Nha Trang, port city, southeastern Vietnam. The city lies at the mouth of the Cai River, 256 miles (412 km) northeast of Ho Chi Minh City (formerly Saigon). Its history is known as far back as the 3rd century ce, when, as part of the independent land of Kauthara, a Champa kingdom, it acknowledged the suzerainty of Funan. In 1653 it was incorporated into the territory of the Nguyen rulers of southern Vietnam and after 1802 into the kingdom of Vietnam. After 1862 Nha Trang was acquired by the French, who in 1895 established there the Pasteur Institute for research in tropical diseases. In 1912 a rail line between Saigon and Hanoi reached the town.
Nha Trang is a fishing port that has oil-storage facilities. It also has a fine sandy beach, and under the French it became a seaside resort. On the north bank of the Cai River, opposite Nha Trang, is the village of Thon Cu Lao, behind which, on a granite knoll, sits Po Nagar (“Lady of the City”), a well-preserved cluster of four Cham shrines dedicated to the Hindu god Shiva and erected or rebuilt between the 7th and 12th centuries. Nha Trang is the site of the University of Fishery and Marine Products. Pop. (1999) 261,121; (2009) 292,693.