3:13 The temple you just passed by is Đình Tư Lễ, a Vietnamese communal house built in the 2nd year of the Duy Tân reign. I couldn't help but laugh when you said it doesn't look Vietnamese. LOL
3:24 và có cả đài tưởng niệm liệt sĩ được xây dựng sau năm 1975 nữa. Con đàn bà này thật kỳ quặc! Cứ thấy có chữ Hán là nói Trung Quốc, trong khi người Việt xưa cũng dùng chữ Hán.
@Fangvu Hắn nói là một số di tích Việt Nam viết bằng Trung văn không phải nói của Trung Quốc. Đúng ra phải nói chữ Hán. Cũng như nhiều Pháp thấy Việt Nam dùng chữ a,b,c giống họ , nên họ nghĩ là từ tiếng Pháp mà ra. Thật ra là giáo sĩ Bồ Đào Nha lấy ký tự Latinh tạo ra. Chụp mũ chửi bới không nâng tầm văn minh của mình hơn họ. Đấng sinh thành của mình đều là đàn bà hết.
10:55 This woman is causing a significant misunderstanding that could lead to a distortion of history. Hoi An actually resembles old Vietnamese towns before the 20th century. Why does Hoi An look like China? Because that was the common style in all ancient cities in Vietnam before the 20th century, which were all influenced by the Chinese. Hoi An is the only city that has been preserved intact, but you can still find this style in old photos of Hanoi, Nam Dinh, and Bao Vinh. So, can we say that Hoi An looks like China? No, it is very Vietnamese if you can distinguish the architectural styles.
Vietnamese people: please don't get so jumpy when a Chinese tourist felt the city had a strong Chinese flavor. In fact when this youtuber said said Hoi An had an old Chinese tradition because in earlier time many ethnic Chinese lived there, she was being factually correct. Hoi An was a significant commercial sea port, many ethnic Chinese merchants lived there and gave the city a heavier Chinese flavor.
Hoi An town with many Assembly Houses (Hội Quán) of Cantonese (Quảng Đông ),Fujien (Phúc Kiến),Hainan(Hải Nam)...many Chinese Gods worship as: Quan Công in Quan Công Miếu, Mã Chù (Thiên Hậu Nương : Sea God ), Tài Công,Lục Vương Gia,Quan Jing (lady buddha). Almost Chinese in Hoi An moved to Da Nang harbour (Đà Nẵng Hải Cảng) from mid 19th century.😊
Can you distinguish between Vietnamese cultural architecture and Chinese cultural architecture? 😨😨 I agree that there are some Chinese architectural styles in Hoi An, due to the large Chinese community in Hoi An, but Vietnamese cultural architecture will be different, it is also separate like Korea and Japan,😧😧
The youtuber comment was about Hoi An had a lot of Chinese architecture flavors in the older buildings, because as you said correctly, there were large Chinese community lived there. Many ancient Vietnamese architectual styles were essentially indistinguishable from Chinese styles, unless someone is super hair splitting just to claim a distinction.
Hội an từng là nơi sinh sống của người Việt, người Nhật và người Hoa ở phía nam TQ, họ đã đến sinh sống và buôn bán trên vùng đất này, thật tiếc ko ít người đã rời đi vì chiến tranh. Và t nói thật với bạn là bạn ở TQ quá lâu, bạn bị tuyên truyền văn hóa chủ nghĩa dân tộc độc hại của chính quyền bạn, nên nhiều khi bạn bình luận ko đúng với các vấn đề nước khác hay quốc tế
Buồn cười thật chứ nhìn Đình Tu Lễ và đài tưởng niệm Hội An rồi nói không giống Việt Nam, trong khi nó đều được người Việt Nam xây dựng. Không biết nói gì thêm trước thông tin sai lệch của bạn trẻ này. Vui lòng tôn trọng văn hóa bản địa của chúng tôi!
Many French style buildings in Hanoi and HCM were built by Vietnamese. Then if a French or European white person commented that those buildings look French or European, then would you get offended? I bet you won't, in fact you may even "like" it. So why the big emotion about China? Of course I know the answer, because Vietnamese have been taught to view China as a threat. I know Vietnam lives under the shadow of China, so Vietnamese feel concerned about losing identity. It's a psychological issue that Vietnamese have to find a way to deal with, hopefully can find a Win-Win way to exist along with China, rather than keep feeling threatened and to feel negative emotions.
You should go to Japan and Korea and say that it is Chinese culture. I do not deny that Vietnamese culture has been influenced by China, but each country has its own culture. Look at old photos of Hanoi taken by the French and paintings of Hanoi by Bui Xuan Phai. They are very similar to Hoi An; would you dare to say that the culture of Hanoi is Chinese culture?
@@elintravel I do not deny that Vietnam has been influenced by Chinese culture and was a vassal state of China. However, we have our own culture based on the foundation of Chinese culture. It is quite absurd to say that the entire culture of Hoi An is Chinese culture.
@@elintravel Furthermore, I do not think Hoi An is similar to ancient cities in Yunnan, Guangdong, or Fujian. Objectively, it most closely resembles other ancient Vietnamese cities from the 19th century, such as Hanoi, Nam Dinh, and Pho Hien. No one denies that the Chinese lived here and brought their culture, but that does not mean Hoi An lacks its own indigenous culture. I hope you respect our culture, and remember that throughout history, Vietnamese people have been the majority in Hoi An, while Chinese and Japanese people were only minority groups.
That is the culture of Hoi An. The Chinese are only a minority here. In addition, there are also Japanese and Vietnamese people. There are many houses of Vietnamese clans there. Vietnamese culture is, of course, a part of Chinese culture, but it has its own distinct characteristics. It is like saying that Japanese, Korean, and Vietnamese cultures are Chinese culture, which is not correct.
Besides the Chinese guild halls, there are many temples, pagodas, and ancient houses of Vietnamese people. All of these blend together to form the culture of Hoi An, and we collectively respect this diversity. However, it is perplexing that this woman keeps insisting it is Chinese culture. Has she ever seen old photos of Hanoi and Nam Dinh?
These are Vietnamese-style streets, with yellow wall, red roof, green door, mixed with a bit of French architecture. Why do you think they are your chinese style? I agree that there are Chinese people in Hoi An, but they are only a minority, 😨😨 The Chinese assembly halls are Chinese architecture, but the overall Hoi An ancient town is not, it is similar to the ancient streets of Hanoi, Bac Ninh,... Do you mean that the ancient architectures in Vietnam were all built by the Chinese? 😂😂 you can go to Japan and Korea to say that it's your culture, ?.😂😂 Hope you can take some time to learn about Vietnamese history, architecture, and culture before explaining,
Whatever you expression such above. The architectures and the ancient Chinese and Japanese were in Hoi An for a certain period of time that's the history of Hoi An and It's the fact. And the ancient Chinese and Japanese were doing business in Hoi An for a long time and their heritage still remains to nowadays. Your above comments doesn't make any sense. That is it.
10:04 LOL. The Chinese cannot distinguish between Chinese architectural style and Vietnamese architectural style (influenced by China). I think you should go to Japan and South Korea and shout loudly: "Everything is China."
@@elintravel đây là thương cảng của việt nam trong đó có người trung quốc tới buôn bán giao lưu, không phải khu vực người hoa sinh sống, khu vực này còn có cả người nhật và pháp tới buôn bán.
Hội An thực sự từng là 1 hải cảng rất phồn Vinh, nhưng nó đã bị Vua quang Trung Phá hủy đến 90%, thực Sự Quang trung là 1 vị vua đáng kính nhưng đây là 1 lỗi lầm lớn của Ngài ấy
You mean the style of the Chinese people or the style of the Vietnamese people (influenced by Chinese culture)? Remember that the Chinese are only a minority in Hoi An, and their assembly halls are not the entirety of Hoi An's architecture.
@@elintravel this is too funny. China is a bully and steal every countries land and trying to take more. hahahah. Are the communists China paying you to say this?