This page was created by Michitake Aso. 

Bodies and Structures 2.0: Deep-Mapping Modern East Asian History

Northern Vietnam as Part of the Vietnamese Geobody

After the Nguyen dynasty (est. 1802) established their Vietnamese empire in Hue, the Red River Delta became one of two rice baskets (the other being the Mekong Delta) sitting at the end of a long pole. Thus, the Red River Delta was incorporated into a Vietnamese national space, or geobody, that deemphasized the delta's ties with southern China clear in borderland and Sinosphere geographies. Another result of establishing the Nguyen dynasty in Hue was the demotion of Hanoi, and its accompanying market Ke Cho, to regional significance. A representation of this national space is the following excerpt from a 1838 map. In this partial reproduction, the Red River Delta is at the top and Hue is at the bottom. This map uses the derogative "An Nam" or pacified south, rather than the names "Dai Nam" or "Yuë Nan" as mentioned in the page on the Red River Delta in the Sinosphere.





The S-shaped view of Vietnam is even clearer in this full 1889 map of French Indochina.



Of course look at any map of Vietnam today and you'll see a representation of the Red River Delta, and Northern Vietnam, in national space.

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