Throughout Vietnam, thousands of villages had their own independent legal codes known as the
Hương ước (鄉約) that governed social relations within the community. Thousands of written regulations existed, and the central administration often recognised them. The origins of these village conventions is unknown. According to
jurist Lê Đức Tiết, they may date back as far as the
Trưng sisters period but were unwritten until the
Trần dynasty period. The scholar of
Oriental studies Nguyễn Văn Vịnh divides these conventions into two categories: "pre-written conventions" (
tiền hương ước) and "officially written conventions" (
hương ước thành văn chính thức). The
Hương ước contained rules about various legal practices like land management, marriage, labour relations, arbitration of disputes, as well as local customs such as family relations, village relations, ghosts,
ancestor worship, sacrifice, and mourning. During the
colonial period, both the
government-general of French Indochina and the
government of the Nguyễn dynasty attempted to reform these rules and regulations in their favour. To expand their power into Vietnamese hamlets and villages, the French administration issued models for the villages to follow, but many continued to function independently of the French and Nguyễn administrations. The French reformed Vietnamese marriage and funeral laws in order to weaken the influence of the
Hương ước. In 1954, the
Hương ước system was abolished in
North Vietnam as part of
its land reforms. The system was seen as "a remnant of a backward feudal system" by the North Vietnamese government and was replaced with a
socialist cooperative production model and a new social structure based on the system of the
Soviet Union. During the 1980s in the
Socialist Republic of Vietnam, during the
Đổi Mới reforms, the
Hương ước were re-recognised and re-evaluated in an attempt to restore village customs. Today, the
Hương ước is no longer as culturally relevant as it was before, remaining heavily procedural under the supervision of district-level
People's Committees. ==References==