Chiêu Thiền Pagoda is known in French asPagode des Dames (meaning "Temple of the Ladies"). It worships Buddhist monkTừ Đạo Hạnh and was said that built by emperorsLý Anh Tông orLý Thần Tông.[1]
The space of Chiêu Thiền Pagoda (now Chùa Láng Street) was ever home to the firstfeature film ofVietnamese cinemaKim Vân Kiều, which was shot in 1923. In addition, this architectural work has also appeared in a number of short documentaries by French filmmakers.
Trần Ngọc Thêm.Cơ sở văn hóa Việt Nam (The Foundation of Vietnamese Culture), 504 pages. Publishing by Nhà xuất bản Đại học Tổng hợp TPHCM.Saigon,Vietnam, 1995.
Trần Quốc Vượng, Tô Ngọc Thanh, Nguyễn Chí Bền, Lâm Mỹ Dung, Trần Thúy Anh.Cơ sở văn hóa Việt Nam (The Basis of Vietnamese Culture), 292 pages. Re-publishing by Nhà xuất bản Giáo Dục Việt Nam & Quảng Nam Printing Co-Ltd.Hanoi,Vietnam, 2006.
Li Tana (2011).Jiaozhi (Giao Chỉ) in the Han period Tongking Gulf. In Cooke, Nola; Li Tana; Anderson, James A. (eds.). The Tongking Gulf Through History. University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 39–44. ISBN 9780812205022.
Tập bản đồ hành chính Việt Nam (Vietnamese Administrative Maps), Nhà xuất bản Tài nguyên – Môi trường và Bản đồ Việt Nam, Hà Nội, 2013.
Samuel Baron,Christoforo Borri,Olga Dror,Keith W. Taylor (2018).Views of Seventeenth-Century Vietnam : Christoforo Borri on Cochinchina and Samuel Baron on Tonkin. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-1-501-72090-1.
The Birth of Vietnam : Sino-Vietnamese Relations to the Tenth Century and the Origins of Vietnamese Nationhood.University of Michigan Press. 1976.