Vietnam has had its "Practices Related to the Viet Beliefs in the Mother Goddesses in Three Realms" recognized by the UNESCO as an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

The worship is based on an ancient system of beliefs in the incarnation of various deities channeled through mediums and believed to provide good health and prosperity.

Nam Dinh, some 80 km south of Vietnamese capital Hanoi, is considered the largest pilgrimage center for those who practice Mother Goddesses worship, with 287 temples and vestiges relating to the beliefs across the province.
In addition to Practices Related to the Vietnam Beliefs in the Mother Goddesses in Three Realms, so far, Vietnam has had 10 other UNESCO-recognized intangible cultural heritages, including Hue Imperial City's royal court music (certified in 2003); the Space of Gong Culture in the Central Highlands (2005); love duets and ceremonial singing (both in 2009); Giong festival (2010); Xoan singing (2011); Hung King worshipd rituals (2012); don ca tai tu (southern traditional music and song) performance (2013); Vi and Giam folk songs of Nghe Tinh (2014); and the tug of war (2015).
Trending
-
A new vision for Hanoi’s Old Quarter: tourism, traffic and tradition
-
Vietnam news in brief - February 24
-
Hanoi one of the must-visits on travelers' Asian dream lists
-
Vivid yellow flowers brighten spring in Hanoi
-
Vietnam heritage painting contest launched
-
Vietnam scales back plan to boost offshore wind
-
Indochina fine arts heritage in the heart of Hanoi
-
Keeping the spirit of Vietnamese folk paintings alive
-
Hanoi's traditional craft villages join the world stage