Ancient water system found at Hanoi Citadel

Traces of a huge water supply system and parallel ground wall from the time of the Ly dynasty have been unearthed at the former Thang Long Imperial Citadel in downtown Hanoi, archaeologists have announced.

The findings were the first of their kind found in Vietnam and were heralded by most commentators and scientists as striking.

“Never before have architectural vestiges from the Ly dynasty (11th to 13th century) been detected in the North Gate area and what was found proves the dynasty’s architecture was quite imposing,” said Tong Trung Tin, head of the Vietnam Institute of Archaeology, at a workshop on December 26.

The water structure was about 2m wide and 2m high, archaeologists said. It was thought to have been a waterway, water tank, well, tunnel or spiritual work.

It was built with square and rectangular bricks and timber poles in an east-west direction. The ground wall was 1.6m wide.

“It is likely that this huge brick-made water line was part of a drainage system in the Forbidden City or a spiritual structure in accordance with the science feng shui in the Ly dynasty,” Tin said.

The workshop was held by Hanoi-Thang Long Heritage Conservation Centre and the Vietnam Institute of Archaeology to report on recent archaeological excavations at the centre’s Kinh Thien Palace area.

In previous excavations, relics and artefacts from the Ly dynasty had been unearthed at the archaeological site at 18 Hoang Dieu Street, but no architectural remnants were found, the workshop was told.

The new discovery would provide an insight into sanctums inside the imperial citadel.

Prof Phan Huy Le said the findings revealed the continuity of cultural development from the Ly dynasty to the Tran dynasty (13th-14th century) and then to the Le dynasty (15th-16th century).

“A structure of such a large scale has never been in any architecture, though its exact name and function remains unconfirmed,” Le said.

Hanoi Historian Association president Nguyen Quang Ngoc said, “Such a water supply system has never been found at archaeological sites at 18 Hoang Dieu Street or in China, Japan, and the Republic of Korea that we have studies.”
Also found at the 500 sq.m wide by 4.2m deep excavation site at the North Gate were relics from the Tran, Le So and Nguyen dynasties.

They included flower decorations, drainage, foundation buttresses and brick foundations.

Archaeologists said the findings, which lay at the very centre of Thang Long-Hanoi cultural axis, intertwined and overlapped over a thousand years.

They recommended the diggings be covered to prevent damage, and that further excavations be undertaken to provide more information.

Here are some photos:

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