
As Ho Chi Minh City's cyclo drivers  rest easy below vast neon billboards, the emerging Vietnamese middle  class -- mobile phones in hand -- cruise past draped in haute couture on  their imported motorcycles. Welcome to Ho Chi Minh City --  Vietnam's largest and most exciting city.
How things have changed from the sleepy days pre-16th century, when the  Khmer fishing village of Prey Nokor was established on a vast swampland.Saigon's origins date back to the early 17th century when the  area became home for refugees fleeing war in the north. Towards the end  of the century, once the population was more Vietnamese and Cambodia  weak enough, Vietnam annexed the territory. Over the following decades  Prey Nokor developed into the Saigon the French found when they  conquered the region in the mid 19th century.
Within a very short time the French began to leave their mark on the  city and still today some of the best hotels in Saigon are within  grandiose colonials overlooking gorgeous boulevards dating back to  Saigon's heyday as the Paris of the Orient. For the French,  Saigon became the capital of Cochinchina -- an expansive region  encompassing parts of modern-day Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam. Through the  next 100 years, they extracted as much as they could from the region --  much of it passing through Saigon's ports. Often cruel and thoughtless,  French rule remained over the city and Cochinchina until their exit  from Vietnam following their defeat at the Battle of Dien Bien Phu in  1954.
When the French opted out of Vietnamto avoid recognising the communist  victors, they left the south under the care of Emperor Bao Dai who had  made his capital there in 1950. Subsequently, when Vietnam was  officially partitioned, the southern government, led by Ngo Dinh Diem,  kept the capital at Saigon. And there the southern capital remained --  throughout the topsy turvy period of the American war. Then, as  America's role in Vietnam's pains drew to an end, Saigon swelled to the  eyeballs with refugees fleeing troubles to the north -- just as Prey  Nokor once did.
When the South finally fell in 1975, what remained was a paltry shadow  of its more grandiose days. Fittingly, the following year the city was  renamed Ho Chi Minh City in honour of the late leader of North Vietnam,  Ho Chi Minh.. Despite this, many still know the sprawling town as  Saigon, and the name still refers to central District One..
The communist victory was followed by widespread repression and  re-education. The economy buckled under a heavy hand from the north as  entrepreneurial spirit was all but stamped out, and the Chinese trading  class were particularly hard done by. Simultaneously, Saigon's elite and  pretty much anyone else with the means did their best to get out of the  country, and through the late 1970s and early 1980s, Vietnam's "boat  people" were featured in media worldwide.
Through a policy of freeing up economic activity known as doi moi  in the late 1980s and early 1990s, the economic leash was loosened and  Saigon has never looked back. With a very young, increasingly  well-educated population, the city has gone from strength to strength.  Today, children of The Party slide through the heaving traffic in  gleaming, chauffeur-driven Mercedes, and the general population looks  more to neon shrines for direction than to Uncle Ho and the old guard.
Towering developments now pierce what was once a very low-key skyline.  Five-star hotels and international shopping chains have replaced dowdy  government guesthouses and empty shelves. Saigon has some of the best  cuisine in the country, from cheap street eating to salubrious haute  cuisine. A renewed interest in the arts has stimulated the art scene and  many galleries and museums are slowly being spruced up. For a  tourist there is a lot to do in Saigon.
And once you're done with the city, use it as a base to explore the  surrounds -- head out to the tunnels at Chu Chi, the Cao Dai temple at  Tay Ninh or jet off to the sublime Con Dao. Then there's the entire Mekong  Delta to explore. How much time have you got?!
Ho Chi Minh City Travel guide
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