Dong Son village

Dong Son village (Vietnamese: Đông Sơn) is a small village on the banks of the Ma River in phường Hàm Rồng, a suburb of Thanh Hoá town, Thanh Hóa Province. The village is best known for the discovery in 1924 of artifacts of what was later named Dong Son culture.

In 1924 a local fisherman stumbled on some bronze artifacts.[1] On learning of the discovery the director of the École française d'Extrême-Orient, Léonard Eugène Aurousseau (1888-1929), instructed a local French customs official named Louis Pajot to investigate the location. Pajot immediately discovered numerous graves and set to work to excavate them. When the importance of the finds was realised the site was entrusted to professional archaeologists including Olov Janse.[2]

References

  1. Viet Nam Social Sciences 1997 Page 33 "FROM PRE-DONG SON TO DONG SON: SOCIOCULTURAL CHANGES HA VAN TAN* I. INTRODUCTION In 1924, a fisherman chanced upon a number of bronze articles at Dong Son village on the Ma River, Thanh Hoa province. He sold his "
  2. Arts of Asia - Volume 37 - Page 57 2007 "In 1924, a Vietnamese farmer found some bronze artefacts in a small village along the bank of the Ma River in Thanh Hoa ... ..Janse criticised Pajot's crude and un-scientific "excavations" at the Dong Son village site

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