Urban district (Vietnamese: quận), or borough, is a type of second tier subdivision on Vietnam is divided into 713 units along with district, provincial city, and town have equal status.[1]
The urban districts can only subordinate to municipality as the Second Tier unit. At the Third Tier, urban district is divided into wards.
History
editBefore 1975, in South Vietnam, all second-level administrative subdivisions were called districts (quận), regardless of urban or rural areas. For example, quận Châu Thành, Vĩnh Long Province is in the urban area of present Vĩnh Long city, and quận Trà Ôn was the rural area of present Vĩnh Long Province.
As of October 31, 2024[update], Vietnam had 47 urban districts.[2] Ho Chi Minh City with 19 urban districts had the most. Cần Thơ City with five urban districts had the fewest.
List of urban districts in Vietnam
editHanoi (12 urban districts)
- Ba Đình District
- Hoàn Kiếm District
- Đống Đa District
- Hai Bà Trưng District
- Cầu Giấy District
- Thanh Xuân District
- Hoàng Mai District
- Long Biên District
- Tây Hồ District
- Hà Đông District
- Bắc Từ Liêm District (North Từ Liêm District)
- Nam Từ Liêm District (South Từ Liêm District)
Ho Chi Minh City (16 urban districts)
- District 1
- District 3
- District 4
- District 5
- District 6
- District 7
- District 8
- District 10
- District 11
- District 12
- Tân Bình District
- Tân Phú District
- Bình Tân District
- Phú Nhuận District
- Gò Vấp District
- Bình Thạnh District
Haiphong (8 urban districts)
- Hồng Bàng District
- Ngô Quyền District
- Lê Chân District
- Kiến An District
- Hải An District
- Dương Kinh District
- Đồ Sơn District
- An Dương District
Da Nang (6 urban districts)
- Hải Châu District
- Thanh Khê District
- Sơn Trà District
- Ngũ Hành Sơn District
- Liên Chiểu District
- Cẩm Lệ District
Cần Thơ (5 urban districts)
References
edit- ^ "Đơn vị hành chính". Archived from the original on 2015-11-13.
- ^ The data of local administrative subdivisions till 31 December 2008 by Vietnam Statistics General Office. Archived 1 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine