Photo Gallery
Banh It Towers (built c. 11th century)
The four surviving towers in this group were probably built towards the end of the 11th Century. The main tower and the adjacent repository are at the very summit of a hill overlooking the Highway 1, the town of Binh Dinh, and a river (identified by Tran Ky Phuong as a major arm of the Con River). Two smaller towers are situated at lower levels on the hill, to the south and east of the main tower.
At the time of these photographs (March 2004) the main tower was surrounded by scaffolding, with much fresh replacement brickwork in evidence. The neighboring tower shows a fair amount of replacement work, but also much that has been left in a rough state.
Several fine bas-reliefs of dancers from Banh It are now displayed in the Cham Museum in Da Nang. Ngo Van Doanh states that one of the major works of Banh It, a statue of Siva, was removed by the French to the Trocadero Museum around 1884-86, and is now part of the Guimet collection.
Bibliography:
All images copyright 2004 Mike High, Editor, U.S. Dept. of Education, Hunting Creek Road, Arlington, Virginia, USA (mike.high@starpower.net).
Boisselier, Jean. Statuaire du Champa; recherches sur les cultes et l'iconographie
Ecole française d'Extrême-Orient, 1963. Paris
Guillon, Emmanuel. Cham Art, Treasures from the Da Nang Museum, Vietnam
River Books, 2001. Thailand
Maspero, Georges. The Champa Kingdom
White Lotus Press, 2002. Bangkok
Ngo, Van Doanh. Champa Ancient Towers, Reality and Legend
The Gioi Publishers, 2002. Vietnam
Parmentier, H. Inventaire descriptif des monuments cams de l'Annam
Ecole française d'Extrême-Orient, 1909-18. Paris
Stern, Philippe. L'art du Champa, ancien Annam, et son évolution
Adrien-Maisonneuve, 1942. Paris
Tran, Ky Phuong. Unique vestiges of Cham civilization
The Gioi Publishers, 2000. Vietnam

Leave a Comment (*required)