Discover Charming Beauty Of Hanoi - The "Dragon-Eye" only 10 usd
Hanoi, Vietnam
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Hi everyone! I'm Cuong, 27 years old. I love traveling and I want to introduce all amazing things in Hanoi for foreign visitors :) (read more)
Duration: 10 hours
Places to Guide: Old Quarter, Imperial Citadel of Thang Long, Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum, Dong Xuan Market, Long Bien Bridge, St. Joseph's Cathedral, One Pillar Pagoda, Ho Chi Minh Museum
We have 2 routes:
The first:
7:30 AM: I will pick you up at your hotel.
7:30 AM: We will go to Temple of Literature.
8:30 AM: we will arrive at Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum.
10:00 AM: We will sightsee the beauty of Tran Quoc Pagoda.
11:00 AM: It is time for delicious lunch
The second:
2:00 pm: We can go around Hoan Kiem Lake.
3:00 pm: We will walk through Old Quarters of Ha Noi.
5:00 pm: It is late and you may be exhausted, so we finish here.
When you come to Viet Nam, you must regret if you do not visit those beautiful and hallowed places. Just come with me !!!
- Meeting point: At your hotel in Hanoi
-Cost Including:
Transportation are all included ( only by Motobike )
-Cost Excluding:
Tickets, lunch
1. Temple of Literature
This temple is the oldest university in Vietnam, constructed in 1076. Including five courtyards with beautiful gardens, steles inscribed with the names of scholars, several altars and a small museum.
If you are keen on architectue, en the temple of literature has one of the most typical architectural styles in Vietnam, composed of wood and tiles. Along the pass way are hundred years old trees that have witnessed ups and downs of the country's history.
2. Hanoi's Old Quarter
One of the reasons that Hanoi has attracted so many tourists over the years is the Old Quarter (36 old streets and guilds). It is a well-known area for the architecture, the enormous amount and diversity of goods and even the daily life of the locals. The 36 streets that make up the Old Quarter are all named after the type of goods used to be sold there. There are streets named for bamboo, silk, silver, medicine, shoes, fans, chickens, and even coffins. This way of naming the street after goods or services goes back to the old days when craftsmen worked together in guilds to produce and sell their commodities. Even today, walking through the Old Quarter, you might come across an entire block of nothing but paper makers, tinsmiths, or tailors.
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