Embassy of China in Hanoi(Chinese: 中國駐越南大使館 ; Vietnamese: Đại sứ quán Trung Quốc tại Việt Nam)is the official diplomatic mission of the People's Republic of China in the Socialist Republic of Vietnam. The embassy was opened in 1954, and the current ambassador is Xiong Bo.
Embassy of China in Hanoi
Chinese: 中國駐越南大使館 Vietnamese: Đại sứ quán Trung Quốc tại Việt Nam | |
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Location | Ba Đình district, Hanoi, Vietnam |
Address | 46 Hoàng Diệu St., Ba Đình District, Hanoi |
Ambassador | Xiong Bo |
Website | vn |
History
editFollowing the Chinese Communist Revolution at home, China established their embassy to Vietnam on a hill in Đại Từ district, Thái Nguyên province, since Hanoi was unavailable at the time due to the First Indochina War. It was here that China's first ambassador to Vietnam, Luo Guibo, submitted his credentials to Ho Chi Minh.[1]
On August 25, 1954, after Vietnamese victory in the war, China decided to establish an embassy in Hanoi proper. Ho Chi Minh allowed the Chinese delegation to freely choose a location anywhere in Hanoi and report back to him. The current site of the Chinese Embassy was originally the official residence of Hoàng Trọng Phu, a former minister of French Tonkin. The selection was soon approved by Ho Chi Minh.[2]
List of ambassadors
editDiplomatic agrément/Diplomatic accreditation | Ambassador | Chinese language zh:中国驻越南大使列表 |
Observations | Premier of the Republic of China | List of heads of state of Vietnam | Term end |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
February 13, 1941 | Lin Jiamin | 林珈民 | Chargé d'affaires of the government in Nanjing to the Japanese occupation troops in Huế. | Wang Jingwei | Bảo Đại | |
January 1, 1944 | Zhang Yongfu | zh:张永福 | Chargé d'affaires of the government in Nanjing to the Japanese occupation troops in Huế.
(born 1872 in Singapore- 1957) |
Wang Jingwei | Bảo Đại | |
March 11, 1945 | The Japanese occupation force declared an Empire of Vietnam independent from the Fédération indochinoise.[3] | Wang Jingwei | Bảo Đại | |||
August 25, 1945 | The Vietnamese Empire announced the throne abdication. | Chen Gongbo | Bảo Đại | |||
August 30, 1945 | In Huế the Vietnamese Empire celebrated its throne abdication ceremony. | Chen Gongbo | Bảo Đại |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "经商处党小组赴越北使馆旧址开展党日活动". vn.mofcom.gov.cn. Retrieved 2023-10-29.
- ^ Li, Jiazhong (2011). 胡志明和中國駐越大使館交往紀事 (in Chinese). 黨史博覽. pp. 46–47.
- ^ "Japanese occupation of Vietnam". alphahistory.com. Retrieved 2017-08-27.
- ^ Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People's Republic of China, Chinese Ambassadors to Vietnam, [1], 驻越南社会主义共和国历任大使, [2]