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Cultural
and Historical Value
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Stone |
Pottery |
The
beauty of Hạ
Long Bay consists in its mountains, water, clouds, caves and
grottoes. Many, however, do not realise that Hạ
Long was also the cradle of an ancient people who helped create
the present Hạ
Long culture.
At the
end of 1937, a Swedish archaeologist named Anderson, together with
two French archaeologist sisters named Conani, journeyed for
months through Hạ
Long sea. They climbed mountains, visited caves and explored the
coastline, finding many stone artefacts: axes, grinding tables,
sewing needles and jewellery. They called the culture that formed
these remnants “Ngọc
Vừng”
In the months and years following, Vietnamese archaeologists
continued their research and made many excavations; discovering
more archaeological sites, such as Đồng
Mang, Xích Thổ
and Soi Nhụ.
Through an area of some hundreds of square kilometres, they
discovered many stone artefacts and pieces of broken designed
pottery.
Throughout
its development, Hạ
Long has had a particularly important position; being situated on
the communication routes between China, Japan and Thailand.
Gradually, it became the centre of cultural and commercial
exchanges between these countries and ancient Vietnam. The book
Comprehensive History of Đậi
Việt
reads: "In the second month of the spring of the year of Kỷ
Tỵ,
the 10th year of the reign of Lư Anh Tông (1149), the
commercial port of Vân Đồn
was established.”
In the long period overlapping the Lư, Trần and Lê
dynasties, Vân Đồn was a place of busy commercial and cultural
exchanges between Vietnam and its South-East Asian neighbours. A
remaining vestige of the ancient commercial port is Cái Làng Wharf
(Quan Lan).
Vân Đồn
is also a site that witnessed glorious feats of war against the
invasion of the
Yuan-Mongols
aggressors. It was here that the enemy, General Trương
Hổ,
had an entire fleet of food supply boats set ablaze by
Trần
Khánh Dư.
This contributed greatly to the victory of Bạch
Đằng.
Closely
linked to this animated commercial centre were many religious
architectural constructions; built to meet the requirements of
both traders and the population that practised Catholicism and
Buddhism.
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Đồng
Pagoda
(Yên Tử Vestige) |
Poetry
(Bài Thơ Moutain Vestige ) |
At Soi
Nhụ,
researchers found three fossilised human skeletons.
In particular, in the central zone of the present
UNESCO World Heritage Site area, there have been recent
discoveries of fascinating archaeological finds:
Mê Cung, Thiên Long and
Tiên Ông grottoes. The quantity of ancient shellfish in the
Melina Spring, indicated by the 1.5 m-thick heaps of shells,
amounts to hundreds of cubic metres.
The
archaeological sites of the Hạ
Long culture are distributed everywhere, but are mostly found on
the sandy beaches of the coastline, and in these caves and
grottoes:
Ngọc
Vừng,
Tuần
Châu,
Xích Thô and Đông Mang. There are also sites far from the coast,
such as Thoi Giêng and Tiên Ông. Wherever the remnants of the
first peoples of Hạ
Long are found, they seem to bear a common characteristic: the
same materials, techniques, forms and designs. Scientists have
called it the "Hạ
Long culture of the late period of the new Stone Age.”
In Cái
Làng Wharf, along to 200m-long coastline scientists
had found broken pieces of pottery and china forming a 0.6 m-thick
layer. Ages date from between the Lư and Trần
dynasties. Here, there are also foundations of ancient houses once
built along the wharf. Apart from here, many other ancient wharves
have been found, such as: Cống
Đông, Công Yên, Ngọc
Vừng,
Quan Lạn
and Cái Bầu.
They have featured similar artefacts.
On Cống
Đông Island alone, four pagodas were built. Among them, the Lâm
Pagoda is one of the most ancient in the area. It was built under
the Trần
Dynasty with three gates, a shrine to Buddha, anterior cult room
and house of ancestors. On the north-east side of the pagoda was a
tower, the remnants of which indicate it was a large and solemn
construction. |