Although the s stipulated that the line “should not in any way be interpreted as constituting a political or territorial boundary,” the rest of the agreement was not carried out, and the 17th parallel became the practical political boundary between North and South Vietnam.
The 17th latitude from the equator divided erstwhile North and South Vietnam. It was demarcated based on the 1954 Geneva s. The 17th parallel became irrelevant after the unification of Vietnam in 1976.
Land borders of India Land Border CountryDisputeLength (Km) and (mi) desh N 4,096 kilometres (2,545 mi) Bhutan N 578 kilometres (359 mi) China Y 3,488 kilometres (2,167 mi) Myanmar N 1,643 kilometres (1,021 mi)3 more rows
Johnson's Line and McDonald's Line were two proposed frontiers between India and China during the British era of administration in India. Johnson's line places Aksai Chin under Indian administration in what was once Jammu and Kashmir (now Ladakh). The McDonald Line, proposed in 1893 brought it under Chinese control.
The 17th parallel served as a military demarcation line between North and South Vietnam as a result of the Geneva s of 1954. The border ran closely to the Bến Hải River from the Gulf of Tonkin to the border of Laos and Vietnam.
Siegfried Line - The boundary line is between France and Germany. it was built as an extension of the Hindenburg defensive line on the western front of World War I by the Weimar Republic and later the Third of Germany in the 1930s.
The Seventeenth parallel (Vietnamese: vĩ tuyến 17) was the provisional military demarcation line between North and South Vietnam established by the Geneva s of 1954.
West Bengal has the longest international boundary. India and desh share a 4,096 km-long international border, the fifth-longest land border in the world, with West Bengal having the highest length with 2,217 km.
The treaties Native Californians signed in 1851–52 provided eighteen reservations (about 11,700 square miles, one-seventh of California) as homelands for indigenous people. U. S. commissioner O. M. Wozencraft and people associated with the San Luis Rey (Luiseo), Cahuilla, and Serrano Indians signed this treaty.
Many tribes fought American settlers at one time or another, from the Utes of the Great Basin to the Nez Perce tribe of Idaho. But the Sioux of the Northern Plains and the Apaches of the Southwest waged the most aggressive warfare, led by resolute, militant leaders such as Red Cloud and Crazy Horse.