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Foreign Trade University

1960 establishments in North VietnamForeign trade of VietnamUniversities and colleges established in 1960Universities in HanoiUniversities in Ho Chi Minh City

Foreign Trade University (FTU; Vietnamese: Trường Đại học Ngoại thương) is a public university established in 1960, located in Hanoi, Vietnam, with satellite campuses in Ho Chi Minh City and Quảng Ninh. FTU is regarded as one of the most prestigious universities in Vietnam, offering a wide range of business courses - from economics, business administration, and finance to economic law and business languages. The annual admission to FTU is the most competitive in Vietnam and applicants are required to have very high test scores. The core major of the university is International Business Economics, which attracts the most elite students in the country. Students who graduated from FTU are recognized as being active and well-qualified.FTU offers both undergraduate and graduate programs for both local and foreign students. These courses are taught in Vietnamese, English, Japanese, Chinese and French.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Foreign Trade University (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Foreign Trade University
Ngõ 91 Chùa Láng, Hà Nội Dong Da District

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N 21.023 ° E 105.805 °
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Ngõ 91 Chùa Láng

Ngõ 91 Chùa Láng
10298 Hà Nội, Dong Da District
Vietnam
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Cầu Giấy district
Cầu Giấy district

Cầu Giấy is an urban district of Hanoi, the capital city of Vietnam. It is located within the Nhuệ and Tô Lịch River, situating roughly to the south-west of West Lake. It has an unique urban landscape, with new urban developments interlacing old historical neighborhoods with vestiges of traditional artisan economy. The most well-known of them is the Dịch Vọng Village (nicknamed Cốm Vòng) with its popular cốm dessert. With a population of 294,500, Cầu Giấy hosts many administrative and corporate headquarters within the Trung Hoà–Nhân Chính urban area. Cầu Giấy is also considered to be an education hub of Hanoi due to its high concentration of universities and magnet schools. About two-third of Cầu Giấy district's source of income comes from the service sector (mainly from small businesses) and one-third comes from the manufacturing sector. The district contains only a few tourist landmarks such as Vietnam Museum of Ethnology, Hà Temple, and Mai Dịch Cemetery. Present-day Cầu Giấy district was a rural agricultural area, scattered by a few artisanal villages, and lay within Từ Liêm, a periphery district of Thăng Long city. On 22 November 1996, the area was officially splitted from Từ Liêm and incorporated into a district, taking its name from a nearby bridge also named Cầu Giấy (lit. "Paper Bridge"). It experienced very rapid urbanization and public infrastructure development since the 2000s, causing intense gentrification in the process. It is expected by the late 2020s that all of Cầu Giấy's area will contain urban developments with no farmland left.