The first resorts along the beaches of Hưng Long and Phú Thủy wards, as well as Phú Hài and Hàm Tiến wards east of the city center opened in the mid-nineties. Since then, tourism has significantly expanded and hundreds of hotels, restaurants, resorts, guesthouses and shops have been constructed along the coastline. Rang Beach in Hàm Tiến ward was discovered by foreigners in 1995 while witnessing the solar eclipse. Misled by guidebooks, which incorrectly labelled Rang Beach as "Mũi Né Beach", they were the initial tourists, along with many succeeding tourists mistakenly calling every region east of the Phan Thiết city center "
Mũi Né." This area was under the jurisdiction of ancient kingdom of
Champa and later absorbed into the
Đại Việt Empire (former name of
Vietnam). Vietnamese rule was established over the area, which has since become the present-day province of Bình Thuận, although the administrative level and the boundaries of the area hadn't been determined during this time. In 1697, Bình Thuận was changed from a fort ("trấn") to a district (
phủ), then to a
dinh. Later, Phan Thiết was officially recognized as a
đạo (along with
Phan Rang, Phố Hài and Ma Ly of the Tam Tân area). From 1773 to 1801, fierce conclict between the forces of the
Nguyễn dynasty and
Tây Sơn dynasty occurred in the area. In 1825, during the reign of Emperor
Minh Mạng, Bình Thuận officially became a
province; part of Phan Thiết was converted into the district of Hàm Thuận. In 1854, during
Tự Đức's reign, the district was renamed Tuy Lý. In 1836 (the 17th year of
Minh Mạng's reign), cabinet officer Đào Tri Phủ was sent to Bình Thuận to oversee the surveying tasks and establish land boundaries for 307 communes and villages in fifteen districts of Bình Thuận in order to determine taxation. On the right bank of the river (currently Cà Ty river) were Đức Thắng, Nhuận Đức and Lạc Đạo village. On the left bank were Long Bình and Minh Long. Near the end of the 19th century, Phan Thiết was not yet officially recognized as an administrative unit (lower level) within Bình Thuận province. In 1898 (the 10th year of the reign of Emperor
Thành Thái), Bình Thuận's provincial capital was moved to Phú Tài village, a suburb of Phan Thiết. On 20 October of that year,
Thành Thái signed a decree to make Phan Thiết a city and provincial capital (on the same day as the establishment of the cities of Bình Thuận,
Huế,
Hội An,
Qui Nhơn,
Thanh Hóa and
Vinh). In the 20th century, it was a center of the
VNQDĐ independence movement. == Geography ==