- Log in
- Enquiry Form
To City (Destination)
From City
Travel Date
Travel Duration (In Days)
Adult
Child
Infant
Travel With
Hotel
Rooms
Type Of Trip
Total Budget (in INR)
Ticket Booked ?
Ticket Required?
Mode of Transport
Ticket Category
I will book
Date of Birth
Gender
Marital Status
Income (Per Month)
Nationality
Preferred Language
Total countries visited so far
Do you have a Visa ?
Do you have a Passport?
Preferred Time to Call
We have identified additional inquiries related to your tour. Please review them and let us know if there are any inquiries you would like us to remove.
Hung Temple Festival
About Hung Temple Festival
Lord Hung Temple Festival is a customary celebration which honors the first King of Vietnam - King Hung. It's event for each Vietnamese to recollect their beginning and express their regard and additionally appreciation to progenitor of Vietnamese individuals. Accordingly, it's considered as national celebration of Vietnam. King Hung Temple Festival happens yearly at King Hung Temple from the eighth to eleventh day of the third lunar month in the year. As indicated by the legend, the tenth day of that month is the demise commemoration of King Hung. Amid the celebration, Vietnamese individuals from everywhere throughout the nation and additionally Vietnamese individuals living abroad set out toward King Hung Temple on Nghia Linh Mountain, Phu Tho Province to partake in this recorded and significant festival.
The celebration is highlighted with numerous people amusements, for example, "danh du" bamboo swings, "nem con" round of tossing a holy ball through the ring, rice cooking rivalries, lion move, human chess, water manikin execution, wrestling, crossbow shooting, and so on. All society amusements contribute a clamoring feel to the celebration and draw in investment of different individuals. Additionally, "xoan" singing and "gheo" singing are likewise performed at the celebration by nearby occupants. Going to the celebration, visitors appreciate these novel craftsmanship exhibitions, which were perceived by UNESCO as an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, in front of an audience.