Spires: Cathedrals of Vietnam’s Red River Delta

By Peter Steinhauer

Texts by Nguyễn Phan Quế Mai, Hoàng Thúc Hào, and Thúy Đinh

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Hardback with jacket
10 x 11 inches
128 pages
100 color illustrations
ISBN: 979-8-9877845-7-0

In the Red River Delta of northern Vietnam, more than two thousand majestic cathedrals stand as resilient witnesses to faith during the fractious colonial period of the 19th and early 20th centuries. These monuments eloquently fuse French Gothic and Romanesque styles with Vietnamese architectural traditions. Using local materials such as stone, ironwood, and brick, these churches were constructed to withstand the tropical Vietnamese climate and environment, symbolizing the merging of cultures and the growing influence of Catholicism in the region.

Initially evangelical tools for the Catholic Church, over time, the cathedrals transcended their colonial roots, organically embedding themselves in Vietnam’s political, cultural, and religious landscape. This volume unfolds a dramatic narrative of these historic edifices. Here, photographer Peter Steinhauer documents many significant examples of these cathedrals, which display the fusion of French and Vietnamese architectural virtuosity in every stone, arch, and spire.

Attesting to an era of diverse cultural shifts and transformations, many of these architectural marvels now face neglect, deterioration, or intentional dismantlement. Spires seeks to commemorate these remarkable structures—and the complex narratives rooted in their time-tested foundations.

Hoàng Thúc Hào, one of Vietnam’s most well-known living architects, together with his colleagues Nguyễn Ngọc Lân and Phạm Long, and critic Thúy Đinh, contribute an architectural essay on Catholic cathedrals of Vietnam, most of which are located in Nam Định, Thái Bình Ninh Bình and Hà Nam — the four provinces where Catholicism first came into Vietnam around 1533. Nguyễn Phan Quế Mai, author of the internationally best-selling novels The Mountains Sing and Dust Child, addresses the complex history of Catholicism in Vietnam in her essay.

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About the Authors

Peter Steinhauer is an artist photographer, and he lived and worked in Asia for twenty years, beginning in Vietnam in 1993. His photography focuses on architecture within urban landscape, man-made structure, and natural landscape. His prints are in the collections of the Carnegie Museum of Art, the Hong Kong Heritage Museum and a growing number of private and corporate collections worldwide. He is a recipient of numerous international photography awards including a finalist for the 2014 and 2017 Lucie Awards, Ford Foundation grant for his multiyear work in Vietnam, three Communication Arts Photography Annual Award of Excellence awards, among others.

He is the co-founder, with his wife of Vietnam Society, who promotes Vietnam in the Washington, DC area through art and culture and is dedicated to the peace and reconciliation process from the effects of the US / Vietnam war.

Steinhauer’s Enduring Spirit of Vietnam was awarded Best Photography Book of the Year 2007 by Photo District News (PDN).

Dr. Nguyễn Phan Quế Mai is the author of thirteen books, most recently the global bestselling novels The Mountains Sing and Dust Child and the poetry collection The Color of Peace. Her writing has been translated into more than twenty-five languages and has received the PEN Oakland/ Josephine Miles Literary Award, the International Book Award, the BookBrowse Best Debut Award, the Lannan Literary Fellowship in Fiction, as well as Runner-up for the Dayton Literary Peace Prize. She has a Ph.D in Creative Writing from Lancaster University in the United Kingdom.

Hoàng Thúc Hào is the founder of 1+1>2, an architectural firm in Hanoi whose eponymous equation combines “happy architecture” and core values to create structures that are greater than the sum of their parts. His firm is committed to ameliorating the daily lives of Vietnamese people living in poverty in highland and rural areas of Vietnam while respecting both local traditional cultures and the natural environment. He has been honored with several major architectural awards and is currently Vice President of the Vietnam Association of Architects and Executive Board Member of Vietnam Green Architecture Council.

Thúy Đinh is a bilingual critic, literary translator, coeditor of the Vietnamese webzine Da Mau, and editor-at-large for the Vietnamese Diaspora at Asymptote Journal. Her essays and translations have appeared in NPR Books, NBC Think, Michigan Quarterly Review, and Rain Taxi Review of Books, among others. Green Rice, her co-translation of the select poetry of Lâm Thị Mỹ Dạ, was nominated for the Kiriyama Prize in 2006.