The Indochina Art Museum in Hai Phong city currently stores and displays over 15,000 artifacts dating from hundreds to thousands of years old. The owner of the private museum is businessman Cao Van Tuan, who has a passion for history and a love of art.
The first floor is the main exhibition space at the museum. (Photo: VNP/VNA)
The roof of a house from the Ly Dynasty (11th century), with details reconstructed by Cao Van Tuan in the same size as the original. (Photo: VNP/VNA)
Some items in the museum (hoto: VNP/VNA)
A collection of Sino-Vietnamese ceramics dating from the first to third centuries. (Photo: VNP/VNA)
A display area at the Indochina Art Museum. (Photo: VNP/VNA)
A recent national cultural conference outlined the key tasks in reviving and developing Vietnamese culture amid the country’s integration process. In response, the northern province of Yen Bai is working on a number of measures to preserve and promote the cultural values of local ethnic minority groups.
An exhibition is now underway at the History Museum of Ho Chi Minh City, featuring a wide array of valuable ceramic antiquities spanning from the 11th century to the early 20th century.
Da Nang, a popular destination in Vietnam’s central region, offers a wealth of attractions for visitors from near and far. Join us to see more in the following report.
The Ho Chi Minh City Museum of History has hosted an exhibition featuring a remarkable collection of antiques originating from four Vietnamese dynasties: Ly, Tran, Le, and Nguyen. The exhibition garnered significant public attention, drawing in large numbers of visitors, especially young people and students.
Located in Phan Thiet city, Binh Thuan province, the Lang chai xua (Old fishing village) fish sauce museum is the first and only museum of its kind in Vietnam. The museum vividly recreates the 300-year history of the ancient Phan Thiet fishing village, from the Champa era to the French colonial period and the 1940s - 1960s.