Đang chuẩn bị nút TẢI XUỐNG, xin hãy chờ
Tải xuống
Tham khảo bài viết 'báo cáo " the name of red river: an evidence of cultural diversity in vietnam"', luận văn - báo cáo phục vụ nhu cầu học tập, nghiên cứu và làm việc hiệu quả | The Third International Conference on Vietnamese Studies Hanoi. 4-7 December 2008 The name of Red River an evidence of cultural diversity in Vietnam history Prof. Tran Tri Doi Department of Linguistics and Vietnamese Studies College of Social Sciences and Humanities Vietnam National University-Hanoi 1. The Red River and its names in history 1.1. The Red River plays a critical role as a spine of historical and cultural life of Ha Noi the millennium-civilized capital as well as of the entire Tonkin Delta. The river s truck stream flowing through Ha Noi and its branching distributaries spread out to form a fertile delta the Red River Delta. Until now this river has made its appearance with a variety of nominal terms in historical records and folkloristic traditions. Due to the river s great importance to the Vietnamese community its names present more or less clear reflections of cultural traces belonging to the generator of these terms. Therefore a thorough analysis of the differences among the river s names in origin and formation to an extent will shed some light on cultural diversity of the Vietnamese history at the very cradle of the national culture. Figure of the Red River s sub-basin in Vietnamese territory 1.2. There remains a widely and strongly held view concerning language classification that Southeast Asia is home to 5 language families namely Sino - Tibetan Austroasiatic Austronesian Tai - Kadai and Miao-Yao emphasis TTD s 1999 . Vietnam regarded as a linguistic miniature of Southeast Asia is a full convergence of these five families. This framework can serve as a good starting point to take the Red River s names into consideration with a hope of identifying their linguistic origin as well as eradicating their cultural divers. When giving names to the Red River in their own languages the inhabitants of the region definitely recorded them in history. For that reason these toponyms can provide a strong evidence to confirm the cultural convergence of a .