Huynh Thuy Le's House
Update: Feb 04, 2013
In recent years, the house owned by Huynh Thuy near the Tien River in Sa Dec in Dong Thap Province has become a popular destination for both domestic and foreign tourists.

 

 

 

The house is famous for its unique architecture which is the harmonious combination of Vietnamese, French and Chinese styles. It is the place that witnessed the romantic love between Marguerite Duras, a well-known French writer, and Huynh Thuy Le, the son of the Huynh Family who is the house's owner.


When we arrived at the house, we met Australian tourists who were listening to the tourist guide talking about the house's architectural value and the love between the house's owner and writer Marguerite Duras. The bustling atmosphere in Sa Dec in the late afternoon reminded all of us of the animated scene at the wharf on the Tien River in the past.


The house was built using precious wood in 1895. Its roof is covered by Yin-Yang tiles and designed with two curved ends in the shape of boats, a familiar symbol of the watery area in the south-western region. In 1917, Huynh Cam Thuan, father of Huynh Thuy Le reconstructed the house in the style of a French villa with a harmony of both Oriental and Western architecture.

 

For over 100 years, despite the destruction caused by time the house still remains intact with all its beautiful features. The outside of the house impresses visitors with the French architectural style that used decorative details, such as statues and relief from the Renaissance on the facade and arched doors in the Roman style and Gothic windows of multi-coloured glass. All provide the house with a magnificent and imposing appearance. Going inside, tourists have a familiar feeling because of the Oriental architectural style that is clearly seen through skillful and refined patterns and sculptures in the shapes of birds, flowers, plants, daisies, bamboo and apricots. There are beautiful spots and scenes carved on wood that reflect the bustling life in the watery area in South Vietnam. The house consists of three compartments with the middle one used for worshiping Quangong according to the religious belief of the Chinese and two others for receiving guests and for bedrooms. The corridor of the house leads to the servants' quarters. The floor was paved with flowered tiles and the walls were built with solid brick, 30-40cm thick. All the materials were imported from France.


One of the factors that make the house well-known is that it is the place where the love of Huynh Thuy Le and writer Marguerite Duras blossomed. At the end of 1929, Huynh Thuy Le met Marguerite Duras, a beautiful girl, on a ferry on the Tien River and they fell in love. However, their love had an unhappy ending because Huynh Thuy Le was forced by his father to marry another girl. Marguerite Duras was in misery so she decided to return France with her family.

For fifty years, Margueirte Duras felt deeply attached to her lover and she wrote the novel entitled "The Lover" (L'amant in French) published in 1984 to tell her love story. The novel has been translated into 40 languages and it was made into a film of the same name by French Director Jean Jacques Annaud in 1992. The film has left a resounding impression on viewers all around the world.

 

The more famous that the novel and film become, the larger the number of foreign tourists who want to visit the house grows. Over the years, the house has become a popular destination, fascinating tourists from France, the US, Australia, Japan, South Korea and the UK.


With its value in terms of architecture and historical relic, the house was recognized as a national cultural historical relic in 2009.

 

VNP