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'It's in Our Blood': How Vietnam Adopted the Latin Alphabet

  • Vietnam adopted the Latin alphabet, known as Quoc Ngu, partly due to French colonial influence in the 19th and 20th centuries.
  • The French promoted the Latin alphabet by educating local administrators who assisted in managing Indochina, with the intent of distancing the region from China's longstanding cultural influence.
  • Quoc Ngu's adoption sparked a boom in newspapers and publishing, which spread anti-colonial ideas that contributed to the Communist Party's rise.
  • Calligraphy teacher Nguyen Thanh Tung, age 38, noted growing interest in traditional Vietnamese culture and called culture an exchange among regions.
  • Ho Chi Minh’s 1945 independence proclamation emphasized new thinking tied to Quoc Ngu, and it remains central to Vietnam’s flexible 'bamboo diplomacy' approach.
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'It's in our blood': how Vietnam adopted the Latin alphabet

At a calligraphy class in Hanoi, Hoang Thi Thanh Huyen slides her brush across the page to form the letters and tonal marks of Vietnam's unique modern script, in part a legacy of French colonial rule.

·Cherokee County, United States
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KULR-TV broke the news in Billings, United States on Sunday, May 25, 2025.
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