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Archaeologists unearth ruins of Cham tower
Three foundations of a Cham tower complex have been unearthed
four weeks ago by a team of archaeologists in Qua Giang village, Hoa Vang
district, Da Nang city.
The tower is the second largest excavated in the central city since another was
unveiled in Phong Le village two years ago. It was built to honour the Champa
King between the fourth and 13th centuries.
The team has found bricks, ceramic fragments and statues, including a large
head.
Team leader Nguyen Chieu, a lecturer at Hanoi 's University of Social Sciences
and Humanities, on August 1 said that two foundations were rebuilt using
material from collapsed towers.
"We discovered some bricks with figures, used to decorate walls of Cham towers,
in the foundations. That means that Cham people collected old bricks from
damaged towers to build new towers," he explained.
The excavation, close to the Qua Giang River, aims to shed light on a major hub
of the Cham civilisation.
"Cham people often lived near rivers, which were major transport and trading
routes. The Qua Giang River connects to the Han River in Da Nang city and is an
estuary of the East Sea ," Chieu said.
While the French discovered the area 100 years ago, they conducted no
excavations and left only vague documents, which are currently displayed at the
Cham Sculpture Museum .
Contemporary researchers must overcome funding shortages, as well as the
difficult task of getting permission to excavate from the four families who own
the gardens and houses on the archaeological site.
The excavation was organised by archaeologists from the central city's Cham
Sculpture Museum and Hanoi's University of Social Sciences and Humanities./.
Source: CPV |
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