Cao Bang Province: Difference between revisions
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==Historical and Military== | ==Historical and Military== | ||
On February 8, 1941, [[Ho Chi Minh]] established his headquarters in a the Coc Bo Grotto, in a mountain near Pac Bo hamlet of the province. <ref name=Patti>{{cite book | On February 8, 1941, [[Ho Chi Minh]] established his headquarters in a the Coc Bo Grotto, in a mountain near Pac Bo hamlet of the province. <ref name=Patti>{{cite book | ||
| title = Why Viet Nam? Prelude to America's Albatross | | title = Why Viet Nam? Prelude to America's Albatross | ||
| author = Patti, Archimedes L. A. | | author = Patti, Archimedes L. A. | ||
| publisher = University of California Press | | publisher = University of California Press |
Revision as of 20:42, 4 July 2010
Cao Bang Province is in Vietnam's northern border with China, for 314 km in the north and east. Bac Kan and Lang Son Provinces are on its south, and Ha Giang and Tuyen Quang Provinces form the western border. It is 272km north of Hanoi on National Highway 3. of Vietnamese-Chinese border. The terrain is mountainous, with many lakes. Bak Kan and Lang Son Provinces are to its south, while Ha Giang and Tuyen Quang Provinces are to the west.
- external site [1]
Historical and Military
On February 8, 1941, Ho Chi Minh established his headquarters in a the Coc Bo Grotto, in a mountain near Pac Bo hamlet of the province. [1] He made a statue of Karl Marx out of one of the stalagmites, and named the spring running in front of the grotto entrance after Vladimir Lenin and the highest mountain peak also after Marx,[2] which the Ministry of Tourism plans to develop as a historical site.[3]
Cao Bang City is its capital. It was attacked by Chinese forces in 1979, during the Third Indochina War.
Economic
It is developing an industrial sector for mining and processing manganese.
- external economics [2]