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Chợ Lớn

Chợ Lớn (, Chinese: 堤岸), usually anglicized as "Cholon" in English sources, is a quarter of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. It lies on the west bank of the Saigon River, having Bình Tây Market as its central market. Chợ Lớn consists of the western half of District 5 as well as several adjoining neighborhoods in District 6 and District 11. The quarter has long been inhabited by Chinese people and is considered the largest Chinatown in the world by area.

For the former province of South Vietnam, see Chợ Lớn province. Not to be confused with Cholón District in Peru.

Chợ Lớn

embankment

Dī'àn

Dī'àn

Ti1an4

tai4ngon6

Chợ Lớn

The Vietnamese name Chợ Lớn literally means "big" (lớn) "market" (chợ). The Chinese (and original) name is (In Cantonese, tai4 ngon6, which is occasionally rendered in Vietnamese orthography as Thầy Ngòn or Thì Ngòn,[4] and in Mandarin, Dī'àn),[1][2] which means "embankment" (French: quais). The Sino-Vietnamese reading of the Chinese name is Đê Ngạn, but this is rarely used. Vietnamese speakers exclusively use the name Chợ Lớn, while Chinese speakers (both inside Vietnam and in China) are the only users of the original Chinese name.

- He was born in Chợ Lớn. He is best remembered as the last Frenchman to win the Wimbledon championships men's singles title in 1946.

Yvon Petra

- Chief of the Joint General Staff of the Army of the Republic of Vietnam from 1966 to 1975.[10][11]

Cao Văn Viên

- French author, aristocrat, and adventurer lived here in 1955. He resided in the Sun Wah hotel, keeping an illustrated journal that was published as From a Chinese City (published in 1957). "He chose Cho Lon, the Chinese riverbank community snuggled up to Saigon because he suspected the ancient customs of a national culture endure longer in remote colonies than in the motherland. In effect, he was studying a bit of ancient China."[12]

Gontran de Poncins

Charles Tran Van Lam

(Chinese: 尹光), born Lui Minkwong (呂明光 and also known as Jackson Wan Kwong), Hong Kong singer

Wan Kwong

(觀音寺)

Quan Am Temple

Thien Hau Temple (Cholon)

Cho Lon Mosque

Nhị Phủ Temple (二府廟)

Hà Chương (Hokkien) Guildhall

Miếu Quan Đế (關帝廟)

Guildhall (明鄉嘉盛會館)

Minh Hương

Tam Sơn Guildhall (三山會館)

. Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 267.

"Cholon" 

literatier Ulrich Brinkhoff: Albträume am Saigon-Fluss. Agenda 2014,  978-3-89688-516-6.

ISBN

book contains many situations and photos in Cholon (in German)