This content was created by Michitake Aso. The last update was by Kandra Polatis.
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Croquis d'ensemble de l'Indochine (1894)
1media/Croquis ensemble de Indochine 1894_thumb.png2020-07-28T12:28:09-04:00Michitake Asoc957806dd05559bbe07c540e9ab4cd46aae194d3355Red River Deltaplain2020-09-07T02:18:35-04:00French IndochinaVietnam National Library.1894Michitake AsoMA-0010Kandra Polatis4decfc04157f6073c75cc53dcab9d25e87c02133
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12020-07-28T09:44:19-04:00Northern Vietnam as Borderland38Background Information for northern Vietnamplain48022021-06-23T14:05:45-04:00Tonkin22.0000, 105.00001894-2000sMichitake AsoAs the "cradle of Vietnamese civilization," the Red River Delta has often been considered a heartland. Yet, the Red River Delta and its surrounding mid- and uplands have, like Xing An in Shellen Wu's module, often been cast as a contested borderland. Those invoking such a space imagined northern Vietnam in a regional geography that has referenced the immediately surrounding areas, including southern China. They also viewed northern Vietnam as part of larger commercialized and militarized spaces. Thus, northern Vietnam has been seen as either a core or a periphery, depending on the questions being asked and the interest of the viewer.
During the period of French colonization, Đại Nam was divided into Cochinchina, Annam, and Tonkin and formed part of French Indochina. The name Tonkin was mistakenly derived from an older name for Hanoi, Đông Kinh (東京) or eastern capital, and erroneously equated with the Vietnamese term Đàng Ngoài (the northern region of Vietnam). This newly created political unit was incorporated in a French imperial world. French commercial and imperial concerns continued to be interested in northern Vietnam's potential access to the markets of China. Here is a French map from 1894 showing Indochina's waterway connections to southern China.
By the early twentieth century, the blank spaces around the Red River Delta on French maps had been filled with ethnographic knowledge relevant to military control of the delta. The following 1905 map of the military territories that ring the delta shows the presence of non-Việt ethnicities such as the Hmong and Tai and suggests how they can be used for military alliances.
Another depiction of northern Vietnam's military and commercial connection with southern China comes from the Asia Pacific War. When French Indochina was incorporated into maps of the Japanese empire. The following map comes from a 1940s Japanese publication aimed at school children showing French Indochina and China. This map emphasizes the waterways and railroad connections linking China to Hanoi and to points further south.
Finally, ethnic groups living in the uplands surrounding the Red River Delta had their own, non-cartographic, ways of mapping the highlands between Southeast Asia and China. The following map is from the perspective of someone from the Hmong ethnic group. It names "Mien" (Myanmar), Laos, and the Hmong territory of the uplands, presumably including northern Vietnam.
And finally consider a Google map perspective of someone looking east from the uplands towards the Tonkin Gulf.