Time in Vietnam
Appearance
Reunified Vietnam follows UTC+7, which is 7 hours ahead of Greenwich Mean Time and Coordinated Universal Time.
Vietnam referenced ISO 8601 under in 1998 and then created its own standard TCVN 6398-1:1998.[1]
History
- After Phủ Liễn Observatory was built, French Indochina announced all states (consisting of north-Vietnamese Tonkin, central-Vietnamese Annam, south-Vietnamese Cochinchina, as well as Cambodia, Laos and Chinese Guangzhouwan) were part of 104°17’17”E longitude time zone from 00:00 1 July 1906 onward.
- In 1911, Metropolitan France adopted GMT+0 (the solar time of Greenwich) as its official time, and used it until 1940 (with GMT+1 used during the summers from 1916 to 1940), forcing French Indochina observed GMT+7 from 00:00 1 May 1911.
- Following change in time zone of Vichy authorities, French Indochina was integrated to GMT+8, skipping 60 minutes at 23:00 31 December 1942.
- The Japan occupied Vichy French Indochina fully. Indochinese regions thereafter followed Tokyo time zone (GMT+9), skipping 60 minutes at 23:00 14 March 1945.
- By August General Uprising, the Fall of Empire of Vietnam and the Proclamation of Independence of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, Provisional Uniform Government of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam took control, announcing GMT+7 as official time zone on 2 September 1945. Whilst, the then under-attacked regions of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia adopted GMT+8 and non-attacked regions (at the time and even after the Geneva Conference) adopted GMT+7 from April's Fools 1947: Laos (part of Indochina) from 15 April 1954, Hanoi from October 1954, Haiphong from May 1955.
- Under control of State of Vietnam, South Vietnam adopted GMT+7 from 00:00 1 July 1955.
- South Vietnam time zone was changed to GMT+8 from 23:00 1 January 01 1960, passing 60 minutes.
- North Vietnam confirmed official UTC+7 from 1 January 1968.
- Following the Fall of Saigon in April–May 1975, reunified Vietnam then observes UTC+7 with Saigon (and other southern parts) delaying 60 minutes on 13 June 1975.
Time in French Indochina
Period in use | Time offset from GMT | Notes |
1 July 1906 - 30 April 1911 | UTC+06:57:09.133 | 104°17’17”E French Time |
1 May 1911 - 31 December 1942 | UTC+07:00:00 | Standard Zone Time |
1 January 1943 - 14 March 1945 | UTC+08:00:00 | Standard Zone Time |
15 March 1945 - September 1945 | UTC+09:00:00 | Tokyo Standard Time |
September 1945 - Activation of Geneva Agreements | UTC+08:00:00 | Standard Zone Time |
Time in North Vietnam
Period in use | Time offset from GMT | Notes |
September 1945 - 31 March 1947 | UTC+07:00:00 | Hanoi Zone Time |
1 April 1947 - Activation of Geneva Agreements After the activation |
No Standard Time UTC+07:00:00 for zone under peace UTC+08:00:00 for zone under attacking | |
1 January 1968 - 12 June 1975 | UTC+07:00:00 | Hanoi Zone Time |
Time in South Vietnam
Period in use | Time offset from GMT | Notes |
Activation of Geneva Agreements - 30 June 1955 | UTC+08:00:00 | Saigon Standard Time |
1 July 1955 - 31 December 1959 | UTC+07:00:00 | Saigon Standard Time |
1 January 1960 - 12 June 1975 | UTC+08:00:00 | Saigon Standard Time |
Time in Reunified Vietnam
Period in use | Time offset from GMT | Notes |
13 June 1975 - now | UTC+07:00:00 | Standard Zone Time |
See also
- ASEAN Common Time (ACT)
- Indochina Time (ICT)
- Time in Cambodia
- Time in Laos
- Time in Thailand
- UTC+8
- UTC+9
References
Bibliography
- Trần Tiến Bình (2005), Lịch Việt Nam thế kỷ XX-XXI (1901-2100), Nhà xuất bản Văn hoá Thông tin, Hanoi.