Old East Gate - Ô Quan Chưởng, Hanoi — Guía del visitante y qué hacer cerca
Acerca de Old East Gate - Ô Quan Chưởng
The Old East Gate, known locally as O Quan Chuong, is the last surviving gate of Hanoi's ancient city fortifications. It stands at the eastern edge of the Old Quarter, a short walk from the Red River, and is a tangible link to the city's walled past.
The gate was originally built in 1749 during the reign of King Le Hien Tong and was known as Dong Ha Gate (East River Gate). The current appearance dates to an 1817 restoration under the Nguyen Dynasty. It has a two-storey structure with a curved rooftop pavilion that originally served as a guard observation post, built in the traditional Nguyen Dynasty style of wooden-hammer brick and stone.
The gate was renamed "Quan Chuong" (Military Leader) after 1873, when a Nguyen Dynasty commander and 100 soldiers died defending it against French colonial forces. Their heroic stand failed to save the city, but it saved the gate: while most of Hanoi's other gates were demolished to make way for French colonial expansion, this one survived.
The gate sits about 80 metres from the old Red River wharf, marking the ancient waterway connection that made Hanoi a trading hub for centuries.
Today, the gate stands quietly on a busy street corner, easily missed by passers-by who don't know its story. If you're on a Questo quest through Hanoi's Old Quarter, the Old East Gate is a stop where 250 years of the city's history are concentrated in a single stone archway.
Planifica tu visita
- Dirección
- 4 P. Hàng Chiếu, Đồng Xuân, Hoàn Kiếm, Hà Nội, Vietnam
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