Reunification Palace
Vietnamese landmark building in Ho Chi
Minh City, i.e. Saigon,
built on the site of the former Norodom Palace
and also known as Independence Palace. In 1868, a
residence was built here for the French Governor-General of Indochina
which gradually expanded to become the Norodom Palace, named after the
then king of
Cambodia,
at that time a part of French Indochina. When the French in 1954
departed from
Vietnam, after their defeat in the Battle of Dien Bien Phu
(Điện Biên Phủ -
fig.), the palace became home to the South Vietnamese
President Ngo Dinh Diem, who was so unpopular that in 1962 his own air
force bombed the palace in an unsuccessful attempt to kill him. As a
result, the president ordered the palace rebuilt, now with a bomb
shelter in the basement, yet he was killed by his own troops in 1963 before the building
was completed, i.e. in 1966. When Saigon in April 1975 fell to
the Communists, North
Vietnamese Army
tanks (fig.)
on 30 April 1975 crashed through the iron gates (fig.) and
the flag of the Provisional Revolutionary
Government, i.e. the
VC
flag (fig.), was placed on the balcony
of the Palace's Salon of the Four Cardinal Directions (fig.), just 43 hours after General
Duong Van Minh (Dương Văn Minh) had become
head of the South Vietnamese state.
Besides the modest residential area, the palace features several
substantial halls and quarters, including the presidential office, the
cabinet room, a conference hall, a state banqueting hall, the
vice-president's reception salon, the national security
council chamber, presidential reception rooms,
the ambassadors chamber. The furniture and especially the many
large carpets that decorate these places, are rife of Chinese-Vietnamese
symbolism that has been crafted into them (fig.).
See MAP
and
TRAVEL PICTURES (1),
(2)
and
(3).
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