« Jesus, Mary and Da Vinci | Main | The Cham people »

Linga discovered in Vietnam

Cultural officials have recently found a linga (phallic symbol) of the Cham ethnic minority people at Van Tuong village, Nghia Dung commune in central Quang Ngai province.

The 35-cm-high linga made from sandstone weighs around 100 kg. It is the second found in Quang Ngai province, providing a link to a cluster of towers of the Cham ethnic minority people in the locality. Archaeologist Dr. Doan Ngoc Khoi said the discovery of linga in Quang Ngai reflects the diversity of the Cham Pa culture of the Cham ethnic minority people in Quang Ngai.

Quang Ngai is home to two ancient citadels, namely Chau Sa at Tinh Chau commune in Son Tinh district and Ban Co at Nghia Phu commune in Tu Nghia district, and around 40 towers of the Cham ethnic minority people scattered around the area that have so far been ruined by the climate. Around 80 years ago in 1924, the French found a linga and a yoni during an excavation in Chanh Lo, Quang Ngai township, and these are now exhibited at the Cham museum in the central city of Da Nang. [New linga found in Quang Ngai province]

There is no picture of the linga and hence we don't know if it was influenced by the Siva Linga worshipped by the Hindus.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://varnam.org/mt33/mt-tb.cgi/309

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Linga discovered in Vietnam:

» Cham Linga Found in Viet Nam from Penis Blog
varnam If the linga in Viet Nam is Hindu, it brings a whole new meaning to cultural cross-polination. Cultural officials have recently found a linga (phallic symbol) of the Cham ethnic minority people at Van Tuong village, Nghia Dung commune... [Read More]

About

This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on December 13, 2004 6:05 AM.

The previous post in this blog was Jesus, Mary and Da Vinci.

The next post in this blog is The Cham people.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

Powered by
Movable Type 3.31