Dong son drum: China musical instrument
Dong son drums are bronze drum invented by the Dong Son culture, in the Red River Delta of the northern Vietnam. The musical drums were ma...

https://worldhitz4u.blogspot.com/2013/12/dong-son-drum-china-musical-instrument.html
Dong son drums are bronze drum
invented by the Dong Son culture, in the Red River Delta of the northern
Vietnam. The musical drums were manufactured from about 600 BC or earlier until
the 3rd century AD. The musical instruments are one of the culture’s
finest examples of their metal working.
source: deringhall.com
The drums that are cast in the bronze
with the use of lost wax method are up to a meter in height and the instruments
weigh up to 100 kg. Dong son drums were apparently both musical instruments and
cult objects. The musical instruments are decorated with the geometric
patterns, scenes of daily life and war, animals and birds and boats. The latter
alludes to the importance of trade to the culture that they were produced; the
drums themselves have become objects of trade and heirlooms. More than 200 of
the instruments have been found across the area from the eastern Indonesia to
Vietnam and some parts of the southern china. The earliest version of the drum
found in the year 1976 existed 2700 years ago in Wangjiaba in Yunnam Chuxiong
Yi Autonomous Prefecture China. The musical drum is categorized into the
heavier and the bigger Yue drums including the Dong son drums and the Dian
drum, into 8 different subtypes and purported to be fabricated by Ma Yuan and
Zhuge Liang. But the Book of the later Han sia Ma melt the bronze drums seized
from the rebel Lac viet in Jiaozhi into horse.
The discovery of this musical
instrument in the New Guinea is seen as evidence of trade connections –
spanning at least the past thousand years – between this region and the
technologically modernized- societies of the java and china.
The Heger 1 drums of the Dong son
culture were categorized and divided into five groups by the scholar from
Vietnam known as Huy Thong in the year 1990, a division that meant
chronological succession.