Scientific name: Parinari annamensis.English name: Annamese parinari, Annamese burada.Russian name: Aннамская бурада.
Scientific name: Parinari annamensis.English name: Annamese parinari, Annamese burada.Thai name: มะพอ,Vietnamese name: Cám.
The Annamite Range covers the majority of Vietnam. It runs from north to south along the border between Vietnam and Laos.
Annamese CordilleraAnnamese Cordilleraannamese cordeilla
The Annamite Mountain Range covers Vietnam, running along its eastern border with Laos and Cambodia. It plays a significant role in shaping the landscape and climate of the region.
The Annamite Range covers about 75 percent of Vietnam, running along the western and southwestern border with Laos and Cambodia. The range is known for its rugged terrain, dense forests, and diverse wildlife.
The major mountain range in Vietnam is the Annamite Range, which runs along the Vietnam-Laos border. It is known for its lush forests and biodiversity. Another important mountain range is the Hoang Lien Son Range, which includes Vietnam's highest peak, Fansipan.
The coast is mostly flat beach, there are a few cliff areas along the coast. Many rivers empty into the coast all over.Some of the Physical characteristics in Vietnam, including rivers, mountains, lakes, streams, oceans, gulfs ect are, the Annamese Mountains in central Vietnam, The Gulf of Tonkin located to the northwest side of Vietnam, The Gulf of Thailand located to the southeast side of Vietnam, and the Red River that flows in from the central part of China, to the northern tip of Vietnam. Well that's all I have for now.:)
The Plain of Jars is located on the Xieng Khouang Plateau is located at the northern end of the Annamese Cordillera, in Laos. The Plain of Jars is a massive burial site (extending through multiple areas) dating back to the Iron Age (500 BC to AD 500), e.g. a prehistoric site. The jars, arranged from 1 to 100 jars each, sit on the land's surface. Human remains and burial items have been excavated near the sets of jars.
angolese. annamese. archdiocese. assamese. balinese. beninese. bhutanese. burmese. canarese. cantonese. ceylonese. cheese. chinese. congolese. creese. diocese. faeroese. fukkianese. gabonese. genoese. genovese. ghanese. guyanese. headlinese. hokkianese. japanese. javanese. journalese. kanarese. lebanese. legalese. maltese. manganese. milanese. motherese. nepalese. nipponese. obese. officialese. pekinese. pekingese. portuguese. senegalese. siamese. singhalese. sudanese. sundanese. taiwanese. telegraphese. these. timorese. togolese. tyrolese. viennese. vietnamese. zairese.
This is a complecated question to answer. But the history of colonialism should help. The French colonised Annam and Cochin-china by force long before the American's were involved. The "nominal" administrators of Vietnam at that time were the manderin Chinese who had invaded the country long before and were Annamese-Chinese but still seen by the peasants as being Chinese and not part of the "true" Annamese people. A group of Annamese people in the north of the country began a mini revolution in the 1920s and 1930s to try and get France to leave. These revolutions were partly successful but untimately failed to gain popular support and so failed. During WWII Japan invaded French Indochina (as the are was called) and took over the power position from the French who were allowed to administer the country on behalf of the Japanese. Both countries were brutal to the people they ruled and over two million Annamese died due to famine caused by not having enough rice to eat. Rice and latex were shipped to France firstly and then to Japan with more rice being required from the peasants even as they were starving to death. During this time Ho Chi Mihn and the revolutionaries he led were working for the USA as spies in Vietnam and were given weapons and supplies to help fight against the Japanese in a resistance movement. After the US dropped the two atomic weapons on Japan they were forced to surrender and the French took over control again. The revolutionaries tried to gain US support to kick the French out but Truman was more concerned with post war Europe and denied aid to remain friends with France. The French ultimately left the country after the stunning defeat of Dien Bien Phu in north western Vietnam. Ho Chi Minh became the ruler of Northern Vietnam (he changed the name from Annam [which means pacified south] to the historic name of Vietnam). This is when the Americans entered the scene. Entering first during the 1950s as "advisors" to the sourth vietnamese government that was still controlled by the manderins and a nominal French presence. Soon after the Americans came ovr the French bailed and left them to it. Because Ho Chi Minh had studied under the communists in the Soviet Union and because of the percieved "spread of communism" and the MacCarthy era the US decided that they could not allow Vietnam to become a free independent country and so backed the manderin government in the south who had only the support of the remaining Frnech colons and the rich Vietnamese. The peasants of the whole of Vietnam were behind the government of Ho Chi Mihn in the North. Ultimately the tenacity of the Vietnamese people coupled with their strong desire to finally be free of occupation aftr 500 years won them the war and control of the whole country. As for the Vietnam war itself. The USA never had control of the south and like the French before them were forced to stay in fortified camps and in the major cities. They ultimately turned to terror tactics and began carpet bombing (which is today considered a war crime because it targets civilians also) and actually dropped more bombs on North Vietname during a single year than the entire number of bombs dropped during all of WWII combined! Both sides in the war were babaric and tortured captured prisoners and committed atrocities such as murder, rape and the destruction of whole villages. Was it immoral for the USA to enter a war of independance on the side of the oppressors? Only you the individual can say. A more complete history can be found at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnam_war although the coverage there is considered biased to the American viewpoint. A truly great novel that is considered by most scholars to be VERY accurate is "Siagon" by Anthony Grey. It outlines the entire history of Vietnam from the days of the French until the last Air America helicopter lifted off of the roof of the CIA hostel in Siagon (the very recognized photo of the helicopter on top of the building was not a marine chopper on the embassy but an Air America (read CIA) chopper on top of the apartment buidling used by the CIA).
A Cordillera is an extensive chain of mountains or mountain ranges. There are a number of Cordillera's, so without even knowing the continent or more specifics your question is impossible to answer. Cordillera (from Wikipedia) Arctic Cordillera, the mountain ranges along the northeastern edge of the Arctic Archipelago and the northeasternmost part of the Ungava Peninsula in Labrador and Quebec, Canada American Cordillera, the mountain ranges forming the western backbone of North America and South America Annamese Cordillera (Annamite Range), Laos and eastern Vietnam Baetic Cordillera, Spain Central Cordillera (New Guinea Highlands) Cordillera Cantábrica and Cantabria (including the Picos de Europa) Cordillera Central, several mountain ranges share the name Cordillera Occidental, Andes, Colombia and Ecuador Cordillera Occidental, Peru Cordillera Oriental, several mountain ranges share the name Pacific Cordillera, an alternate name for the Western Cordillera in North America, usually used in Canada. Sometimes mis-used for the Pacific Coast Ranges. Mexican Cordillera, consisting of the Juarez Segment, the Huayacocotla Segment, the Victoria Segment, and the Nuevoleones Cordillera Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR), encompassing the Cordillera Central mountains of the Philippines Cordillera de los Andes, South America Cordillera de la Costa (Chilean Coast Range) Cordillera de la Costa (Venezuelan Coastal Range) Cordillera de Mérida, Venezuela Gran Cordillera Region (Northern Philippines) East Australian Cordillera Southern Pacific Cordillera, Mindanao, Philippines Zagros Cordillera, Middle East, Southeast of Turkey, Northeast of Iraq, and Northwest to Southeast Iran Albors Cordillera, Northwest-Northeast Iran (also written as Elburz)