Six Provinces of Southern Vietnam

Southern Vietnam during the Nguyễn dynasty before 1841. Cần Vột (Kampot), Vũng Thơm (Kampong Saom) and Svay Rieng (triangular wedge protruding into Vietnam known as the "Parrot's Beak") would later be ceded by French colonials to Cambodia. Cao Mien = Cambodia. Biển Đông = vi: East Sea. Nam Vang = Phnom Penh. Koh Kong was annexed by Siam until being returned to French Cambodia.
Map of Southern Vietnam in 1883 as part of French Indochina, however following the administrative divisions of the 1832–1862 Nguyễn dynasty's Nam Kỳ Lục Tỉnh.
Basse Cochinchine map

The Six Provinces of Southern Vietnam (Vietnamese: Nam Kỳ Lục tỉnh, 南圻六省 or just Lục tỉnh, 六省) is a historical name for the region of Southern Vietnam, which is referred to in French as Basse-Cochinchine (Lower Cochinchina).[1] The region was politically defined and established after the inauguration of the Nguyễn dynasty, and called by this name from 1832, when Emperor Minh Mạng introduced administrative reforms, to 1867, which culminated in the eight-year French campaign to conquer the Six Provinces.

The six provinces, which in 1832 Emperor Minh Mạng divided Southern Vietnam into, are:

These provinces are often subdivided into two groups: the three eastern provinces of Gia Định, Định Tường, and Biên Hòa; and the three western provinces of Vĩnh Long, An Giang, and Hà Tiên.

  1. ^ Trương, Jean Baptiste Pétrus Vĩnh Ký. "Petit cours de géographie de la Basse-Cochinchine (Small Course on Lower Cochinchina Geography)". Bibliothèque nationale de France (National Library of France). Retrieved 4 January 2014.

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