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Vietnam: Contemporary Religious Architecture as a Rare Good

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Vietnam: Contemporary Religious Architecture as a Rare Good
Abstract
In the 16th century, the first Spanish and Portuguese Dominican missionaries arrived in Southeast Asia, included Vietnam, but only after the first decades of the seventeenth century, Christianity began to take hold and lived through different episodes of the Proclamation of the Christian faith: first it was tolerated and then abandoned by the dynasties, supported by the colonialists, declined in the north by the communists, it expanded in the south under the Republic of Vietnam and stabilized until now after the reunification of the country followed by a long breakage due to political change. Along with this story, sacred architecture was interpreted in various ways to define identities in religious life and faith. However, the most difficult period of religious architecture is not only in the political conflict of the past, but also until now, the time of the economic boom. The change of values as well as the aesthetic system make sacred art and architecture remain a giant wheel stuck in mud.
Publication
Actas de Arquitectura Religiosa Contemporánea
Date
2021-12-21
Volume
8
Pages
28-47
Journal Abbr
Actas Arquit Relig Contemp
Accessed
4/29/26, 3:14 PM
ISSN
2659-8671
Short Title
Vietnam
Library Catalog
DOI.org (Crossref)
Citation
Thi Vu, T. H., & Nguyen, T. D. (2021). Vietnam: Contemporary Religious Architecture as a Rare Good. Actas de Arquitectura Religiosa Contemporánea, 8, 28–47. https://doi.org/10.17979/aarc.2021.8.0.8850