Showing posts with label site. Show all posts
Showing posts with label site. Show all posts

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Ancient tomb found in Ha Noi

Unearthed: Artefacts belonging to the Dong Son culture (2,000BC-AD200) excavated at a site on the outskirts of Ha Noi. — VNS Photo Hai Kim

Unearthed: Artefacts belonging to the Dong Son culture (2,000BC-AD200) excavated at a site on the outskirts of Ha Noi. — VNS Photo Hai Kim

HA NOI — A tomb estimated to be about 2,000 years old has been excavated at an archaeological site on the outskirts of Ha Noi.

And other objects found at the site indicate that there was an earlier settlement dating back as far as 4,000BC – to the beginnings of Viet Nam's history as a trading nation.

So far, scientists have found an earthenware jar and cooking pan – plus, most significantly, a bronze axe, all of which are thought to belong to the renowned Dong Son culture (2,000BC-AD200).

But they have also uncovered various working tools, weapons and daily wares made from stone, bronze and pottery from the preceding Dong Dau culture, which existed from 4,000 to 2,500BC.

Human bones were found inside the tomb, but they were said to have been almost destroyed by time. They could provide evidence of the physique and type of the people of the time.

The excavation site, named Go Den Ran, covers a total area of 3,000sq.m. The discoveries have been brought to light by archaeologists from the University of Social Sciences and Humanities who have been working for more than a year.

The site is within the allocated border for an urban development area named Kim Chung – Di Trach Urban Zone. Scientists have asked concerned agencies to stop construction so that further study can be carried out. — VNS

Related Articles

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Ancient tomb found in Ha Noi

HA NOI – A tomb estimated to be about 2,000 years old has been excavated at an archaeological site on the outskirts of Ha Noi.

And other objects found at the site indicate that there was an earlier settlement dating back as far as 4,000 BC – to the beginnings of Viet Nam's history as a trading nation.

So far, scientists have found an earthenware jar and cooking pan – plus, most significantly, a bronze axe, all of which are thought to belong to the renowned Dong Son culture (2,000BC-200AD).

But they have also uncovered various working tools, weapons and daily wares made from stone, bronze and pottery from the preceding Dong Dau culture, which existed from 4,000 to 2,500 BC.

Human bones were found inside the tomb, but they were said to have been almost destroyed by time. They could provide evidence of the physique and type of the people of the time.

The excavation site, named Go Den Ran, covers a total area of 3,000sq.m. The discoveries have been brought to light by archaeologists from the University of Social and Humane Sciences who have been working for more than a year.

The site is within the allocated border for an urban area named Kim Chung – Di Trach Urban Zone. Scientists have asked concerned agencies to stop construction so that further study can be carried out. – VNS

Related Articles

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Rival for old ceramics village

by Cong Thanh

Theme park: A craftsman makes a clay jar at Minh Hai craft village in Gia Lam District, Ha Noi. Tourists can practice pottery-making skills during a visit to the site.

Theme park: A craftsman makes a clay jar at Minh Hai craft village in Gia Lam District, Ha Noi. Tourists can practice pottery-making skills during a visit to the site.

A new craft village site, the Minh Hai ceramic village, which has been built near the Bat Trang ceramic village, began welcoming tourists last month, and offers more choice for tourists looking for a day out from Ha Noi.

Bat Trang Village is a well-known half-day tour from Ha Noi, but the new site will offer travellers more choices in exploring a large natural site with folk performances and a backdrop modelled in the typical style of craft villages in the northern delta region.

The 10-ha Vietnamese art village displays different traditional handicraft trades, such as ceramics, silk, woodwork and bamboo.

A lake stage has been set up at the site to feature traditional Vietnamese folk performances such as cheo (traditional opera), chau van (spiritual music), quan ho (love duet) ca tru (ceremonial singing), and water puppetry twice a day every Saturday and Sunday.

Visits cost from VND150,000 (US$7.5) to VND300,000 ($15) for a day-time tour.

The cost includes pottery practices, cultural performances, lunch and fishing from the lake.

Getting there

What's for dinner? Different galleries in the Minh Hai craft village display tri-coloured ceremic products, a unique ceramic product of northern Viet Nam. — VNS Photos Hoai Nam

What's for dinner? Different galleries in the Minh Hai craft village display tri-coloured ceremic products, a unique ceramic product of northern Viet Nam. — VNS Photos Hoai Nam

The site is situated near Bat Trang Village, near the foot of the Red River dyke, and is a 20-minute bus journey from the city centre. The No 47 bus leaves from Long Bien station to Bat Trang Village every 15 minutes from 5.30am to 8.20pm daily.

The bus route winds the 12km river dyke from Chuong Duong Bridge to the east and runs across the site gate, which is 300m from Bat Trang.

Visitors can explore both the site and Bat Trang Village over a few hours.

Hanoian Nghiem Huyen Trang and her friends visited the site as soon as it opened last month.

The 19-year-old student said she preferred taking a motorbike rather than the bus along the river dyke road, but the unfinished road was particularly dusty. However, the Hanoian had a perfect day at the site after touring the ceramic village on a buffalo-drawn cart.

The group also saw water puppetry shows, pottery, reading and fishing with lunch on a raft.

Trang, who grew up in the Old Quarter, said she enjoyed the peace and quiet of the place, just 20-minutes from the crowded city centre.

"I still remember the dust and smoke emitted by the kilns in Bat Trang Village a few years ago when I first visited, but I'm excited by the new craft village site," Trang said.

"I was clumsy when trying the pottery and fishing, but it was interesting to give it a go as I'm a city girl. It was great when we caught some fish from the raft," she said.

Pottery gallery

Nguyen Minh Hai, the owner of the Minh Hai craft village, designed the gate of the site in the shape of a pottery-kiln, while pavilions and stilt houses surround a big lake.

The passageway imitates a stream with dotted stepping-bricks in the middle.

Hai, 40, who has 20 years of experience in the tourism and pottery industries, wanted the site to offer a new look at traditional ceramic villages.

"Bat Trang Village has been long-known as a pottery centre, but it's not easy to promote it as a charming destination due to its polluted environment. Although villagers have introduced gas furnaces to replace coal-fired kilns," said Hai.

"I launched the cart-buffalo service 10 years ago, but I want to lure tourists with a new tourist product," he added.

The site has different galleries showcasing silks from Van Phuc Village in Ha Dong town; brocade weaving from Sa Pa; wooden furniture, rattan and bamboo products, terracotta from Bau Truc in Ninh Thuan Province and precious stone from Yen Bai Province.

"It's like a miniature centre for Vietnamese craft villages. I even made myself a flower pot with the help of a craftsman in the ceramic workshop," said Tran Thanh Van.

Van, 28, a shop assistant from Ha Noi, said she was glad to make the clay pot within half an hour.

Craftsman Nguyen Van Doanh, 36, instructs visitors practising with porcelain clay.

"I teach them how to form thing with hands and a slab-roller. It lets them do a bit of handicraft," Doanh said.

"Tourists can take home unfinished things that they make themselves. We want to let visitors have a bit of fun for a few hours."

The tour closes with cultural performances. — VNS

Related Articles

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Test reveals Thanh Den’s rice grains not ancient

Rice grains at the Thanh Den citadel site in Hanoi's Me Linh District were tested in Japan using an age-validating Tantedron AMS machine using C14 technology and were found to not be 3,000 years old as previously believed.

The Carbon isotopic testing results were announced by Dr Lam Thi My Dung, Associate Professor and head of the Archaeology Division at Hanoi National University's History Department, who was in charge of the excavation at Thanh Den Site.

Last May the grains had generated widespread sensationalism when, thought to be 3,000 years old, they sprouted after being soaked in water for two days.

Nguyen Tri Ngoc, director of the Cultivation Department at the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development's (MARD) announced his department would stop supporting research related to the grains.

“There is nothing miraculous about these grains as they seem to have accidentally fallen into the Thanh Den site,” he said.

MARD initially questioned the findings though they committed to further scientific research to validate or dispute the archaeologists’ discovery with Ngoc recognizing that “no such case exists anywhere in the world.”

Dr Le Huy Ham, head of MARD's Agricultural Genetics Institute – directly involved in caring for and cultivating the “ancient rice grains” – confirmed the results of the carbon isotopic testing deeming the previous assumption a result of archaeological error and announced a halt of all research.

Scientists have explained that even the most modern technology can only preserve seeds that can sprout after a maximum of 50-100 years.

Thanh Den is a well-known Vietnamese archaeological site. Seven excavations have taken place at the site since 2001.

Related Articles

Sunday, August 29, 2010

Thang Long Imperial Citadel tells story of Hanoi

hanoi

A host of treasures hidden underneath and left on the ground over 1,300 years has earned the core of the Thang Long Imperial Citadel UNESCO recognition as a world cultural heritage site.

The site encompasses the No. 18 Hoang Dieu archaeological site and the central axis of the Hanoi ancient citadel which are nestled in the Forbidden Area in the heart of Thang Long Imperial Citadel.

The area was the Center of the Dai La citadel under the Chinese Tang domination (7th -8th century).

It was called the Dai La citadel under the Dinh-Le dynasties (10th century), Thang Long, Dong Do, and Dong Kinh under the Ly dynasties (1009-1226), the Tran Dynasty (1226-1400), the Early Le Dynasty (1428-1527), the Mac Dynasty (1527-1592), and Le Trung Hung (1593-1789) before becoming the Hanoi Citadel under the Nguyen Dynasty (19th century).

At the No. 18 Hoang Dieu archaeological site, scientists found imprints typical of the Ly, Tran and Le dynasties that revealed much about the origin of Thang Long Imperial Citadel more than 1,300 years ago.

Lying adjacent to Kinh Thien Palace to the west, the No. 18 Hoang Dieu archeological site is a component of the Forbidden Area from the Ly dynasty to the end of the Le Trung Hung era.

Covering a land area of 47,700 square meters, the site is enclosed by Hoang Van Thu Street to the north, Bac Son Street to the south, Hoang Dieu Street to the east and Doc Lap Street to the west.

From December 2002 to March 2004, archaeologists excavated numerous artifacts on 19,000 square meters of the site, exposing layers of cultures of different dynasties which reigned in Vietnam and proving that Thang Long Imperial City played a key role as a political Center throughout 1,300 years.

Architectural vestiges of palaces, pavilions, and the foundations of architectural structures of the Imperial Citadel have also been revealed.

At the site, scientists found a cluster of architectural structures built on land areas in rectangular and polygonal shapes, which were arranged in line with a city’s standards.

They unearthed a great deal of decorative objects placed on the roofing of architectural structures to provide proof of the ancient Vietnamese people’s artistic skills in constructing big and magnificent works.

Those decorative objects included an earthen phoenix head dating from the 11th -12th century, an earthen dragon head from the 12th century, earthen tube roof tiles with Bodhi tree leaf and dragon decoration dated from the 12th century.

Of them, with the majority made for the King, were transparent ceramic bowls decorated with a five-toe dragon image dated to the 15th century, and decorative glazed terracotta pots made in the 10th century.

At the 18 Hoang Dieu site, archaeologists unearthed many precious ceramic and glazed terracotta items, architectural materials, jewelry, weapons, and metal artifacts, of which many were personal objects of the kings and the royal families.

They also found a cannon weighing 100kg with a length of 1.2 meters. It was carved with the words, “Tu dai sung nhat hieu” (literally translated as “The first cannon among four big cannons”).

A system of ancient wells was exposed, including two believed to exist in the Dai La era, two built under the Ly dynasty, two under the Tran dynasty, and six under the Le dynasty. These wells have similar shape and size as those found in the forbidden citadels in Japan, China and North Korea.

The No. 18 Hoang Dieu archaeological site has supplied clear evidence of the site’s important role throughout the nation’s history, at least nearly 1,000 years, from 1010 to 1789.

Situated to the east of the 18 Hoang Dieu archaeological site is Hanoi’s ancient citadel area - the remainder of the central axis of the Vauban building.

The Vauban-styled building was built in the heart of the old Thang Long Citadel by King Gia Long in 1803. The building, with a perimeter of 4km, served as the headquarters of the Bac Thanh and the stop-over palace for the King during his visits to the north.

At present, there sit the surrounding walls of the stop-over palace which were built under the Nguyen Dynasty in the 19th century.

In the center of the ancient citadel lies the foundation of Kinh Thien Palace which was constructed under the Early Le Dynasty (1428).

Other construction works which still remain in the Hanoi ancient citadel were mostly built from the 19th century afterwards.

Walls and almost all gates of the Hanoi ancient citadel were built by the Nguyen Dynasty in early 19th century when Thang Long was the headquarters of the Bac Thanh and the King’s stop-over palace.

Many buildings inside the citadel were constructed by the French colonists during the 1880’s after they occupied Hanoi.

There are also some important buildings built after 1954, which served as the headquarters of the Defense Ministry until 2004.

The most important existing remains of the Kinh Thien Palace are its foundations and the stone steps with a handrail carved in the shape of a dragon, called the dragon's entrance.

The foundations are believed to have been built in 1428 and are seen as a Vietnamese architectural masterpiece. The palace was situated at the center of the Imperial Citadel and the two dragons were carved from solid blocks of stone during the Early Le Dynasty in the late 16th and early 17th centuries.

Doan Mon, the southern gate, was the main entrance to Cam Thanh (the Forbidden Area). The gate was built by the Early Le Dynasty in the 15th century and was later upgraded in the 19th century.

The U-shaped gate was built of brick and stones and measured 46.5m by 26.5m by 6m and covers 3.970 m2. The Doan Mon Gate had five domed doors. The largest one in the middle was for the King, flanked by two smaller ones, one for mandarins and the other for members of the royal family.

The Ky Dai, flag tower, was built in 1805, the same time as the Vauban-styled citadel.

It was built on the former foundations of the Tam Mon, the outer gate of the Forbidden Citadel during the Le dynasty. It is among the last remaining intact structures from the Nguyen dynasty.

The tower, built in brick, has a square base with three stories on top of it, each one progressively smaller.

It is 33.4 m high and has a 54-step spiral staircase leading from the bottom to the top of the tower where there is a 3.1 m-high observatory with a rectangular doorway on each side and a 40cm diameter flagpole on the top.

The Hau Lau, Princess Pavilion, was built in 1821, but was destroyed at the end of the 19th century. The remaining structure was rebuilt by the French.

Bac Mon, the northern gate, was built in 1805 and is the only remaining out of the five gates of Hanoi citadel from the Nguyen dynasty. It is designed in the trapezium architectural style, with each side sloped at an angle of 15 degrees. Above the gate is a two-storey observatory tower with a curved roof and the traditional spearhead.

The external wall was built in 1805 running from Doan Mon (southern gate) to surround the internal palace, where the Nguyen Kings to work and rest when they visited the north.

At present, the eight gates of the palace still remain and were recognized as relics in 1925. Between 1954 and 2004, the Palace served as the headquarters of the High Command of the Vietnam People's Army.

The French-styled buildings, the D57 bunker and the offices of the Party Central Committee’s Politburo, the Central Military Committee, General Vo Nguyen Giap and the headquarters of the General Staff of Vietnam People’s Army are now open for visitors.

Relics from the Thang Long royal citadel have been recognized as a world cultural heritage by UNESCO and have brought honor and pride to every Vietnamese citizen as part of the nation’s cultural history.

Related Articles