September 13, 2025 | 10:10

A village in Hoi An ancient town named namong world’s 50 most beautiful villages

Khanh Van

Cam Thanh is the sole representative from Vietnam, securing the 20th place in the list selected by Forbes.

A village in Hoi An ancient town named namong world’s 50 most beautiful villages
Cam Thanh village, a famous eco-village located about 3–4 km southeast of Hoi An ancient town in the former province of Quang Nam (now part of Da Nang City) (Source: VGP)

U.S. magazine Forbes has unveiled its list of the world’s 50 most beautiful villages in 2025, with Cam Thanh village in Hoi An ancient town, the sole representative from Vietnam, securing the 20th place.

"Woven between coconut groves and tidal creeks, Cam Thanh hums with the rhythm of river life. Bamboo basket boats swirl through the Bay Mau nipa palm forest—their skippers casting nets in the shade of swaying fronds," Forbes wrote, as quoted by the Government News

Meanwhile, on the banks, cooking classes sizzle with lemongrass and tamarind—as water buffalo graze lazily beside stilted homes. Cyclists drift past shrimp farms and lotus ponds—the air thick with the scent of grilled squid and sweet jackfruit—but as the sun dips low, the Thu Bon River glows bronze, and the village exhales.

Topping the list is Bibury village in Britain, which unfurls like a watercolor dream, where honey-slicked cottages line Arlington Row and their mossy roofs whisper tales of 14th-century weavers.

In second place is Lake Hallstatt in Austria, which glows like a storybook reflection, where centuries-old timbered houses cling to the steep mountainside and flower-boxed balconies spill with scarlet geraniums.

Shirakawa-go in Japan, ranking ninth globally, and Batad in the Philippines, placing tenth in the world, are the two most beautiful villages in Asia.

Others on the list include Reine in Norway, Giethoorn and Bourtange in the Netherlands, Oia in Greece, Kotor in Montenegro, and Russell in New Zealand.

Attention
The original article is written and published on VnEconomy in Vietnamese, then translated into English by Askonomy – an AI platform developed by Vietnam Economic Times/VnEconomy – and published on En-VnEconomy. To read the full article, please use the Google Translate tool below to translate the content into your preferred language.
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