Huế
| Hue Huế Phu Xuan (Phú Xuân) | |
|---|---|
| City of Huế Thành phố Huế | |
| Aerial view of  Huế | |
| Nickname(s): City of Romance, Festival City | |
| Location of Huế within Vietnam | |
| Coordinates: 16°27′50″N 107°35′12″E / 16.46389°N 107.58667°E | |
| Country | Vietnam | 
| Region | North Central Coast | 
| Government center | Thuận Hóa district | 
| Subdivisions | |
| Government | |
| • Body | Huế People's Council | 
| • People's Council Chair | Lê Trường Lưu | 
| • People's Committee Chair | Nguyễn Văn Phương | 
| Area | |
|  • Total | 4,947.11 km2 (1,910.09 sq mi) | 
| Elevation | 15 m (49 ft) | 
| Population  (2024): 105  | |
|  • Total | 1,380,000 | 
| • Density | 280/km2 (720/sq mi) | 
| • Urban : 115  | 840,000 | 
| • Rural : 117  | 540,000 | 
| Demographics | |
| • Ethnicities | Vietnamese, Chăm, Tà Ôi, Cơ Tu, Bru, Thai | 
| Time zone | UTC+7 (ICT) | 
| Postal code | 49xxx | 
| Area codes | 234 | 
| ISO 3166 code | VN-26 | 
| HDI (2020) | 0.704 (34th) | 
| Website | hue | 
Huế (formerly Thừa Thiên Huế province) is the southernmost coastal city in the North Central Coast region, the Central of Vietnam, approximately in the center of the country. It borders Quảng Trị to the north, Quảng Nam and Đà Nẵng to the south, Salavan of Laos to the west and the South China Sea to the east. As one of the country's six direct-controlled municipalities, it falls under the administration of the central government.
Huế has 128 km of coastline, 22,000 ha of lagoons and over 200,000 ha of forest. The city is located in the middle of the North Central and South Central regions (including the South Central Coast and Central Highlands), and is transitional in many aspects: geology, climate, administrative division and local culture.
Huế and its surroundings is widely known as Xứ Huế (the Land of Huế). What is now the modern city was historically part of Thuận Hóa, a territory ceded by Champa to Đại Việt in 1306 as a wedding dowry. Huế (then known as Phú Xuân) became the provincial capital in 1687, then the capital of Đàng Trong from 1738 to 1775, and of Vietnam during the Nguyễn dynasty from 1802 to 1945. The city served as the Imperial Citadel and administrative capital for the Nguyễn dynasty, and later functioned as the administrative capital of the protectorate of Annam during the French Indochina period.
Huế is today a popular tourist destination, thanks to its extensive UNESCO-designated complex of imperial palaces, tombs and temples. Alongside its moat and thick stone walls, the complex encompasses the Imperial City of Huế, with palaces and shrines; the Forbidden Purple City, once the emperor's home; a replica of the Royal Theater; as well as temples and monuments in the city's outskirts.