Northern, Central and Southern Vietnam
Northern Vietnam, Central Vietnam and Southern Vietnam are the three main historical, geographical and cultural regions within Vietnam. Each region consists of subregions, with considerable cultural differences originating from each subregions. The regional names below have been used by the Vietnamese governments since 1975 :
Northern Vietnam includes the following subregions:
Central Vietnam includes the following subregions:
Southern Vietnam includes the following subregions:
Historical context
The Northern Vietnam is the traditional homeland of the ethnic Vietnamese where the Đông Sơn culture existed with the first states appearing here, the region later was ruled by Nanyue and later the various Chinese dynasties until the independence in 939 and influenced by Han Chinese culture, language, and migration. After the division of Vietnam from 944, the country was unified and the Đinh Dynasty was established as the first Vietnamese one with the title of emperor in 968. Through migration and conquests, Vietnamese people gradually spread south in a process called Nam Tiến.Central Vietnam was home to Cham people, a Malayo-Polynesian ethnic group who founded their distinct Indianised Kingdom over the Central Coast before being subdued by the Vietnamese during the 14th century. Their predecessors, people who are now known as the Sa Huỳnh culture, dated back from 1000 BCE.
The Southern Vietnam was part of Funan, Chenla then Angkor Empire. Chinese and Vietnamese started migrating en masse to this region during the 16th to 17th century, the region was gradually annexed by Vietnamese, including the Mekong Delta of Cambodia.
Northern and Southern Vietnam was a fluid concept that changed constantly during the course of history. During the Lý and Trần dynasties, the Đại Việt kingdom was marked into two regions termed Kinh and Trại. From Thanh Hóa southward was Trại, and from Ninh Bình northward was Kinh.
During the Northern and Southern dynasties, Vietnam was partitioned with the Mạc dynasty holding the Red River Delta and Lê dynasty controlling the Central Region from Thanh Hóa to Bình Định while Champa and the Khmers still held their polities further south.
During the Trịnh–Nguyễn War and from 1627 to 1777, two ruling Lords existed in the country with the border being the Gianh River in Quảng Bình Province. The North, called Đàng Ngoài was ruled by the Trịnh lords and Nguyễn lords in the South, called Đàng Trong or Quảng Nam Quốc, with Lê emperors still nominally acting as head of state. The two sides ruled their own domain independent of the other, and frequently fought each other. The imposed separation encouraged the two regions to develop their own cultures. During the 16th to 17th centuries, the southward expansion or Nam Tiến have completed with the Lower Cochinchina peninsula being populated by Vietnamese settlers. The new region now became known as Gia Định.
After the Tây Sơn Wars and the founding of the Nguyễn dynasty, the country was unified in 1802 with the center of power now located in Huế in Central Vietnam and with three main regions: Đàng Ngoài, Đàng Trong and Gia Định.
In 1802, Emperor Gia Long created a protectorate government in Tonkin, naming the Viceroyalty of the Northern Citadel from 11 provinces of the former Đàng Ngoài. The region is ruled by a Tổng trấn or the Overlord of Citadel, or Viceroy. In 1808, he created the Viceroyalty of the Gia Định Citadel from five southern provinces. The country now consists of Bắc Thành and Gia Định regions, 7 central provinces and 4 departments are under direct rule of the Emperor.
In 1833, Emperor Minh Mạng restructured the administrations. Bắc Thành was renamed Bắc Kỳ and Phiên An was renamed Nam Kỳ. Hữu Kỳ was created from provinces from Thanh Hóa to Hà Tĩnh. Tả Kỳ was created from the provinces from Bình Định to Bình Thuận. The central provinces from Quảng Bình to Quảng Ngãi, including the capital prefecture Thừa Thiên formed Trực Kỳ or Directly-ruled region. The protectorate of Tây Thành was also formed from the Nguyễn-ruled areas in Cambodia. In 1887, Tả Kỳ, Hữu Kỳ and Trực Kỳ were merged and formed Trung Kỳ.
During French colonial era, the French first invaded and directly ruled over Cochinchina as a colony from 1862. In 1884, the French established the Annam protectorate in Trung Kỳ and Tonkin protectorate in Bắc Kỳ. In 1897, Tonkin became de-facto under direct French rule. Consequently, Cochinchina was longer influenced by French culture than the other two regions. In Tonkin, only urban centers such as Hanoi, Haiphong and Nam Dinh have significant French influence.
From 1954 to 1975, Vietnam was again divided into two separate countries, it divided by the Bến Hải River in Quảng Trị Province at the 17th parallel, with the North led by a communist government, and the South by one that was capitalist. Although the nation has been united, linguistic, cultural, and other differences serve to delineate the two regions from one another, with accompanying stereotypes.
Hanoi is the nation's capital and the second largest city of Vietnam. Ho Chi Minh City is the country's economic capital and largest city in Vietnam.
Cultural differences
The cultural differences between the regions can be divided into two main categories: "tangible" cultural differences such as traditional clothing, cuisine, and so on; and "intangible" cultural differences dealing with stereotypes of behavior, attitude and such between the people of these two regions.Perceived traits and stereotypes
While relations between the two groups are generally civil, the increased contact due to the influx of northerners into the South since the start of the Vietnam War has given rise to very many stereotypes about people from different regions:- Northerners, especially Hanoians, tend to view themselves as more cultured and refined.
- Southerners consider themselves more dynamic, and tolerant.
- Northerners are more concerned about status and appearances.
- Southerners are more liberal with their money while Northerners are more thrifty.
- Northerners are more socially conservative and afraid of change, while Southerners are more dynamic and more socially liberal.
- Southerners are more Westernized, while northerners are more Chinese, East European, Socialist and Communist-influenced.
- Southerners are more direct while the northerners are more formal.
Cuisine
Cuisine is one of the cultural differences between the regions. Northern Vietnam being the "cradle" of ethnic Vietnamese civilization, bears many of Vietnam's signature dishes. The cuisine is perceived to be complex in ingredients but simplistic in flavours.The South's cuisine has been influenced by the cuisines of southern Chinese immigrants and indigenous Cambodians, and thus Southerners prefer sweet and sour flavors, respectively, in many dishes. Examples of sour-flavored food items include canh chua and green mango salad/green papaya salad. Southern cookery also tends to use a significantly larger variety of fresh ingredients while Northern cuisine much relies on preserved and dried goods. The cuisines of Southern Vietnam and Cambodia also share considerable similarities in ingredients, cooking style and food dishes, such as hủ tiếu Nam Vang.
Central Vietnamese cooking is distinct from the cuisines of both the Northern and Southern regions, in its use of many small side dishes and requiring more complex preparation. The royal cuisine of Hue places greater importance and food presentation, examples like bánh bèo and bánh bột lọc. It is also distinctive in its spiciness when compared to its counterparts, for example in bún bò Huế. Food items from this region also tend to be lesser in size of individual portions. Central Vietnam dishes also feature a large amount of seafood.
Certain unusual foods are more prevalent in one region than in another. For example, dog meat is much more popular in the North than in the South. Cat meat is also eaten in Northern parts of the country. Similarly, certain unordinary dishes and game meat, such as coconut worm or grilled rodent meat, while popular in other parts of the country, is uncommon in the North.
Southern Vietnam has a renowned coffee culture while tea is the preferred beverage in the North. Beer is more popular in the South and liquor is the North's choice of alcoholic drink.
Clothing
Traditional clothes are also often used to symbolize different regions. In women's attire, commonly the áo tứ thân is associated with the North, the áo ngũ thân with the central region, and the áo bà ba in the South. However, the áo dài is now a very popular and widely worn ladies' attire nationwide.Linguistic differences
The Vietnamese language features many accents, the three major dialects are those of the North, Center, and South with major differences in phonology and vocabulary. Due to cultural prominence, the Hanoi and Saigon accents are mostly intelligible to speakers from other regions. The Central is marked by several minor dialects from the provinces of Nghệ An, Hà Tĩnh, Quảng Bình, Quảng Nam, and Quảng Ngãi are often unintelligible to speakers outside of these regions.Differences in these accents lie in several different factors, including but not limited to the following:
- Pronunciation of words, an example would be: a Hanoi
is pronounced like the English /z/ while a Saigon is pronounced like the English /j/. - Northern Vietnamese has the full 6 tones, whereas Southern Vietnamese has only 5
- Words ending in "nh" are pronounced differently between North and South
- Merging of the "tr" and "ch" sounds in Northern Vietnamese
- Some differences in vocabulary between different regions
- Northerners speak with a higher-pitched accent.
- Central Vietnamese speak in a high-pitched, diverse accents. In areas of Nghệ An, people living in different villages could speak in completely different accents.
- Southerners, along with the South Central Coast provinces of Bình Định, Phú Yên, Khánh Hòa, Ninh Thuận and Bình Thuận, speak in a lower-pitched, more monotone accent, which is also found in the accents of various aboriginal languages spoken by Montagnard hill tribe ethnicities.
While these differences may seem superficial to non-Vietnamese speakers, even the difference in phonology. The vocabulary of the different regions also differs, and the difference between Northern and Southern Vietnamese is quite striking.
Kinship terms are especially affected, as each term has a subtly different meaning in each region. In the South, the eldest child in a family is referred by the ordinal number two, while in the North "number two" refers to the second-eldest child. The vocabularies of the different regions also differ. Vocabulary differences can be confusing as sometimes the same word could have different meaning in each dialects. For example, the word mận refers to two different fruits: it is used for Prunus salicina in the North, while in the South it refers to Syzygium samarangense. Similarly; chè is a dessert in Southern Vietnamese but in the Northern it has two meanings: tea and chè, ốm means sick in Northern Vietnamese and thin in Southern Vietnamese. "bông" refers to flower in Southern Vietnamese but means cotton in Northern Vietnamese, and the word địt refers to flatuence in the South but means "fuck" in the North.
Differences in climate
Vietnam is located in both a tropical and a temperate zone. It is characterized by strong monsoon influences, but has a considerable amount of sun, a high rate of rainfall, and high humidity. Regions located near the tropics and at high altitudes are endowed with a temperate climate.Northern Vietnam has a humid subtropical climate, with a full four seasons, with much cooler temperatures than in the South, as well as winters that can get quite cold, sometimes with frost. The lowest temperature reached in Hanoi was in 1955. Snow can even be found in the high mountains of Northern Vietnam such as Sapa and Mount Mẫu Sơn when the region receives a strong cold wave.
Central and Southern Vietnam, which have a tropical climate, have only two main seasons: a dry season and a rainy season.
Miscellaneous cultural differences
- While Southern Vietnamese often ring in the Tết Nguyên Đán with yellow mai blossoms, Northern Vietnamese often prefer hoa đào blossoms.
Names
Today these regions were called Miền Bắc, Miền Trung and Miền Nam in Vietnamese.During the Nguyễn dynasty and French colonial period, the regions were named as Bắc Kỳ, Trung Kỳ, and Nam Kỳ ; these terms originated from the Minh Mạng period.
During the Empire of Vietnam these regions were renamed to Bắc Bộ, Trung Bộ, and Nam Bộ by Prime Minister Trần Trọng Kim. Following the creation of the State of Vietnam and the establishment of its government, the Chief of State Bảo Đại signed the two ordinances related to the administration and local governance of the State of Vietnam, namely Ordinance No. 1 and Ordinance No. 2.
These ordinances renamed the regions to Bắc Việt, Trung Việt, and Nam Việt. Later on 4 August 1954 the government of the State of Vietnam enacted Ordinance No. 21 which renamed the regions to Bắc Phần, Trung Phần, and Nam Nhần. On 24 October 1956 the South Vietnamese president Ngô Đình Diệm officially abolished the three region system as the regions were divided into smaller regions in South Vietnam.