Tân Định Church

Tân Định church

Tân Định church (Vietnamese: nhà thờ Tân Định) is a Roman Catholic church in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Its formal name is the Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus (nhà thờ Thánh Tâm Chúa Giêsu, French: Église du Sacré-Cœur de Tan Dinh). Even though it is in District 3, the parish shares its name with neighbouring District 1's Tân Định Ward.

It was built during the French colonial period in the 1870s and completed on 16 December 1876, when Vietnam was part of French Indochina. The architecture is mainly neo-Romanesque, but it also has some neo-Gothic and neo-Renaissance elements.[1] It has been painted pastel-pink both on the exterior and interior since 1957,[1] earning it the nickname "the pink church" (nhà thờ màu hồng).[2]

It is the second-largest church in Ho Chi Minh City, after Notre-Dame Basilica in District 1. They both belong to the Archdiocese of Ho Chi Minh City. Tân Định Church is not a cathedral; Notre-Dame is the cathedral (seat) of this metropolitan archdiocese.

Its address is 289 Hai Bà Trưng Street, Ward 8 (Phường 8), District 3, Ho Chi Minh City.

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tân Định Church.
  1. ^ a b "Saigon's Favourite Churches – Tan Dinh Church". Historic Vietnam. 2014. Designed in Romanesque style with Gothic and Renaissance elements
  2. ^ Insight Guides (1 September 2015). Insight Guides Vietnam. APA. p. 218. ISBN 978-1-78005-537-4. Tan Dinh Church in Ho Chi Minh City, known locally as the Pink Church.
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French colonial architecture in Vietnam
Hanoi
Ho Chi Minh CityOther municipalities

10°47′18″N 106°41′26″E / 10.78840°N 106.69065°E / 10.78840; 106.69065


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