Từ Nguyên Của Địa Danh "Sài Gòn" - Sưu Tầm

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Từ Nguyên Của Địa Danh "Sài Gòn" - Sưu Tầm

Postby rubydraco » 05 Jan 2006

Tác Giả: Sưu Tầm

RD muốn chia sẻ một sô bài nghiên cứu khá hay dzà lý thú nhưng dzì mấy bài ni khá dài mà RD wánh tiêng Việt rất rất ư là chậm chạp. Trừ khi có ai wánh tiếng việt nhanh dzà giúp RD khõ mấy bài này :tt:. RD thử thí nghiệm hấp tự dzô dạng jpeg dzả up lên cho bà con xem thử. Xin cho RD ý kiến dzì nếu topic hiện ra wá chậm thì RD sẽ bỏ cách này. Xin bắt đàu nha...

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Còn ai muốn dl bài ni ở dạng pdf để đọc từ từ thì bấm dzô đây:
http://www.hotmit.com/mega05/Tu Nguyen Dia Danh Saigon.pdf
Lỗ mũi anh tám gánh lông
Nhưng thương em bảo râu rổng trời cho!
:D
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Món quà tinh thần gởi tặng rubydraco từ: Mười Đậu, sau rieng

Postby Mười Đậu » 05 Jan 2006

Không chậm đâu Rồng Đỏ. Tố chè nị. :D
Dziệc dzì để được ngày mai, thì không nên làm bửa nay!
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Postby uachoiboi » 05 Jan 2006

hay quá, hình như học giả Nguyễn Hiến Lê và nhà văn Bình Nguyên Lộc cũng có bài khảo cứu về địa danh Saigon?
ruby có hông?
cám ơn nhe
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Postby rubydraco » 07 Jan 2006

uachoiboi wrote:hay quá, hình như học giả Nguyễn Hiến Lê và nhà văn Bình Nguyên Lộc cũng có bài khảo cứu về địa danh Saigon?
ruby có hông?
cám ơn nhe


Xin lỗi uachoiboi RD hổng có. Nhưng RD kiếm được cái ni:

---------------------
Nguồn Gốc Danh Từ Sài Gòn

Ho Chi Minh City (Vietnamese: Thành phố Hồ Chí Minh) is the largest city in Vietnam, located near the delta of the Mekong River. Under the name Prey Nokor (Khmer: ), it was the main port of Cambodia, before being conquered by the Vietnamese in the 16th century. Under the name Saigon (Vietnamese: Sài Gòn), it was the capital of the French colony of Cochinchina, and later of the independent state of South Vietnam from 1954 to 1975. It is situated on the Saigon River. Hồ Chí Minh City is located at 10°45' North, 106°40' East (10.75, 106.667), 1,760 km south of Ha Noi. [1]

Origin of the name
Original Khmer name

The city was known by its original Khmer inhabitants as Prey Nokor ( ). Prey Nokor means "forest city", or "forest land" in Khmer (Prey = "forest"; Nokor = "city, land", from Sanskrit nagara). The name Prey Nokor is still the name used in Cambodia today, as well as the name used by the Khmer Krom minority living in the delta of the Mekong.
Traditional Vietnamese name
After Prey Nokor was settled by Vietnamese refugees from the north, in time it became known as Sài Gòn. There is much debate about the origins of the Vietnamese name Sài Gòn, whose etymology is analyzed below.
Before the French colonization, the official Vietnamese name of Saigon was Gia Định (Hán nôm: 嘉定). In 1862, the French discarded this official name and adopted the name "Saigon", which had always been the popular name.
From an orthographic point of view, the Vietnamese name Sài Gòn is written in two syllables, which is the traditional convention in Vietnamese spelling. Some people, however, write the name of the city as SàiGòn or Sàigòn in order to save space or give it a more westernized look.
Sino-Vietnamese etymology
A frequently heard etymology is that Sài is a Chinese loan word (Chinese: 柴, pronounced chái in Mandarin) meaning "firewood, lops, twigs; palisade", while Gòn is another Chinese loan word (Chinese: 棍, pronounced gùn in Mandarin) meaning "stick, pole, bole", and whose meaning evolved into "cotton" in Vietnamese (bông gòn, literally "cotton stick", i.e. "cotton plant", then shortened to gòn).
Some people say that this name originated from the many cotton plants that the Khmers had planted around Prey Nokor, and which can still be seen at Cây Mai temple and surrounding areas. …
Trương Vĩnh Ký, "Souvenirs historiques sur Saigon et ses environs", in Excursions et Reconnaissances, Imprimerie Coloniale, Saigon, 1885.
Another explanation is that the etymological meaning "twigs" (Sài) & "boles" (Gòn) refers to the dense and tall forest once existing around Saigon, a forest to which the Khmer name Prey Nokor already referred.
Chinese people both in Vietnam and in China do not use the name 柴棍 (pronounced Chaai-Gwan in Cantonese and Cháigùn in Mandarin), although etymologically speaking it is the Chinese name from which the Vietnamese name Sài Gòn is derived (if the theory here is correct). Instead, they call the city 西貢 (pronounced Sai-Gung in Cantonese and Xīgòng in Mandarin), which is a mere phonetic transliteration of the name "Saigon".
Khmer etymology
Another etymology often proposed is that "Saigon" comes from "Sai Con", which would be the transliteration of the Khmer words prey kor ( ) meaning "forest of kapok trees" (prey = forest; kor = kapok tree). The Khmer word prey kor should not be confused with the Khmer name "Prey Nokor" discussed above (kor is a Khmer word meaning "kapok tree", while nokor is a Khmer word of Sanskrit origin meaning "city, land").
This Khmer etymology theory is quite interesting given the Khmer context that existed when the first Vietnamese settlers arrived in the region. However, it fails to completely explain how Khmer "prey" led to Vietnamese "Sài", since these two syllables appear phonetically quite distinct.
Cantonese etymology
A less likely etymology was offered by Vuong Hong Sen, a Vietnamese scholar in the early 20th century, who asserted that Sài Gòn had its origins in the Cantonese name of Cholon (Vietnamese: quoc ngu Chợ Lớn; chu nom ), the Chinese district of Saigon. The Cantonese (and original) name of Cholon is "Tai-Ngon" (堤岸), which means "embankment" (French: quais). The theory posits that "Sài Gòn" derives from "Tai-Ngon".
Current Vietnamese name
On May 1, 1975, after the fall of South Vietnam, the now ruling communist government renamed the city after the pseudonym of their leader Hồ Chí Minh. The official name is now Thành phố Hồ Chí Minh, often abbreviated TPHCM. In English this is translated as Hồ Chí Minh City, abbreviated HCMC, and in French it is translated as Hô Chi Minh Ville (the circumflex is sometimes omitted), abbreviated HCMV. Still, the old name Sài Gòn/Saigon is widely used by Vietnamese and is found in company names or on book titles.

History
Hồ Chí Minh City began as a small fishing village known as Prey Nokor. The area that the city now occupies was originally swampland, and was inhabited by Khmer people for centuries before the arrival of the Vietnamese. It grew to become a trading post and the main port of the Kingdom of Cambodia.
In 1623, King Chey Chettha II of Cambodia (1618-1628) allowed Vietnamese refugees fleeing the Trinh-Nguyen civil war in Vietnam to settle in the area of Prey Nokor, and to set up a custom house at Prey Nokor. Increasing waves of Vietnamese settlers, which the weakened Cambodian kingdom could not impede, slowly vietnamized the area. In time, Prey Nokor became known as Saigon.
In 1698, Nguyen Huu Canh, a Vietnamese noble, was sent by the Nguyen rulers of Huế to establish Vietnamese administrative structures in the area, thus detaching the area from Cambodia, which was not strong enough to intervene. He is often credited with the expansion of Saigon into a significant settlement.
Conquered by France in 1859, the city was influenced by the French during their colonial occupation of Vietnam, and a number of classical western-style prominent buildings in the city reflect this. So that Saigon was called ' the Pearl of the Far East" (Hon ngoc Vien Dong) or "Little Paris" (Tieu Paris).
In 1954, the French were defeated by the Communist Viet Minh in the Battle of Điện Biên Phủ, and withdrew from Vietnam. Rather than recognise the Communists as the new government, however, they gave their backing to a government established by Emperor Bảo Đại. Bảo Đại had set up Saigon as his capital in 1950. At that time Saigon and the city of Cholon (primarily Vietnamese Chinese) next to were combined into one administrative unit, called the Capital of Saigon (Đô Thành Sài Gòn in Vietnamese). When Vietnam was officially partitioned into North Vietnam (the Democratic Republic of Vietnam) and South Vietnam (the Republic of Vietnam), the southern government, led by President Ngô Đình Diệm, retained Saigon as its capital.
At the conclusion of the Vietnam War in 1975, the city came under the control of the North Vietnamese Army and its allies. In the U.S. this event is commonly called the "Fall of Saigon," while in Vietnam it is called the "Liberation of Saigon."
In 1976, upon establishment of the unified Socialist Republic of Vietnam, the victorious Communists renamed the city after socialist Vietnam's founding father, Hồ Chí Minh. The former name Saigon is still used by most Vietnamese, especially in informal contexts. Generally, the term Saigon refers only to District One of Hồ Chí Minh City.
After April 30, 1975 the city of Saigon (including Cholon), the province of Giadinh and 2 suburban districts of two other nearby provinces were combined to create a new great city and renamed Ho Chi Minh City in honour of the leader Hồ Chí Minh. HCMC covers a large area of 809 sq mi/2,095 sq km up to Cu Chi 20 km far from the Cambodian border, down to Can Gio on the East Sea coast. The distance from the northernmost point (Phu My Hung Commune, Cu Chi District) to the southernmost one (Long Hoa Commune, Can Gio District) is 120 km, and from the easternmost point (Long Binh Ward, District Nine) to the westernmost one (Binh Chanh Commune, Binh Chanh District) is 46 km. Although Hồ Chí Minh is the city's official name, almost all of its inhabitants still refer to their city as Saigon. The word "Saigon" can also be found on shop signs all over the country, even in Hanoi, as in "Saigon Fashion" or "Saigon Style," since many Vietnamese associate the word "Saigon" with a kind of hipness.
Today, the city's core is still adorned with wide elegant boulevards and historic French colonial buildings. The most prominent structures in the city center are Reunification Hall (Dinh Thống Nhất) on Le Duan Street and Notre Dame Cathedral (Nhà thờ Đức Bà).
Hồ Chí Minh City is home to a well-established ethnic Chinese population. Cholon, now known as District Five, serves as its Chinatown.

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:tt:
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Postby sau rieng » 07 Jan 2006

Cám ơn Rồng đỏ đã cho coi những tài liệu giá trị , nhờ vậy mình cũng khôn ra được chút xíu ! (Cũng... too late rùi huh , khi mình ko còn ở đó nữa thì mới biết thêm về nó :buồn: )
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