1945. Les Indes savantes. pp. 253–276. ISBN9782846540643.
Tran, Nhung Tuyet (2005). "Les Amantes de la Croix: An Early Modern Vietnamese Sisterhood". In Bousquet, Gisèle; Taylor, Nora (eds.). Le Viêt Nam au féminin. Les Indes savantes. pp. 51–66. ISBN9782846540759.
Wilcox, Wynn (2010). "Đặng Đức Tuấn and the Complexities of Nineteenth-Century Vietnamese Christian Identity". In Wilcox, Wynn (ed.). Vietnam and the West: New Approaches. Cornell University Press. pp. 71–87. ISBN9780877277828.
Journal articles
Alberts, Tara (2012). "Catholic Written and Oral Cultures in Seventeenth-Century Vietnam". Journal of Early Modern History. 16 (4–5): 383–402. doi:10.1163/15700658-12342325.
Chu, Lan T. (2008). "Catholicism vs. Communism, Continued: The Catholic Church in Vietnam". Journal of Vietnamese Studies. 3 (1): 151–192. doi:10.1525/vs.2008.3.1.151.
Cooke, Nola (2004). "Early Nineteenth-Century Vietnamese Catholics and Others in the Pages of the Annales de la Propagation de la Foi". Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. 35 (2): 261–285. doi:10.1017/S0022463404000141. S2CID153524504.
Cooke, Nola (2008). "Strange Brew: Global, Regional and Local Factors behind the 1690 Prohibition of Christian Practice in Nguyễn Cochinchina". Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. 39 (3): 383–409. doi:10.1017/S0022463408000313. hdl:1885/27684. S2CID153563604.
Du, Yuqing (2022). "Reconfiguring Inculturations: Hội Đồng Tứ Giáo and Interfaith Dialogues in Eighteenth-Century Vietnam". Journal of Vietnamese Studies. 17 (2–3): 38–63. doi:10.1525/vs.2022.17.2-3.38. S2CID250519251.
Hansen, Peter (2009). "Bắc Di Cư: Catholic Refugees from the North of Vietnam, and Their Role in the Southern Republic, 1954–1959". Journal of Vietnamese Studies. 4 (3): 173–211. doi:10.1525/vs.2009.4.3.173.
Hoang, Tuan (2019). "Ultramontanism, Nationalism, and the Fall of Saigon: Historicizing the Vietnamese American Catholic Experience". American Catholic Studies. 130 (1): 1–36. doi:10.1353/acs.2019.0014. S2CID166860652.
Hoang, Tuan (2022). ""Our Lady's Immaculate Heart Will Prevail": Vietnamese Marianism and Anticommunism, 1940–1975". Journal of Vietnamese Studies. 17 (2–3): 126–157. doi:10.1525/vs.2022.17.2-3.126. S2CID250515678.
Keith, Charles (2008). "Annam Uplifted: The First Vietnamese Catholic Bishops and the Birth of a National Church, 1919–1945". Journal of Vietnamese Studies. 3 (2): 128–171. doi:10.1525/vs.2008.3.2.128.
Luria, Keith P. (2017b). "Catholic Marriage and the Customs of the Country: Building a New Religious Community in Seventeenth-Century Vietnam". French Historical Studies. 40 (3): 457–473. doi:10.1215/00161071-3857016.
Nguyen, Phi-Vân (2016). "Fighting the First Indochina War Again? Catholic Refugees in South Vietnam, 1954–59". Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia. 31 (1): 207–246. doi:10.1355/sj31-1f.
Ngô, Lân (2022). "Prophets and Zealots: The 1873 Synodal Document, Nonconformist Confucianism, and the Vietnamese Clergy". Journal of Vietnamese Studies. 17 (2–3): 64–92. doi:10.1525/vs.2022.17.2-3.64. S2CID250515444.
Nyan, Francis (2011). "Half-Brothers: The Frères des Écoles Chrétiennes in Vietnam, 1900–1945". Journal of Vietnamese Studies. 6 (3): 1–43. doi:10.1525/vs.2011.6.3.1.
Ramsay, Jacob (2004). "Extortion and Exploitation in the Nguyễn Campaign against Catholicism in 1830s–1840s Vietnam". Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. 35 (2): 311–328. doi:10.1017/S0022463404000165. S2CID143702710.
Tran, Anh Q. (2022). "Catholicism and the Development of the Vietnamese Alphabet, 1620–1898". Journal of Vietnamese Studies. 17 (2–3): 9–37. doi:10.1525/vs.2022.17.2-3.9. S2CID250513843.
Trân, Claire Thi Liên (2005). "The Catholic Question in North Vietnam: From Polish Sources, 1954–56". Cold War History. 5 (4): 427–449. doi:10.1080/14682740500284747. S2CID154280435.
Trân, Claire Thi Liên (2013). "The Challenge for Peace within South Vietnam's Catholic Community: A History of Peace Activism". Peace & Change: A Journal of Peace Research. 38 (4): 446–473. doi:10.1111/pech.12040.
Trân, Claire Thi Liên (2020). "The Role of Education Mobilities and Transnational Networks in the Building of a Modern Vietnamese Catholic Elite (1920s–1950s)". Sojourn: Journal of Social Issues in Southeast Asia. 35 (2): 243–270. doi:10.1355/sj35-2c. S2CID225458221.
Trần, Claire Thị Liên (2022). "Thanh Lao Công [Young Christian Workers] in Tonkin, 1935–1945: From Social to Political Activism". Journal of Vietnamese Studies. 17 (2–3): 93–125. doi:10.1525/vs.2022.17.2-3.93. S2CID250508860.
Michaud, Jean (2004). "Missionary Ethnographers in Upper-Tonkin: The Early Years, 1895–1920". Asian Ethnicity. 5 (2): 179–194. doi:10.1080/1463136042000221876. S2CID55551641.
Pham, Ly Thi Kieu (2019). "The True Editor of the Manuductio ad linguam Tunkinensem (Seventeenth- to Eighteenth-Century Vietnamese Grammar)". Journal of Vietnamese Studies. 14 (2): 68–92. doi:10.1525/vs.2019.14.2.68. S2CID181585717.
Trần, Claire Thị Liên (2013a). "Communist State and Religious Policy in Vietnam: A Historical Perspective". Hague Journal on the Rule of Law. 5 (2): 229–252. doi:10.1017/S1876404512001133. S2CID154978637.
José Manuel Casado Casado bermain untuk XerezInformasi pribadiNama lengkap José Manuel Casado BizcochoTanggal lahir 9 Agustus 1986 (umur 37)Tempat lahir Coria del Río, SpanyolTinggi 1,73 m (5 ft 8 in)Posisi bermain Bek kiriInformasi klubKlub saat ini AlmeríaNomor 14Karier junior1996–1998 Coria1998–2001 Sevilla2001–2004 BarcelonaKarier senior*Tahun Tim Tampil (Gol)2004–2006 Barcelona C 57 (0)2006–2008 Sevilla B 68 (2)2007–2010 Sevilla 2 (0)2008–2009 → R...
Carus pada koin anumerta. Marcus Aurelius Carus (k.l. 230 - akhir Juli/awal Agustus, 283) adalah seorang Kaisar Romawi (282-283). Selama pemerintahannya yang singkat, Carus telah berusaha untuk mengikuti langkah memperbaiki kekuatan dari kekaisaran, yang ditempuh pendahulunya yaitu Aurelian dan Probus. Bersama putra-putranya, Carinus dan Numerian, Carus membentuk sebuah dinasti singkat, yang memberikan kestabilan lebih lanjut bagi kekaisaran yang sedang bangkit kembali. Sumber primer Aurelius...
Perisai (shield) yang diraih oleh pemenang Community Shield FA Community Shield FA (sebelumnya bernama Charity Shield) adalah sebuah pertandingan sepak bola tahunan yang diselenggarakan oleh The Football Association dan saat ini diikuti oleh juara Liga Utama Inggris dan juara Piala FA. Saat sebuah tim memenangkan kedua gelar tersebut, maka pertandingan diikuti oleh juara kedua liga.[1] Pertandingan ini dimainkan setiap bulan Agustus sebagai pembuka musim sepak bola domestik Inggris....
1981 American slasher film by Jimmy Huston Final ExamPromotional film posterDirected byJimmy HustonWritten byJimmy HustonProduced byJames McNamaraPerry KatzStarring Cecile Bagdadi Joel S. Rice DeAnna Robbins Sherry Willis-Burch Timothy L. Raynor CinematographyDarrell CatchartEdited byJohn A. O'ConnorMusic byGary S. ScottDistributed byMotion Picture Marketing[1]Release date February 27, 1981 (1981-02-27) Running time89 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget$363...
Vena cava inferiorTampak anterior (depan) sebuah jantung yang terbuka. Panah putih menunjukkan arah aliran darahVena cava superior, vena cava inferior, vena azygos vein dan cabang-cabangnyaRincianAliran tujuanAtrium kananArteriaorta abdominalPengidentifikasiBahasa Latinvena cava inferiorAkronimIVCMeSHD014682TA98A12.3.09.001TA24991FMA10951Daftar istilah anatomi[sunting di Wikidata] Vena kava inferior adalah vena besar yang mengangkut darah terdeoksigenasi dari tubuh bagian bawah dan tengah...
2012 international conference in Brazil United Nations Conference on Sustainable DevelopmentDate(s)13–22 June 2012[1][2]Location(s)Rio de Janeiro, BrazilPrevious eventEarth Summit 1992Earth Summit 2002Websiteuncsd2012 The United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development (UNCSD), also known as Rio 2012, Rio+20 (Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈʁi.u ˈmajʒ ˈvĩtʃi]), or Earth Summit 2012 was the third international conference on sustainable development aimed at rec...
Protected cruiser For other ships with the same name, see USS Baltimore. Baltimore in 1891 History United States NameBaltimore NamesakeBaltimore, Maryland BuilderWilliam Cramp & Sons, Philadelphia Cost$1,546,172.13 (hull and machinery) Yard number254 Laid down5 May 1887 Launched6 October 1888 Sponsored byMrs. Theodore D. Wilson, wife of Chief Constructor Wilson Commissioned7 January 1890 Decommissioned15 September 1922 ReclassifiedCM-1 Stricken14 October 1937 Identification Hull symbol:C-...
State-recognized tribe in Maryland that claims descent from the historic Piscataway tribe Ethnic group Piscataway Indian NationBilly Tayac, hereditary chief of the Piscataway Indian Nation And Tayac Territory in 2012Total population103Regions with significant populationsMarylandLanguagesEnglish, Piscataway (historically)ReligionChristianity, Native American religion (historically)Related ethnic groupsNanticoke The Piscataway Indian Nation /pɪsˈkætəˌweɪ/, also called Piscatawa /pɪsˈkæ...
History and regulations of Bhutanese citizenship Bhutanese Citizenship ActParliament of Bhutan Long title An Act relating to Bhutanese citizenship Enacted byGovernment of BhutanStatus: Current legislation Bhutanese nationality law is the law governing the acquisition, transmission and loss of Bhutanese citizenship. The Bhutanese Citizenship Act of 1985 was introduced by the Druk Gyalpo Jigme Singye Wangchuck, on June 10, 1985, modifying the definition of a Bhutanese citizen. The Act was ...
1949 novel by George Orwell This article is about the 1949 novel by George Orwell. For the year, see 1984. For other uses, see 1984 (disambiguation). Nineteen Eighty-Four First-edition coverAuthorGeorge OrwellCover artistMichael Kennard[1]LanguageEnglishGenreDystopianpolitical fictionsocial science fictionSet inLondon, Airstrip One, OceaniaPublisherSecker & WarburgPublication date8 June 1949 (1949-06-08)Publication placeUnited KingdomMedia typePrint (...
2020 studio album by CamThe OthersideStudio album by CamReleasedOctober 30, 2020 (2020-10-30)Recorded2017–2020GenreCountry pop, EDMLength37:07Label RCA Triple Tigers Producer Jack Antonoff Jeff Bhasker Cam Avicii Tyler Johnson Doug Showalter Cam chronology Untamed(2015) The Otherside(2020) Singles from The Otherside DianeReleased: October 27, 2017 ClassicReleased: July 17, 2020 Till There's Nothing LeftReleased: April 5, 2021 The Otherside is the second major-label st...
Person who keeps honey bees For other uses, see Beekeeper (disambiguation). This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Beekeeper – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (May 2018) (Learn how and when to remove this message) A beekeeper holding a brood frame, in Lower Saxony, Germany A commercial b...
Japanese inventor and industrialist Sakichi Toyoda豊田 佐吉BornMarch 19, 1867 (1867-03-19)Kosai, Shizuoka, JapanDiedOctober 30, 1930 (1930-10-31) (aged 63)Nagoya, Aichi, JapanOccupation(s)Founder, Toyota Boshoku Corporation, Toyota Industries, which eventually spawned the Toyota GroupChildrenAiko ToyodaKiichiro ToyodaRelativesEiji Toyoda (nephew) Japan portalTextile arts portalCars portalCompanies portalBiography portal Sakichi Toyoda (豊田 佐吉, Toyoda Sakichi, March 1...
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Örnsköldsvik – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2008) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Place in Ångermanland, SwedenÖrnsköldsvikClockwise from top: Hägglunds Arena, the guest harbor, the old city hall, the port gantries, and...
Pura Kehen Pura Kehen adalah sebuah pura Hindu yang berlokasi di Kelurahan Cempaga, Kecamatan Bangli, Kabupaten Bangli, Bali, Indonesia, sekitar 45 km dari pusat Kota Denpasar.[1][2] Pura ini disebut juga sebagai Pura Hyang Api di mana kehen dalam Bahasa Bali berarti api.[butuh rujukan] Pura Kehen yang terletak di Desa Cempaga, Bangli, memiliki banyak keunikan.[3] Selain letaknya yang strategis, pada pintu masuk pura tidak menggunakan candi bentar seperti pada ...
Personification of wisdom in philosophy and religion Sapientia redirects here. For other uses, see Sapientia (disambiguation). Personification of Wisdom (Koinē Greek: Σοφία, Sophía) at the Library of Celsus in Ephesus (second century) Sophia (Koinē Greek: σοφία, sophía—wisdom) is a central idea in Hellenistic philosophy and religion, Platonism, Gnosticism and Christian theology. Originally carrying a meaning of cleverness, skill, the later meaning of the term, close to the mea...
يفتقر محتوى هذه المقالة إلى الاستشهاد بمصادر. فضلاً، ساهم في تطوير هذه المقالة من خلال إضافة مصادر موثوق بها. أي معلومات غير موثقة يمكن التشكيك بها وإزالتها. (نوفمبر 2019) 1933 في الجزائرمعلومات عامةالسنة 1933 1932 في الجزائر 1934 في الجزائر تعديل - تعديل مصدري - تعديل ويكي بيانات سنوا...