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Dating Tin-bronze culture of Ancient Far East to not later than ca.3000 BCE

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Dating Tin-bronze culture of Ancient Far East to not later than ca. 3000 BCE 


Mirror: https://www.academia.edu/12406343/Dating_Tin-bronze_culture_of_Ancient_Far_East_to_not_later_than_ca._3000_BCE

 

Karen bronze drum of Burma is an exquisite cire perdue artifact inscribed with Meluhha hieroglyphs: frogs. Sarasvati-Sindhu civilization evidences remarkable artifacts of cire perdue metal castings: e.g., leopard weights of Shahi-Tump, dancing girl, lam-bearer, foot with ankle castings of Mohenjo-daro.

 

This monograph presents some perspectives on dating the tin-bronze culture evidenced by Karen and Dong Son bronze drums of Ancient Far East to not later than ca. 3000 BCE. This points to the need for further archaeo-metallurgical researches to document cultural contacts between Indian sprachbund and Ancient Far East and extended maritime trade contacts with Ancient Near East during the Bronze Age.

Cire perdue casting: Leopard bronze weight of Shahi-Tump (Baluchistan) with Meluhha hieroglyphs (See: http://bharatkalyan97.blogspot.in/2014/01/meluhha-dhokra-art-from-5th-millennium.html

 

Cire perdue castings: dancing girl, Mohenjo-daro

 

Foot with anklet; copper alloy. Mohenjo-daro (After Fig. 5.11 in Agrawal. D.P. 2000. Ancient Metal Technology & Archaeology of South Asia. Delhi: Aryan Books International.)

 

Bronze statue of a woman holding a small bowl, Mohenjodaro; copper alloy made using cire perdue method (DK 12728; Mackay 1938: 274, Pl. LXXIII, 9-11)

 

In this tradition of exquisite cire perdue metallurgy, Karen and Dong Son bronze drums are pinnacles of metalwork in the deployment of cire perdue technique in metal castings, not excluding the ability to write hieroglyphic inscriptions (messages) on such drums. The 'frog' hieroglyph conveys the message of copper alloy metal work.

 

The bronze drums of Ancient Far East using the rich resources of tin from the Southeast Asia's tin belt are a celebration of tin-bronze metallurgy. The 'frog' hieroglyph signifies the hard alloy metal copper-tin yielding tin-bronzes.

 

The chronology of the evolution of tin-bronzes and the techniques of cire perdue (lost-wax) metal casting exemplified by the brilliantly illustrated bronze drums has to be reviewed. This review will narrate the contributions of archaeometallurgy in the cultures of the Ancient Far East who had maritime contacts and trade transactions along the Tin Road of the Bronze Age with Ancient Near East.

 

Hieroglyph: frog:maṇḍa -- 5 m. ʻ frog ʼ .<menDaka>(A)  {N} ``^frog''.  *Hi.

 

<mE~dhak>, Skt.<maNDu:kam>.  #21820.  <poto menDka>(Z)  {N} 

 

``^toad''.  |<poto> `?'.  ^frog (which lives out of water).  *Loan?.  #27302. 

 

 <o~ia mendka>(Z),,<oJa mendka>(Z)  {N} ``^bullfrog''.  |<o~ia> `id.'.  ??

 

RECTE D?  #24562 (Gorum)

 

Rebus: meD 'iron' (Ho.)

 

Origin of the gloss med 'copper' in Uralic languages may be explained by the word meD (Ho.) of Munda family of Meluhha language stream:


Sa. <i>mE~R~hE~'d</i> `iron'.  ! <i>mE~RhE~d</i>(M).
Ma. <i>mErhE'd</i> `iron'.
Mu. <i>mERE'd</i> `iron'.
  ~ <i>mE~R~E~'d</i> `iron'.  ! <i>mENhEd</i>(M).
Ho <i>meD</i> `iron'.
Bj. <i>merhd</i>(Hunter) `iron'.
KW <i>mENhEd</i>
@(V168,M080)

— Slavic glosses for 'copper'
Мед [Med]Bulgarian
Bakar Bosnian
Медзь [medz']Belarusian
Měď Czech
Bakar Croatian
KòperKashubian
Бакар [Bakar]Macedonian
Miedź Polish
Медь [Med']Russian
Meď Slovak
BakerSlovenian
Бакар [Bakar]Serbian
Мідь [mid'] Ukrainian[unquote]
Miedź, med' (Northern Slavic, Altaic) 'copper'.  

One suggestion is that corruptions from the German "Schmied", "Geschmeide" = jewelry. Schmied, a smith (of tin, gold, silver, or other metal)(German) result in med ‘copper’.

Hieroglyph of a worshipper kneeling: Konḍa (BB) meḍa, meṇḍa id. Pe. menḍa 
id. Manḍ. menḍe id. Kui menḍa id. Kuwi (F.) menda, (S. Su. P.) menḍa, (Isr.) meṇḍa id.Ta. maṇṭi kneeling, kneeling on one knee as an archer. Ma.maṇṭuka to be seated on the heels. Ka. maṇḍi what is bent, the knee. Tu. maṇḍi knee. Te. maṇḍĭ̄ kneeling on one knee. Pa.maḍtel knee; maḍi kuḍtel kneeling position. Go. (L.) meṇḍā, (G. Mu. Ma.)  Cf. 4645 Ta.maṭaṅku (maṇi-forms). / ? Cf. Skt. maṇḍūkī- (DEDR 4677)
 

maṇḍa6 ʻ some sort of framework (?) ʼ. [In nau -- maṇḍḗ n. du. ʻ the two sets of poles rising from the thwarts or the two bamboo covers of a boat (?) ʼ ŚBr. (as illustrated in BPL p. 42); and in BHSk. and Pa. bōdhi -- maṇḍa -- n. perh. ʻ thatched cover ʼ rather than ʻ raised platform ʼ (BHS ii 402). If so, it may belong to maṇḍapá -- and maṭha -- ]Ku. mã̄ṛā m. pl. ʻ shed, resthouse ʼ (CDIAL 9737)


Rebus: mḗdha m. ʻ sacrificial oblation ʼ RV.Pa. mēdha -- m. ʻ sacrifice ʼ(CDIAL 10327)


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YxEbLTQsjvU  (11:02) Listen to the celestial beat and music of the drums brilliantly rendered by Gregory Beyer Karen Bronze Drum quintet

"Five Ponds" (2012) - Karen Bronze Drum quintet, composed by Gregory Beyer

Published on Dec 3, 2012

 

On Saturday October 6th, 2012, Dr. Gregory Beyer and members of the Northern Illinois University Percussion Ensemble (Lane Parsons, Nick Fox, Jonny Gifford and Brian Wach) gave the premiere performance of a new work for a quintet of Karen Bronze Drums (pam klo), as part of the closing ceremony of the 2012 International Burma Studies Conference.

 

The 2012 International Burma Studies Conference was hosted by the Northern Illinois University Center for Burma Studies. For the occasion, the Center's Director, Dr. Catherine Raymond, approached Beyer to commission a new piece for a rare collection of antique bronze drums housed in the Burma Art Collection at NIU.

 

Professor Emeritus and former Center for Burma Studies Director, Richard Cooler, is responsible for the sizeable collection of these drums held in the Burma Art Collection at NIU. Cooler made these drums an important part of his scholarly life's work.

 

The title of "Five Ponds" is a reference that pays tribute to Professor Richard Cooler's article, "The Magical Bronze Pond" and his larger book, "The Karen Bronze Drums of Burma." Therein he demonstrates that the artwork depicted on the playing surface of these drums (known and codified as Heger Type III, pam klo) suggests an idyllic aquatic environment and, by extension, prosperity for the Karen community that depended upon such an environment for their livelihood. The artful design on the playing surface of the Karen bronze drum features four small frogs, positioned in the four cardinal directions around the perimeter. In the center of the tympanum one finds a multi-pointed star, referencing the Karen creationist belief that a "star of foam" was the primordial stuff from which sprang original life.

 

As very little information is documented about how these drums were actually played (other than anecdotally in such resources as Professor Richard Cooler's treatise on the drums) Beyer was afforded a great deal of freedom to explore the sounds of the drums on their own terms. Much of the thematic material in this work was developed through free improvisation, recording, playback and analysis.

 

Of the piece, Beyer states, "Through swimming in the sonic waters of rehearsals for this piece, my students and I have come to understand the unique power and amazing potential that these drums possess. Although the drums are antiques (and accordingly come with their fair share of buzzes, cracks and sonic impurities!) their voices are very much alive. I am humbled by this unique opportunity to have been asked to work with them and hope that as a musical offering, Five Ponds will only be the first step...a breath of renewal for their voices today."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0qRmz5MqGMo  

Jason plays a 1,300 year old bronze rain drum  Published on Sep 27, 2013

Jason Ginter JG Percussion with JG Green sticks from hickory on ancient Dong son drum, bronze masterpieces

Bronze frog drum (2nd century AD). The little lumps are frogs.

Photo by IAMCP30 (Flickr).

Three frogs superimposed on tympanum of a Karen drum.

 

hparr, bharr pyuut (Burmese words for frog, toad)

 

Frog on tympanum of a Karen drum

 

https://www.academia.edu/1223547/The_Origins_of_Metallurgy_in_Prehistoric_Southeast_Asia_The_View_from_Thailand

 

http://pubs.usgs.gov/bul/1301/report.pdf "The most productive tin belt stretches more than 1,500 miles from Billiton (Belitung) island in Indonesia through Malaysia and Thailand into northern Burma. Many placer deposits and a few important lode deposits are worked throughout the belt."(p.23)

 

Anatomy of the Dong Son Bronze Drums

image

An overview of the classification and anatomy of the Nong-Noc (Circle-rod) Southeast Asian Bronze Drums (1)

Nguyễn Xuân Quang

Abstracts

The anatomy of the bronze drums reveals that the morphology and structure of the bronze drums reflect the entire spectrum of the cosmogony (cosmogeny). In general, the bronze drums are purposely made with open bottoms and have n nòng nọc yin-yang characters. The different morphology of the drums portrays the different aspects of cosmogony. My classification is based on the doctrine of cosmogony.

 

*

 

Dr A.B. Meyer and W. Foy, the two first authors in the book Bronzepauken aus Sušdostasien (The Bronze Drums of the Southeast Asia, Dresden, 1897) have divided the Southeast Asian bronze drums into six groups based on the studying of 52 bronze drums. In 1902, the Austrian scholar F. Heger expressed his disagreement with Meyer and Foy’s classification, and published his drum typology in his book, Alte Metalltrommeln aus Sudost Asien. Based on the meticulous work on the 165 bronze drums, he has classified the bronze drums into four main groups: H.I, H.II, H.III, H.IV and three intermediate groups.

A. THE NGUYỄN XUÂN QUANG’S CLASSIFICATION BASED ON THE MORPHOLOGY OF THE BRONZE DRUMS.

F. Heger’s typology of the bronze drums is merely descriptive; therefore I classify the bronze drums based on the doctrine of cosmogony. Based on their morphology, or gross anatomy, the bronze drums of  Southeast Asia are classified as follows:

1.  Nguyễn Xuân Quang type I (NXQ.I): egg-shaped drums or cosmic drum.

The drums of this type have the shape of a sphere, O shape or an egg shape. I call them cosmic drums. The O-shaped drums symbolize the Cosmic Pouch (Nothingness, Hư Vô, Universe, Vũ Trụ,  or Creation, Tạo Hóa). The egg-shaped drums (representing yin-yang, the Great Ultimate Thái Cực), symbolize the yin-yang Cosmic Pouch or Cosmic Egg. The egg-shaped drums are usually called barrel drums. I called them creator drums. The cosmic bronze drums can be the symbol of the Macrocosm or Upper World or Universe.

 

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A regular barrel-shaped bronze drum with two membranes (a Dongsonian  bottomless barrel drum has only one membrane).

In front of a yin sacred house or cosmos house on the Ngoc Lu I drum (see chapter The Houses in Nguyễn Xuân Quangs The Decipherment of the South East Asian Bronze Drums), there is a person holding a round object which is considered by many scholars to be a drum.

 

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A yin cosmic drum on the Ngoc Lu I drum.

In the book Dong Son Bronze Drums Found in Viet Nam, Nguyen Van Huyen and Hoang Vinh have mentioned that the Caœnh Thịnh drum or Taýy Sơn drum (inventory number D.6214-22), worshipped at the Buddhist temple Cổ Lễ and Buddhist temple Keo, at Hành Thiện, Nam Hà province and Nguyễn’s dynasty drum displayed at Hùng king’s museum at Vĩnh Phú city have the shape of the skinned barrel drums, but without bottoms (similar to the other types of the bronze drums). Unfortunately, no pictures or drawings of this type of bronze drums are available.

2. Nguyễn Xuân Quang type II (NXQ. II): Tubular or Cylindrical drums or Fire-drums or Kien drums (Trống Kiền hay Càn).


On the yang side, the bronze drums of this type have the shape of a tube or a cylinder with open bottom and straight sides portraying male principle and/or fire element or Kien. The yang fire-drums have no significant shoulders and bases.

3. Nguyễn Xuân Quang Type III (NXQ. III): Air Parasol-Shaped Drums or Yang Wind Drums or Tui Drums (Trống Đoài).

The drums of this type have the shape of parasols which are symbols of air, wind and sky.  The wind drums have insignificant bases.

 

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Karen drum (NXQ. type III, Heger III).(A. J. B Kempers, plate 19.04)

Heger called these drums Shan drums, because they are mainly cast by the Shan and Karen people living in east Burma. Note that Shan people, speaking a Tai-Kadai language, belong to the yin side  or cool sun stem of the tai yang sun Hồng Bàng family. The yang side of the yin branch is IO (rod yang on circle yin), young yin, air or wind clan. The Shan is a young yin, air or wind clan. This is the reason why the Shan people make a lots of yang wind parasol-shaped drums.
Under the projecting part of the roof, on the right side of a yin sun house on the Ngoc Lu I drum, there is a drum or drum-like object placed in a horizontal position. This parasol-shaped drum is a yang wind Tui drum (see chapter The Houses).

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Stylized parasol-shaped drum on the Ngoc Lu I drum.

Under the floor of the Triple World dais of the boat 2 on the Ngoc Lu I drum, there is a parasol-shaped drum or drum-like object representing a tai yang Tui drum of the water people.

 
 

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Parasol-shaped drum on the Ngoc Lu I drum.

 

 
 

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Lương Sơn (Kim Bôi) drum, NXQ. type III, (Heger III).(J. Cuisinier, planche XXXI).

Figure 4 in planche XXXI, in Les Mường, by J. Cuisinier, shows a gigantic bronze drum. Three parts of the drum are clearly divided, but the insignificant base and the waist form a cylinder. The drum has the shape of a parasol.
The drums of Heger type III can be considered as yang wind drums or NXQ type III.


4 . Nguyễn Xuaýn Quang Type IV (NXQ IV): “Âu” Shaped Drums or Male Water Chen Drums (Trống Chấn).

The drums of this type have the shape of an “âu” container or upside down cauldrons (see Signs and Symbols) and are yang water Chen drums. The drums are divided into only two parts. The drums of this type having no waist or axis and look very short.

 

 
 

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A South China drum or an “âu” container–shaped drum.
NXQ IV or H.IV.
 (A. J. B. Kempers, plate 20.02).

 

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Âu (C. Higham, figure 4.23, f).

Therefore they are termed “squat” drums. This type of drum represents male water Chen. The drums of Heger type IV belong here. The male water drums are the symbols of the male Water clans who worshipped the water sun of the yin side. Heger called these drums South China drums, because they are mainly found in south China, and their decorations have Chinese motifs such as dragons, fish and on some drums even there are the Chinese characters. It is easy to understand since south China is the old domain of the yin branch of the tai yang sun Hồng Bàng family (Red Family or Sun Family in the Vietnamese tradition). They belong to the Sun Tốn (Cosmos, yang wind), Chen (Water Sun) or Âu / Giao dragon stem.
Under the projecting part of the roof, on the right side of a yang house on the Song Da drum, there is a drum or a drum-like object. On the yang side, this “aýu”-shaped object is a Chen drum (Nguyễn Xuaýn Quang type IV).

 

 

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A yang water Chen drum at a yang sun house on the Song Da drum.

The drums of Heger type IV can be considered as yang water drums or NXQ type IV.


5. Nguyễn Xuaýn Quang type V (NXQ. V): Pillar-shaped Drums or Earth-drums or Young Yang or Li Drums (Trống Li).

The drums of this type have the shape of pillars or supporting posts with wide bases that looks like flat-cratered volcanoes. They symbolize Fire Mountain, yang earth, earthy World Mountain, the earth-axis Mountain, sky supporting post, or World axis.

 

clip_image002[22] clip_image002[24]

 
  

Figure a.                                                             Figure b.

Tan Long, Hoa Binh province drum (fig.a)

and South  China drum  fig. b(A. J. B. Kempers, plate 18.02).
(NXQ.V, Heger II).

The shape of the drums of this type is rather simple, with less distinctive divisions but their three parts are still visible. The drums have insignificant cylindrical shoulders (short, flat), the surface usually spreading out beyond the mantle like a supporting disc of the sky supporting post. However they have a characteristic higher prominent waist (or axis).
Under the projecting part of the roof, on the left side of a yang sun house on the Ngoc Lu I drum, there is a drum or drum-like object in the shape of a supporting pillar (see chapter The Houses). 
This pillar-shaped drum is a young yang Li drum.

 

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A pillar-shaped drum on the Ngoc Lu I drum (from Nguyen Van Huyen, p. 169), the wide base and the straight upper part portray a pillar or a supporting post.

On the Co Loa I drum, under the projecting part of the roof of a sun house, at the lower right corner, there is a horizontally laid drum with the tympanum facing to the right. This drum portrays tai yang Li (see chapter Signs and Symbols). The pillar-like shape confirms that this drum is a Li drum.

 

 
  

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A pillar-shaped drum at a yang sun house on the Co LoaI drum (from Pham Huy Thong, p.8).

Under the projecting part of the roof, on the right side of a yang sun house on the Kai Hua drum, there is a drum or drum-like object in the shape of a supporting pillar (see chapter The Houses). This pillar-shaped drum is a tai yang Li drum.

 

 

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A pillar-shaped drum on the Kai Hua drum.

The drums of Heger type II can be considered as earth drums or NXQ type V.


6. Nguyễn Xuân Quang Type VI (NXQ.VI): Mushroom-shaped Drums or Cosmic Mushroom drums (Trống Nấm Vũ Trụ).

Cosmic Mushroom Drums or Triple World Drums convey the entire spectrum of the cosmogony. The drums of this type have the shape of a flat-topped Mushroom, which is the symbol of the Cosmic Mushroom (a kind of Cosmic Tree), the Triple World Mushroom and the Mushroom of Life. These drums have three very clear-cut parts: broad shoulders, slim axis and slanting bases.

 

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Ngọc Lũ I bronze drum Nguyễn Xuân Quang VI (Heger I).

The drums on the platform next to the yang sun house on the Hoang Ha drum have three distinctive parts and are considered cosmic mushroom drums.

The drums of Heger type I belong to this type.

The tympanum usually does not spread out beyond the mantle. The tympanum and the shoulder form the flat-topped dome of a Mushroom, symbolizing the Upper and Middle Worlds. The axis of the drum, similar to the stem of a mushroom, represents the World Axis and/or the World Mountain. The base of the drum, corresponding to the root of the mushroom, symbolizes the Under World. This explains why the NXQ.VI cosmic mushroom drums, such as Ngoc Lu I and its kin (Hoang Ha, Song Da drums, etc) are the finest, most artistic of all specimens.
This type of bronze drum is termed “Dong Son drums” by Vietnamese scholars. These drums are considered to be representative of the Dong Son culture (Pham Huy Thong, p. 262). They were carved on the Ngoc Lu I, Kai Hoa, Hoang Ha and Song Da drums.
The Cosmic Mushroom is born from the Cosmic Egg, therefore, from an anatomical point of view, the morphological outline of the Cosmic Mushroom bronze drum NXQ.VI must have the shape of an egg (which represents the NXQ. type I, cosmic drum).

B. Dissection of a Cosmic Mushroom Drum NXQ.VI.

The four elements  Fire, Wind, Water, Earth interact to give birth to the entire universe, life and all living things (Cosmic Tree or Tree of Life).  Thus, the four types of drums representing the four elements {NXQ.II (Fire), NXQ.III (Wind) NXQ.IV (Water) and NXQ.V (Earth),] can be put together to form the Cosmic Mushroom drum NXQ.VI. Conversely, the Cosmic Mushroom drums NXQ.VI can be dissected into the NXQ.II, III, IV and V types.

C. The Gross Anatomy and the Structure of a Cosmic Mushroom Drum.

The meaning and anatomy of the Cosmic Mushroom-shaped drums NXQ VI express the doctrine of cosmogony, so their “blue print” of the structure must be followed the doctrine of cosmogony represented by the Cosmic Tree.

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The Anatomy of a Cosmic-mushroom shaped Bronze Drum.

a. The Macrocosm or Upper World.
The central zone of the tympanum represents the Macrocosm or Upper World, which also portrays the entire spectrum of cosmogony.
b. The Microcosm or Middle World or Human Living Being World.
The Middle Worlds on the bronze drums are represented by the remaining parts of the tympanums (the area is unoccupied by the Upper World) and the shoulders (upper parts of the mantles or bulging parts) of the drums.
c. The Under World.
The Under World or Nether World is represented by the base of the bronze drum.
d. The World Axis or axis mundi.
The World Axis is represented by the axis (middle part of the mantle or waist) of the drum.

D. Yin and Yang faces of the Bronze Drums

The bronze drums are purposely made with open bottoms. When placed in the beating position (the tympanums are facing upwards), the bronze drums symbolize male, yang. When placed in the upside down positions, they become mortars or cauldrons, or containers or gongs, symbols of female, yin.

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Therefore, the bronze drums  with open bottoms are yang-yin drums. The shape of the drums which is the same shape as the containers when in upside down positions, carries the symbolic meaning of cosmogony.

Conclusion

In summary, the anatomy of the bronze drums reveals that the morphology and structure of the bronze drums reflect the entire spectrum of the cosmogony. The form and structure of the bronze drums are accorded with the meaning of the drums or the doctrine of cosmogony. In general, the bronze drums are purposely made with open bottoms and have yin-yang characters.
The different morphology of the drums portrays the different aspects of cosmogony. In the view of religion, bronze drums are the symbols or religious icons of cosmogony, and in the patriarch society, they are symbols of sun worship or solar cult. Culturally, the bronze drums recorded the bronze nòng nọc I Ching. In the view of ethnology, bronze drums are symbols of the clans, nationalities, federals, the Empire of the sun or the Sun family. In comparison to Vietnamese ancient history and traditions, they are the symbols of Vietnamese Red Family or Sun Family Hồng Bàng (see Giải Đọc Trống Đồng Nòng Nọc, Âm Dương Đông Nam Á Decipherment of The Nong Noc Ying Yang Southeast Asian Bronze Drums).

 

————————————-

Foot Note

(1)
.see more details in the chapter  Cơ Thể Học Trồng Đồng Nòng Nọc Âm Dương Đông Nam Á  (The Anatomy of the Nòng Nọc Ying Yang Southeast Asian Bronze Drums) in  Giải Đọc Trống Đồng Nòng Nọc, Âm Dương Đông Nam Á (The Decipherment of the Nòng Nọc Ying Yang Southeast Asian Bronze Drums) (published by Hừng Việt 2008 written in Vietnamese by Nguyễn Xuân Quang).
.Vietnamese term nòng nọc (circle-rod), in a respect, means ying yang represent ying yang concept with circle O represents yin (female) and rod I represents yang (male).

https://nguyenxuanquangbacsi.wordpress.com/2009/12/04/anatomy-of-the-bronze-drums/


The Ancient Pharsi Drums of Burma

 

    The ancient bronze drums of South-East Asia particularly those from the northeast regions of what used to be known as the Indo-China Peninsula have long been the subject of research. As maybe be expected researchers have sought to classify the drums according to certain characteristics.

    According to Franz Heger of Vienna in his " Metaltrommeln aus Suedost-Asien" ( The metal drums of South-East Asia) published in 1902, the bronze drums were classified into four main types after close study of 165 specimens. The first type which is believed to be among the earliest known is peculiar for the shape of the drum body which has flaired mouth ; the middle part is a straight cylinder and the top part is bulbous, curving up gently to meet the drumhead whose diameter is slightly smaller than the diameter of the bulbous part at its broadest.

    In both the second and the third types, the most noticeable characteristic is that the drumhead proper projects a little beyond the body of the drum like a ledge. The resonance case or the body of the drum generally has a more graceful configuration than the first type. The flaired mouth gently narrows towards the waist and then broadens out again with just a hint of a bulge before it meets the projecting drumhead.

    The third type which approximates with the pharsi bronze drum of Burma has bands of horizontal ridges or lines in relief encircling the drum body. And of course there are also the distinctive frog figures which adorn the outer rim of the drumhead.

    Incidentally, the frog motif is peculiar not only to Burma. Bronze drums with similar decorations have also been found in other parts of South East Asia.

    Since 1902 many more drums have been discovered and more classifications may have been made. For instance, W.Foy in  " Uber Alter Bronze Tromeln aus Sudest Asien" classifies South East Asian bronze drums into give categories placing the pharsi in the fifth category.

    But no matter what the classification, it is generally agreed that the drums of the first type are among the most ancient possessing the characteristics of what is known as Dongson culture a term given after an excavation site near Dongson, south of  Hanoi in north Vietnam where large bronze drums and other bronze artifacts of a high degree of artistry were unearthed.

    Later discoveries have however shown that Dongson drums which were at one time believed to be among the oldest discovered are actually, quite recent chronologically, being cast only about BC 100 though some drum fragments later discovered in Malaysia have been dated earlier-- about BC 200. The grandfather of them all , as far as is known, is the Ngoc-lu in the province of Ha-nam, Tongkin. This drum has been ascribed to be as early as BC 450.

    In the opinion of Doctor John Lowestein in his paper on the " Origins of the Malayan Metal Age" published in the Journal of the Malayan Branch Royal Asiatic Society ( Volume XXIX , Part 2; May 1956 ), "Within Type I we know of a few drums which are rightly regarded as constituting the very first specimens ever cast. These are adorned in a naturalistic style with figures of warriors wearing large feather head-dresses and with elaborate pictures of houses and boats, as well as representations of animals, musical instruments, etc,. which are in fact the most ancient cultural records in South East Asia. On later examples of Type I drums the representations become more and more stylized and finally disintegrate into ornaments the original features on which could not be detected if none of the 'parent' drums had ever come to light."

    If we are to take this as basis, the predominance of realism as against geometric design may serve as useful reference to antecedents.

    Considering this, the ancient pharsi bronze drums of Burma with their combination of geometric designs and mixture of stylized as well as realistic animal figures mark in development though not necessarily chronological. we cannot totally disregard the possibility that bronze drum culture if we are to call it that, goes even further back than has been believed.

    It is interesting to note the comment made in the " the Kares " section of the series entitled " Cultural Traditions and Customs of the National Races of the Socialist Republic of the Union of Burma" published by the Burma Socialist Programme Party. The comment which appears on page 322 states, " ... a thriving pharsi bronze drum casting industry emerged in the Wa region not only because of the abundance of metals but also because the drums were used a barter for trade in the city of Tagaung."

    This claim that pharsi bronze drums were already in existence by the time of the near-legendary city of Tagaung may not be too farfetched as it may seen to be. For, according to U Aung Thaw in Historical Sites in Burma, " the re-establishment of the capital (Tagaung) by a second refugee prince is believed to have taken place about is believed to have taken place about 6th century B.C.". Even if the second founding of the city took place later than stated, its is known to have existed as a city-State at least up to about BC 200.

    This would place the period of existence of Tagaung, traditionally known as the cradle of Burmese civilization in about the same chronological spectrum as the earliest bronze drums which have so far been found.

    Considering the advanced casting process evidently used and the high degree of artistry seen in them, there is powerful reason for researchers to fell that art of making bronze drums could have begun much earlier than shown by discovered evidence.

    If we are to follow traditional orthodox reconstruction, of the spread of bronze culture, bronze was supposed to have been first discovered in western Asia and then taken to Greece about 3,000 BC from where it spread to eastern Europe. And it is believed that a migration from eastern Europe at about 1,000 BC, moving east and south entered China during the Western Chou Dynasty (1122-771 BC) bringing with them not only a knowledge of bronze work but also a new art form in which they decorated their bronze with geometric patters as well as scenes of animals and people.

    As applied to South East Asia this culture was termed Dong-son. It was felt that the people of Dong-son first introduced bronze and the geometric art style which can be see on practically all the bronze drums of South East Asia. This is based on the presumption that South East Asia got its bronze culture from the north through China.

    However this hypothesis does not seem to quite match the discovered evidence which reveals that bronze culture was in China even earlier than that Chou dynasty. In fact the lat capital of the Shang Dynasty ( 1523-1028 BC) near Anyang in North Honan is the oldest Bronze Age site known in China. But here too as in the case of South East Asian Bronze Drums advanced that " the assumption of a more archaic phase became almost imperative " as the Encyclopedia Britannica (Volume 2 : Archaeology) put it. It presented a problem which has confounded pre-historians, archaeologists and anthropologists alike. As William Watson commented in his Early Civilization in China. "InHonan, the Shang are found to have discovered bronze and to have mastered the art of using it in a manner comparable to that of the Late Bronze Age of the Mediterranean." Herein lies a problem which has not been fully solved. Archaeologists have long sought an earlier civilization, particularly evidence of primitive bronze technology which would give color to the theory that the main development of the metallurgy was accomplished in China independently of any considerable influence from the bronze-using civilization of the Near East and the Mediterranean World."

    What is even more significant, they are not conspicuous in either the Shang or the Chou dynasties.

    But more recent excavations in other parts of South East Asia are beginning to point to a more obvious solution which seems to have been overlooked. Writing in the National Geographic Magazine ( march 1971 ) Dr. Wilhelm G Solheim II, professor of Anthropology of the University of Hawaii gave an account of how excavations at Nok Nok Tha in northern Thailand resulted in the discovery of bronze tools of advanced design including bronze axes cast in double sand-stone moulds pre-dating Dong-son culture by at least 2,000 years, suggesting that South East Asian bronze industry began around 3,000 BC or even earlier. This would put it some 500 years earlier than the first known bronze casting in India and some 1,000 years before any known in China.

    Studies of plant domestication have also shown that the  South East Asian peoples made early and important strides of their own in the domestications and cultivation of staples and other vegetables round 10,000 BC. Carbon-14 dating of a post shred with the imprint of a paddy grain has shown it to date at the latest from 3,500 BC, as much as 1,000 years earlier than rice dated for either India or China where some archaeologists claimed, rice was first domesticated.

    The only people who fit in chronologically with the new evidence are the Haobinhian -- a term coined after a site near the village of Hao Binh in northern Vietnam to denote a primitive culture prior to Dong-son.

    The Padahlin caves in eastern Burma excavated in 1969 and wehre many cave paintings were found is a Haohinbian site. Indeed, Padahlin has the distinction of being the most western-most Haobinhian site so far reported. Yet another Haobinhain site is the Spirit Cave in northern Thailand. Standing high on the side of a limestone outcrop, overlooking a stream which ultimately drains into the Salween river in Burma, the Spirit Cave showed signs of human habitation which on carbon-14 dating showed periods ranging from 9,700 BC to 6,000 BC.

    The fact is that many archaeologists have tended to regard prehistoric South East Asia as a relatively passive land -- a cultural cul de sac as it were of ideas and influence from neighboring regions. Recent evidence thought spares -- Burma itself is virtually unknown prehistorically -- and uncorrelated facts have provided suggestions which in the opinion of at least one archaeologist's appraisal South East Asia added to the world culture as much if not more than it received.

    As Dr. Solheim suggested, it is not improbable that instead of civilization coming down to South East Asia from the north, the first Neolithic ( Late Stone-Age) culture of North China known as Yanghshao developed out of a Haobinhian subculture that moved north from northern South East Asia at about 6,000 or 7,000 BC.

    If this, be so , is it not then also possible that the sophisticated bronze casting methods and the fine artistry evident in the Dong-son culture began and developed not in areas further north in China anywhere else but within South East Asia itself criss-crossed with the fertile valleys of great rivers like the Mekong whose civilization would have the best chance of springing up.

    In this connection Poo Taw Oo (Thra Bu Mu) in Karen Bronze Drums states that Karens ( or their ancestors) used to make the pharsi bronze drums long before they arrived at the present location in South East Asia. This is according to ancient Karen ballads, poems and folklore which quite explicitly state that their ancestors used to live "at the headwaters of the Mekong". The pharsi bronze drums, according to the Karen folklore, were said to have been made by a certain race of Shan Kareans known as Khamon, Khamu or Khmu who roved from place to place and eventually settled down at a region inhabited by "wa" people where there was n abundance of metals such as tin, tungsten, zinc, silver and others.

    Strangely enough, the region of South East Asia where the Khmu people may still be found in great numbers today is in Laos where exist the headwarers of the Mekong. At the same time the region where the Wa or the Lwa people as they are also known may be found today forms a broad belt which runs north to south on eastern part of Burma covering such well-known mines a Bawdwin and mawchi in the north to numerous other mines lower down including Ngwedaung of Kayah State which even today is known as prominent place where the Pharsi bronzed drums were at c time manufactured in great numbers.

    Anthropologically speaking, the Khmer, the Khmus, the Lawas all belong to the Austro-Asiatic stock of Mon-khmers.

    Hence from the angle of both folklore and recent archaeological discoveries it becomes evident that the bronze drums of South East Asia including our cherished pharsi bronze drums are more than just a link with South East Asian's bronze age-- they represent nothing less than a direct link with the earliest bronze age culture in the world and perhaps even with one of the oldest human civilization found anywhere in the world.

 

 

Bronze Drums - An Animist Art Form

 

The use and manufacture of bronze drums is the oldest continuous art tradition in Southeast Asia. It began some time before the 6th century BC in northern Vietnam and later spread to other areas such as Burma, Thailand, Indonesia and China. The Karen adopted the use of bronze drums at some time prior to their 8th century migration from Yunnan into Burma where they settled and continue to live in the low mountains along the Burma - Thailand border. During a long period of adoption and transfer, the drum type was progressively altered from that found in northern Vietnam (Dong Son or Heger Type I) to produce a separate Karen type (Heger Type III). In 1904, Franz Heger developed a categorization for the four types of bronze drums found in Southeast Asia that is still in use today.

 

Heger’s four drum types 

The Karen Drum Type or Heger Type III 

 

The vibrating tympanum is made of bronze and is cast as a continuous piece with the cylinder.  Distinguishing features of the Karen type include a less bulbous cylinder so that the cylinder profile is continuous rather than being divided into three distinct parts. Type III has a markedly protruding lip, unlike the earlier Dong Son drums. The decoration of the tympanum continues the tradition of the Dong Son drums in having a star shaped motif at its center with concentric circles of small, two-dimensional motifs extending to the outer perimeter.

 

Tympanum of a Karen Bronze Drum

Complete Tympanum of a Karen Drum

Detail of Tympanum of a Karen Drum

Detail of Tympanum of a Karen Drum

  

In Burma the drums are known as frog drums (pha-si), after the images of frogs that invariably appear at four equidistant points around the circumference of the tympanum.

 

Frog on Tympanum of a Karen Drum

 

A Karen innovation was the addition of three-dimensional figures to one side of the cylinder so that insects and animals, but never humans, are often represented descending the trunk of a stylized tree.

 

Stylized tree with snails and elephants

Detail of stylized tree with snails and elephants

Detail showing a complex arrangement of snails, elephants, trees squirrels and other animals.

 

The frogs on the tympanum vary from one to three and, when appearing in multiples, are stacked atop each other. The number of frogs in each stack on the tympanum usually corresponds to the number of figures on the cylinder such as elephants or snails. The numerous changes of motif in the two- and three-dimensional ornamentation of the drums have been used to establish a relative chronology for the development of the Karen drum type over approximately one thousand years.  

The Karens speak several languages that linguists have had difficulty classifying.  Karen groups often speak different languages, some of which are not mutually intelligible.  Hence, the Karen peoples are an exception to the basic assumption that an ethnic group can be defined by the fact that all its members can converse in a single tongue. There are at least three major cultural and linguistic divisions among the Karen: the Karreni or the Red Karen, who cast the bronze drums, the Pwo Karen, and the Sgaw Karen, as well as a number of other splinter groups who have scattered into the mountains below the Shan Plateau.

 

Two Red Karen Women  

A Sgaw Woman    

Two Sgaw Karen couples

 

These hillside people practice swidden or slash-and-burn agriculture and speak a language that is very different than that of the lowland Burmese.  The practice of slash-and-burn agriculture consists of burning the forests and then using the ashes from the burnt timber as fertilizer for the fields. 

 

A swidden field ready for planting

Broadcasting rice in swidden field

 

 

The fertilizer lasts for only several years, never more than six, and at that time the Karen must pack and move everything to a new site where a different section of the forest is burned.  A number of hillside groups practice slash-and-burn agriculture and periodically move through each other's hereditary territory to new lands.  These people move back and forth across the Thai border with little regard for the national boundary.  Slash-and-burn agriculture is perilous in that after the forest is burned, seeds must be planted and then rains must occur quickly and consistently until the plants are well established.  If this does not happen, the plants will wither and die or insects and animals will eat the seeds.  It is not unusual for the Karen to be forced to plant four times in order to reap a single harvest.  For the Karen, the bronze drums perform a vital service in inducing the spirits to bring the rains. When there is a drought, the Karens take the drums into the fields where they are played to make the frogs croak because the Karens believe that if the frogs croak, it is sign that rain will surely fall. Therefore, the drums are also known as "Karen Rain Drums"

 

Bronze drums were used among the Karen as a device to assure prosperity by inducing the spirits to bring rain, by taking the spirit of the dead into the after-fife and by assembling groups including the ancestor spirits for funerals, marriages and house-entering ceremonies. The drums were used to entice the spirits of the ancestors to attend important occasions and during some rituals the drums were the loci or seat of the spirit.

 

It appears that the oldest use of the drums by the Karen was to accompany the protracted funeral rituals performed for important individuals. The drums were played during the various funeral events and then, among some groups, small bits of the drum were cut away and placed in the hand of the deceased to accompany the spirit into the afterlife.  It appears that the drums were never used as containers for secondary burial because there is no instance where Type III drums have been unearthed or found with human remains inside. The drums are considered so potent and powerful that they would disrupt the daily activities of a household so when not in use, they were placed in the forest or in caves, away from human habitation.  They were also kept in rice barns where when turned upside down they became containers for seed rice; a practice that was thought to improve the fertility of the rice. Also, since the drums are made of bronze, they helped to deter predations by scavengers such as rats or mice.

 

When played, the drums were strung up by a cord to a tree limb or a house beam so that the tympanum hung at approximately a forty-five degree angle.

 

Karen drum being played      

 

The musician placed his big toe in the lower set of lugs to stabilize the drum while striking the tympanum with a padded mallet. Three different tones may be produced if the tympanum is struck at the center, edge, and midpoint.  The cylinder was also struck but with long strips of stiff bamboo that produces a sound like a snare drum. The drums were not tuned to a single scale but had individualized sounds, hence they could be used effectively as a signal to summon a specific group to assemble. It is said that a good drum when struck could be heard for up to ten miles in the mountains. The drums were played continuously for long periods of time since the Karen believe that the tonal quality of a drum cannot be properly judged until it is played for several hours.

 

The drums were a form of currency that could be traded for slaves, goods or services and were often used in marriage exchanges. They were also a symbol of status, and no Karen could be considered wealthy without one.  By the late nineteenth century, some important families owned as many as thirty. The failure to return a borrowed drum often led to internecine disputes among the Karen.

 

a. Animist Drums and Buddhism

 

Although the drums were cast primarily for use by groups of non-Buddhist hill people, they were used by the Buddhist kings of Burma and Thailand as musical instruments to be played at court and as appropriate gifts to Buddhist temples and monasteries. The first known record of the Karen drum in Burma is found in an inscription of the Mon king Manuha at Thaton, dated 1056 AD.  The word for drum in this inscription occurs in a list of musical instruments played at court and is the compound  pham klo: pham is Mon while klo is Karen.  The ritual use of Karen drums in lowland royal courts and monasteries continued during the centuries that followed and is an important instance of inversion of the direction in which cultural influences usually flow from the lowlands to the hills.

  

b. Casting the drums

 

The town of Nwe Daung, 15 km south of Loikaw, capital of Kayah (formerly Karenni) State, is the only recorded casting site in Burma. Shan craftsmen made drums there for the Karens from approximately 1820 until the town burned in 1889.  Karen drums were cast by the lost wax technique; a characteritic that sets them apart from the other bronze drum types that were made with moulds. A five metal formula was used to create the alloy consisting of copper, tin, zinc, silver and gold. Most of the material in the drums is tin and copper with only traces of silver and gold. The Karen made several attempts in the first quarter of the twentieth century to revive the casting of drums but none were successful.

 

Karen drums casting - 1923 

 

During the late 19th century, non-Karen hill people, attracted to the area by the prospect of work with British teak loggers, bought large numbers of Karen drums and transported them to Thailand and Laos. Consequently, their owners frequently incorrectly identify their drums as being indigenous to these countries.

 


Bibliography - Animism and the Arts

 

F. Heger,  Alte Metalltromeln aus Sudest-Asie (Leipzig, 1902).

 

H. I. Marshall, The Karen People of Burma: A Study in Anthropology and Ethnology (Columbus, 1922).

 

H. I. Marshall, "Karen Bronze Drums"Journal of the Burma Research Society, xix (1929), pp. 1-14.

 

Richard M. Cooler, "The Use of Karen Bronze Drums in the Royal Courts and Buddhist Temples of Burma and Thailand: A Continuing Mon Tradition?"Papers from a Conference on Thai Studies in Honor of William J. Gedney  (Michigan Papers on South and Southeast Asia, No 25, Ann Arbor, 1986) pp. 107-20.

 

Richard M. Cooler, The Karen Bronze Drums of Burma: Types, Iconography, Manufacture, and Use (Leiden, 1994).

 

 

Bronze Drums - An Animist Art Form
by
Dr. Richard M. Cooler ,
Professor Emeritus
Art History of Southeast Asia, Northern Illinois University
Original link @ http://www.seasite.niu.edu/burmese/cooler/Chapter_1/Chapter_1.htm 

 


The use and manufacture of bronze drums is the oldest continuous art tradition in Southeast Asia. It began some time before the 6th century BC in northern Vietnam and later spread to other areas such as Burma, Thailand, Indonesia and China. The Karen adopted the use of bronze drums at some time prior to their 8th century migration from Yunnan into Burma where they settled and continue to live in the low mountains along the Burma - Thailand border. During a long period of adoption and transfer, the drum type was progressively altered from that found in northern Vietnam (Dong Son or Heger Type I) to produce a separate Karen type (Heger Type III). In 1904, Franz Heger developed a categorization for the four types of bronze drums found in Southeast Asia that is still in use today.


Heger’s four drum types 


The Karen Drum Type or Heger Type III 

The vibrating tympanum is made of bronze and is cast as a continuous piece with the cylinder.  Distinguishing features of the Karen type include a less bulbous cylinder so that the cylinder profile is continuous rather than being divided into three distinct parts. Type III has a markedly protruding lip, unlike the earlier Dong Son drums. The decoration of the tympanum continues the tradition of the Dong Son drums in having a star shaped motif at its center with concentric circles of small, two-dimensional motifs extending to the outer perimeter.


Tympanum of a Karen Bronze Drum


Complete Tympanum of a Karen Drum


Detail of Tympanum of a Karen Drum


Detail of Tympanum of a Karen Drum


In Burma the drums are known as frog drums (pha-si), after the images of frogs that invariably appear at four equidistant points around the circumference of the tympanum.


Frog on Tympanum of a Karen Drum

A Karen innovation was the addition of three-dimensional figures to one side of the cylinder so that insects and animals, but never humans, are often represented descending the trunk of a stylized tree.


Stylized tree with snails and elephants


Detail of stylized tree with snails and elephants


Detail showing a complex arrangement of snails, elephants, trees squirrels and other animals.

The frogs on the tympanum vary from one to three and, when appearing in multiples, are stacked atop each other. The number of frogs in each stack on the tympanum usually corresponds to the number of figures on the cylinder such as elephants or snails. The numerous changes of motif in the two- and three-dimensional ornamentation of the drums have been used to establish a relative chronology for the development of the Karen drum type over approximately one thousand years. 

The Karens speak several languages that linguists have had difficulty classifying.  Karen groups often speak different languages, some of which are not mutually intelligible.  Hence, the Karen peoples are an exception to the basic assumption that an ethnic group can be defined by the fact that all its members can converse in a single tongue. There are at least three major cultural and linguistic divisions among the Karen: the Karreni or the Red Karen, who cast the bronze drums, the Pwo Karen, and the Sgaw Karen, as well as a number of other splinter groups who have scattered into the mountains below the Shan Plateau.


Two Red Karen Women  


A Sgaw Woman    


Two Sgaw Karen couples

These hillside people practice swidden or slash-and-burn agriculture and speak a language that is very different than that of the lowland Burmese.  The practice of slash-and-burn agriculture consists of burning the forests and then using the ashes from the burnt timber as fertilizer for the fields. 


A swidden field ready for planting


Broadcasting rice in swidden field

 

The fertilizer lasts for only several years, never more than six, and at that time the Karen must pack and move everything to a new site where a different section of the forest is burned.  A number of hillside groups practice slash-and-burn agriculture and periodically move through each other's hereditary territory to new lands.  These people move back and forth across the Thai border with little regard for the national boundary.  Slash-and-burn agriculture is perilous in that after the forest is burned, seeds must be planted and then rains must occur quickly and consistently until the plants are well established.  If this does not happen, the plants will wither and die or insects and animals will eat the seeds.  It is not unusual for the Karen to be forced to plant four times in order to reap a single harvest.  For the Karen, the bronze drums perform a vital service in inducing the spirits to bring the rains. When there is a drought, the Karens take the drums into the fields where they are played to make the frogs croak because the Karens believe that if the frogs croak, it is sign that rain will surely fall. Therefore, the drums are also known as "Karen Rain Drums"

Bronze drums were used among the Karen as a device to assure prosperity by inducing the spirits to bring rain, by taking the spirit of the dead into the after-fife and by assembling groups including the ancestor spirits for funerals, marriages and house-entering ceremonies. The drums were used to entice the spirits of the ancestors to attend important occasions and during some rituals the drums were the loci or seat of the spirit.

It appears that the oldest use of the drums by the Karen was to accompany the protracted funeral rituals performed for important individuals. The drums were played during the various funeral events and then, among some groups, small bits of the drum were cut away and placed in the hand of the deceased to accompany the spirit into the afterlife.  It appears that the drums were never used as containers for secondary burial because there is no instance where Type III drums have been unearthed or found with human remains inside. The drums are considered so potent and powerful that they would disrupt the daily activities of a household so when not in use, they were placed in the forest or in caves, away from human habitation.  They were also kept in rice barns where when turned upside down they became containers for seed rice; a practice that was thought to improve the fertility of the rice. Also, since the drums are made of bronze, they helped to deter predations by scavengers such as rats or mice.

When played, the drums were strung up by a cord to a tree limb or a house beam so that the tympanum hung at approximately a forty-five degree angle.


Karen drum being played      

The musician placed his big toe in the lower set of lugs to stabilize the drum while striking the tympanum with a padded mallet. Three different tones may be produced if the tympanum is struck at the center, edge, and midpoint.  The cylinder was also struck but with long strips of stiff bamboo that produces a sound like a snare drum. The drums were not tuned to a single scale but had individualized sounds, hence they could be used effectively as a signal to summon a specific group to assemble. It is said that a good drum when struck could be heard for up to ten miles in the mountains. The drums were played continuously for long periods of time since the Karen believe that the tonal quality of a drum cannot be properly judged until it is played for several hours.

The drums were a form of currency that could be traded for slaves, goods or services and were often used in marriage exchanges. They were also a symbol of status, and no Karen could be considered wealthy without one.  By the late nineteenth century, some important families owned as many as thirty. The failure to return a borrowed drum often led to internecine disputes among the Karen.

a. Animist Drums and Buddhism

Although the drums were cast primarily for use by groups of non-Buddhist hill people, they were used by the Buddhist kings of Burma and Thailand as musical instruments to be played at court and as appropriate gifts to Buddhist temples and monasteries. The first known record of the Karen drum in Burma is found in an inscription of the Mon king Manuha at Thaton, dated 1056 AD.  The word for drum in this inscription occurs in a list of musical instruments played at court and is the compound  pham klo: pham is Mon while klo is Karen.  The ritual use of Karen drums in lowland royal courts and monasteries continued during the centuries that followed and is an important instance of inversion of the direction in which cultural influences usually flow from the lowlands to the hills.
 
b. Casting the drums

The town of Nwe Daung, 15 km south of Loikaw, capital of Kayah (formerly Karenni) State, is the only recorded casting site in Burma. Shan craftsmen made drums there for the Karens from approximately 1820 until the town burned in 1889.  Karen drums were cast by the lost wax technique; a characteritic that sets them apart from the other bronze drum types that were made with moulds. A five metal formula was used to create the alloy consisting of copper, tin, zinc, silver and gold. Most of the material in the drums is tin and copper with only traces of silver and gold. The Karen made several attempts in the first quarter of the twentieth century to revive the casting of drums but none were successful.


Karen drums casting - 1923 

During the late 19th century, non-Karen hill people, attracted to the area by the prospect of work with British teak loggers, bought large numbers of Karen drums and transported them to Thailand and Laos. Consequently, their owners frequently incorrectly identify their drums as being indigenous to these countries.

 

Bronze gong drum

Karen klo (Khamu yaan, rpal)

Karen klo used in ceremony near Wat Chan

consists of a hollow cylinder one or two feet high with curving sides with one end covered by a flat plate of thinly beaten bronze. Normally it is suspended and often carried on poles; the plate is struck with a heavy stick. It is customarily decorated with small tree frogs, an engraved star and concentric circles in which are birds, fishes, other animals and symbols.  A large number of frogs on the striking surface indicates a gong of high value.

Historical records show it in use as early as the 4th century BC in China, later in Vietnam and they have for many years been used by the Karen. Mien people also use it in China, primarily on three occasions: to summon the souls of the ancestors for the New Year; when somebody of more than five years of age becomes ill; or when a person dies.

The Khamu yaan is traditionally stored in the forest and played to call the spirits of the ancestors at funerals, buffalo sacrifices and house-building ceremonies.

Khamu yaan Luang Namtha museum

 

S. Kalyanaraman

Sarasvati Research Center

May 16, 2015


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