Region
_Regions are political and physical border lines, or sections of land that divide one large area into many smaller ones. Political regions cannot be seen; they are large cities, countries, provinces, and states. Toronto, New York, and France are examples of political regions. Physical regions are mountain ranges, rivers, and other natural dividing lines. The Nile River and the Rocky Mountains are examples of physical regions. Regions help control and divide large areas of land.
Vietnam had 58 provinces, five centrally governed cities, and eight regions. It was different a few decades ago when Vietnam was split in half and having a north and south Vietnam. The eight regions are the Red River Delta, Northwestern, Northeastern, North Central Coast, South Central Coast, Central Highlands, Southeastern, and Mekong Delta. The provinces and cities with the most population in each region are Hanoi (capital city), Son La (province), Bac Giang (province), Thanh Hoa (province), Binh Dinh (province), Dak Lak (province), Than Pho Ho Chi Minh (city), and An Giang (province). Some physical regions are the Red River, Annam Mountains, and the Anamite Mountain Chain. Without all the regions, Vietnam would be hard to control.
Vietnam had 58 provinces, five centrally governed cities, and eight regions. It was different a few decades ago when Vietnam was split in half and having a north and south Vietnam. The eight regions are the Red River Delta, Northwestern, Northeastern, North Central Coast, South Central Coast, Central Highlands, Southeastern, and Mekong Delta. The provinces and cities with the most population in each region are Hanoi (capital city), Son La (province), Bac Giang (province), Thanh Hoa (province), Binh Dinh (province), Dak Lak (province), Than Pho Ho Chi Minh (city), and An Giang (province). Some physical regions are the Red River, Annam Mountains, and the Anamite Mountain Chain. Without all the regions, Vietnam would be hard to control.