Côn Đảo
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The Côn Đảo ("Côn Island") are an archipelago of Bà Rịa–Vũng Tàu province, in the Southeast region of Vietnam, and also a district (Template:Langx)[1] of this province.
Geography
Situated about Template:Cvt from Vũng Tàu and Template:Cvt from Ho Chi Minh City, the group includes 16 mountainous islands and islets. The total land area reaches Template:Cvt and the local population is about 5,000.
The islands are composed of magmatic rocks of different ages. Hòn Bảy Cạnh, Hòn Cau and Hòn Bông Lang are composed of Cretaceous microgranite rocks]. The northern part of Côn Đảo Island is composed of quartz diorite and granite - granodiorite of late Mesozoic- early Cenozoic age, and is partially covered by Quaternary marine sediments. The southern part of this island and Hòn Bà island are composed of the rhyolite and intrusive formations of unknown age. On the western slope of Côn Đảo Island, there exist groups of outcrops of diorite and microgranite penetrated by big quartz bands.[2]
The island group is served by Con Dao Airport (Template:Comma separated entries) situated on the largest island in the archipelago, Côn Sơn Island. The total size of Côn Đảo Airport is Template:Cvt, with one runway Template:Cvt long. It can handle 400,000 passengers per year. Currently, Vietnam Airlines (Operated by VASCO), Bamboo Airways and Vietnam Helicopters are three airlines operating flights to the island.[3]
History
In Template:Circa, the Java (Daba) fleets from Shailendra dynasty were laid a military attacks. The Cambodian inscriptions were generally said the fleets was Malayan, Sumatran, Javanese, or all of them, quickly seized the island of Pulo-Condor (Côn Sơn Island). At that time, the island were used by Javanese pirates to conducting some numerous military raids on Champa and Chiaou-Chou.[4]Template:Sfn
On June 16, 1702, the East India Company from England founded a settlement on Côn Sơn Island, which they named Pulo Condore as an entrepôt for ships plying between India and China.[5] Three years later, on 2 March 1705, the Bugis mercenaries hired by the English mutinied, murdered the agents, destroyed the factory, and expelled the remaining settlers.[6]
During the internecine wars for the Court of Huế, the Nguyễn prince, Gia Long, born Nguyễn Phúc Ánh, ceded the islands to France as part of the 1787 Treaty of Versailles in return for military assistance. The treaty however was abrogated as France failed to provide the aid.
It was only under conquest that the islands came under French control in 1861. Côn Sơn Island became infamous during the French colonial era because of Côn Đảo Prison and the notorious "tiger cages". Vietnamese and Cambodian nationalists and revolutionaries were sent here to serve their sentence for anti-French activities. Many Vietnamese Communist leaders were "schooled" on Côn Đảo Island as well.
The French Indochinese government named the group of islands Poulo-Condore Islands, a name that derives from the islands' Malay name Pulo Condore[7] (pulau meaning "island" and kundur meaning "wax gourd"). The islands can be identified with Ptolemy's Satyrorum insulae (Isles of the Satyrs), a name probably drawn from the monkeys endemic to the islands, the Con Song long-tailed macaque, (Macaca fascicularis ssp. condorensis). Ptolemy refers to the three islands inhabited by people, 'said to have tails such as they depict satyrs having'.[8]
In 2020, the United States Navy sent ships on "freedom of navigation exercises" around the islands to challenge what they deemed to be Vietnam's "excessive maritime claims."[9]
Climate
Côn Đảo National Park
Many of the islands were given protected status in 1984 as part of Côn Đảo National Park. This natural preserve was subsequently enlarged in 1998. Endangered species protected within the park include the hawksbill sea turtle, the green sea turtle, dolphins,[10] and the dugong. Ecosystems represented in the park include seagrass meadow, mangrove and coral reefs.
Côn Đảo National Park is working with the World Wide Fund for Nature, formerly the World Wildlife Fund, (WWF) Vietnam to further protection in the marine areas, with programs to establish a marine protected area that protects coral reefs, seagrass beds and species, while also developing sustainable nature-based ecotourism. The island's management is strongly geared towards sustainable use, hoping to learn from previous experiences in Vietnam and the region to balance development with conservation.
Ferry
A hydrofoil service from Vũng Tàu to Côn Đảo was started in February 2019. The service is a daily return and boasts that the ferry will operate year-round, regardless of the weather. Travel time is 4–5 hours.
Two ferries operate between Côn Đảo and the mainland. There is a daily overnight hour ferry service from Vũng Tàu which, in addition to bringing passengers, serves as the main source of importing goods to the islands. The ferry operates on a daily basis, however in winter months the service depends largely on weather conditions as the seas between Côn Đảo and the mainland can be rough.
In 2016, a ferry service primarily for passengers opened up between Sóc Trăng and Côn Đảo, shortening the length of the journey to three hours. With the addition of a fast ferry to the islands, the islands have experienced an increase in tourism fueled mostly by domestic tourists who view Côn Đảo as a sacred place due to its history.[11]
List of islands
Côn Đảo Islands include 16 islands, with a total area of Template:Cvt
- Côn Lôn Island or Côn Sơn Island (French: Grande-Condore), Phú Hải, Template:Cvt
- Little Côn Lôn Island (Petite-Condore), or Hòn Bà, Phú Sơn, Template:Cvt
- Bảy Cạnh Island, or Bãi Cạnh Island, Phú Hòa, Template:Cvt
- Cau Island, or Phú Lệ Template:Cvt
- Bông Lan Island, or Bông Lang, Bông Lau, Phú Phong, Template:Cvt
- Vung Island, or Phú Vinh, Template:Cvt
- Ngọc Island, or Trọc Island, hòn Trai, Phú Nghĩa, Template:Cvt
- Trứng Island, or Đá Bạc Island, Đá Trắng Island, Phú Thọ, Template:Cvt
- Tài Lớn Island, or Phú Bình Template:Cvt
- Tài Nhỏ Island, or Thỏ Island, Phú An, Template:Cvt
- Trác Lớn Island, or Phú Hưng Template:Cvt
- Trác Nhỏ Island, or Phú Thịnh Template:Cvt
- Tre Lớn Island, or Phú Hòa Template:Cvt
- Tre Nhỏ Island, or Phú Hội, Template:Cvt
- Anh Island, or Trứng Lớn Island
- Em Island, or Trứng Nhỏ Island
Thứ phi Hoàng Phi Yến
Thứ phi Hoàng Phi Yến, or Imperial Concubine Phi Yến, is a controversial local legend from the Côn Đảo archipelago. According to the legend she was the concubine of Lord Gia Long (Nguyễn Phúc Ánh) and gave birth to a son known as Prince Cải, she advised Lord Ánh not to ask foreigners for help as that would make their victory less glorious and might cause issues in future, these comments caused Lord Ánh to be suspicious of her motives and to lock her up in a cave. Later when their toddler asked where his mother was he killed him. She grieved their son and later committed suicide as she was touched by a butcher during a vegetarian festival seeing it as "harming her honour as a concubine". This caused the villagers of Côn Đảo to hold a festival in her honour every year.
References
Further reading
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External links
- Con Dao photos
- The Kun Lun Shan islands are shown on sheet 11 of the Mao Kun map Wu Bei Zhi at the Library of Congress
- Vietnamese Sea and Islands – position Resources, and typical geological and ecological wonders. Publisher Science and Technology. Ha Noi, Editor: Nguyen Khoa Son, Template:ISBN. In Vietnamese
Template:Districts of Southeast Vietnam
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- ↑ Robert J. King, "Pulo Condor, Isles of the Satyrs", presented at ‘Mapping in Action’: 47th annual ANZMapS conference, National Library of Australia, Canberra, 24–25 September 2019.[1]Template:Dead link
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- Districts of Bà Rịa-Vũng Tàu province
- Bà Rịa-Vũng Tàu province
- Archipelagoes of Vietnam
- Landforms of Bà Rịa-Vũng Tàu province
- Former British colonies and protectorates in Asia
- States and territories established in 1702
- Former populated places in Vietnam
- Islands of the South China Sea
- Former penal colonies
- 1702 establishments in the British Empire