Photo Gallery

Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum (built 1973-75)

Ignoring Ho Chi Minh's wish to be cremated, the successors of Ho Chi Minh constructed this mausoleum between 1973-75 to house his mortal remains. The building is made entirely of native materials, and is contextual to the extent that the roof lines vaguely recall traditional houses (perhaps also the peristyle brings to mind the ubiquitous stilts of traditional homes).

Inside, no cameras or portable items of any kind are allowed. Guards dressed all in white watch carefully as visitors shuffle by the glass case housing Ho Chi Minh. During the night the corpse is lowered deep into the ground into a cooler vault. Despite this protection, the mausoleum closes for three months a year (from September to early December) while the corpse is in Russia for maintenance.

Macabre though it may be, the mausoleum follows a tradition begun with Lenin in Russia. Also housed in a similar building is Mao Zedong of China, who died a few years after Ho Chi Minh and was installed in the Mao Mausoleum at Tiananmen Square, Beijing.

Location

The approximate location of the mausoleum is 21.036706' N, 105.834620' E (WGS 84 map datum).

Bibliography:

All images copyright 2003 Yunsheng Huang of the University of Virginia.

Bezacier, L. Relevés de Monuments Anciens Du Nord Viet-Nam
  Ecole Francaise D'extreme Orient, 1958. Paris

Buckley, Michael. Moon Travel Guides: Vietnam Cambodia and Laos Handbook, 2nd Edition
  Moon Publications, Inc., 1997. China

Cohen, Barbara. The Vietnam Guidebook
  Harper and Row Publishers, Inc., 1990. New York

Florence, Mason & Storey, Robert.
  Lonely Planet Publications, 1999. Melbourne

Nguyen, Ba Dang
  Gioi Publishers, 2004. Hanoi

West, Helen
  APA Publications (HK) Ltd., 1991. Sinapore


Leave a Comment (*required)

Saving...
Name:*
Email:*
 (will not be published)
Website:
Comment:*
Captcha text:*