A cultural festival celebrating Hùng Kings, known as the country’s founders, began on April 18 in Ho Chi Minh city and Thu Duc city.
The event opened with a series of traditional games and sports, and cooking competitions at the Hùng Kings memorial area located in the Park of Culture and National History in Thủ Đức City.
The main ceremony commemorating the anniversary of the kings' death will be organized on the 10th day of the third month of the lunar calendar, which falls on Wednesday this year.
It will include incense-offering rituals dedicated to the Hùng Kings, the National Father Lạc Long Quân and National Mother Âu Cơ, hosted by officials from the People’s Party Committee, People’s Committee and Motherland Front Committee.
A special exhibition of pictures and ancient objects featuring the country’s history and culture in different periods is being held.
Folk music and martial arts performances, staged by artists of leading traditional art troupes in the region, will be organised during the ceremony.
Vietnamese songs and instrumental music pieces will be performed. Patriotism, peace, love, youth and spring will be the shows’ themes.
In HCM City, a youth camp called Tự Hào Nòi Giống Tiên Rồng (Proudly Our Legends) with university students will open at 8am on Thursday at the Tao Đàn Cultural Park in District 3.
As per tradition, Suối Tiên and Đầm Sen parks in districts 9 and 11 will hold events for visitors to pay tribute to the Hùng Kings.
According to Vietnamese legend, Lạc Long Quân, the son of Kinh Dương Vương, married Âu Cơ, the daughter of King Đế Lai. Âu Cơ then gave birth to a sack containing 100 eggs from which 100 children were born.
The couple then decided to separate in order to populate the land. Half of the children followed their mother to the highlands, while the rest went with their father to the sea.
The first child went with his mother Âu Cơ to Phong Châu, now Phú Thọ Province. He then became King Hùng I and founded Văn Lang, the first recorded state in the history of Việt Nam.
Ruling the country for 18 generations, the Hùng Kings taught the people how to grow wet rice. They chose Nghĩa Lĩnh Mountain, the highest in the region, to perform rituals devoted to rice and sun deities to pray for lush crops.
In Phú Thọ, the annual Hùng Kings Memorial Festival or Hùng KingsTemple Festival, hosted by the province’s government, is organised from the 6th to 10th day of the third month of the lunar year.
The event consists of various ceremonies and entertaining activities for tourists and pilgrims nationwide.