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| Gò Mun culture | |
|---|---|
| Name | Gò Mun culture |
| Period | Late Neolithic to Early Bronze Age |
| Dates | c. 1200–700 BCE |
| Region | Red River Delta, Northern Vietnam |
| Notable sites | Gò Mun, Bắc Ninh, Hà Nội, Hòa Bình, Mường Thanh |
| Preceded by | Phùng Nguyên culture, Đồng Đậu culture |
| Followed by | Đông Sơn culture |
Gò Mun culture
The Gò Mun culture represents a Late Neolithic to Early Bronze Age archaeological horizon in the Red River Delta and adjacent uplands of northern Vietnam with links to broader Southeast Asian and East Asian networks. Excavations at eponymous sites near Hanoi and provincial centers such as Bắc Ninh and Hà Nam have revealed ceramics, worked stone, and early metal artifacts that illuminate interactions among prehistoric communities, transregional exchange with Yunnan, Guangxi, and maritime contacts toward the South China Sea.
Archaeological interpretation of the Gò Mun complex draws on findings from sites near Hanoi, stratigraphic comparisons with the Phùng Nguyên culture and Đông Sơn culture, and typological links to assemblages in southern China and mainland Southeast Asia. Scholars from institutions like the Institute of Archaeology (Vietnam), the Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences, and foreign teams from École Française d'Extrême-Orient, University of Cambridge, University of Sydney, and Peking University have debated its chronology, technological innovations, and role in regional cultural transmission. Radiocarbon dates from contexts containing bone and charcoal have been compared with sequences from Hòa Bình and Mán Bạc to refine temporal placement.
Gò Mun horizons are dated roughly to c. 1200–700 BCE based on stratigraphic succession after Phùng Nguyên culture layers and prior to early Đông Sơn culture phases identified at sites such as Thanh Hóa and Ninh Bình. Distribution concentrates in the Red River Delta provinces of Bắc Ninh, Hà Nội, Hưng Yên, and Hà Nam with extensions into the Mường Thanh basin, Tràng An karst, and upland corridors toward Lạng Sơn and Quảng Ninh. Comparative studies reference contemporaneous assemblages from Yunnan, Guangxi, Guangdong, and the Thai-Malay Peninsula to model diffusion and local innovation.
Excavated inventories include cord-marked and incised ceramics, ground and polished stone tools, bone implements, and early worked copper objects; these are paralleled by finds at Đồng Đậu and Mán Bạc. Metallurgical evidence—hammering, annealing, and casting traces—has been assessed alongside metallographic analyses from laboratories at Vietnam National University and Zhejiang University. Stone tool typologies show continuity with Hòa Bình industries while exhibiting new forms similar to assemblages from Yunnan and Guangxi. Bone and shell artifacts connect to material culture at coastal sites like Hạ Long Bay and inland sites such as Mai Châu.
Zooarchaeological and palaeobotanical remains indicate mixed wet-rice agriculture, millet cultivation, riverine fishing, and hunting-gathering within the Red River Delta wetlands and nearby forests. Flotation and macrobotanical studies compare assemblages with those from Mán Bạc, Baiyue contexts in Guangdong, and floodplain sites near Mekong Delta references to trace crop introductions. Faunal remains of pig, dog, and waterfowl, alongside carp and catfish bones, echo subsistence strategies reported in excavations at Thanh Hà and Đông Triều.
Mortuary data from cemeteries near Hanoi, Bắc Ninh, and Phú Thọ reveal varied interment forms—flexed inhumations, jar burials, and secondary deposits—paralleling patterns seen at Đông Sơn precursors and contemporaneous Yangshao-linked sites in southern China. Grave goods range from pottery and ornaments to copper tools and personal items; spatial analyses have been undertaken by teams from Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences and National Museum of Vietnamese History to infer status differentiation and kinship. Comparisons with burial sequences at Ban Chiang and Sanxingcun contribute to models of social complexity and emerging hierarchy.
Ceramic styles include cord-marked, impressed, and incised motifs with geometric and zoomorphic patterns; parallels are drawn to decorative repertoires documented at Phùng Nguyên, Đồng Đậu, and Hòa Bình sites. Motifs have been compared with bronze iconography from later Đông Sơn drums, and with ornamentation in southern China assemblages at Gao Ben and Shixia. Stone and bone ornament styles show affinities with coastal artifact types from Hạ Long Bay and inland motifs in Mai Châu, suggesting symbolic networks spanning riverine and maritime corridors.
Major excavations include the eponymous site near Hanoi by teams from École Française d'Extrême-Orient and the Institute of Archaeology (Vietnam), stratigraphic work at sites in Bắc Ninh and Hà Nam, and regional surveys in Lạng Sơn and Quảng Ninh. Key comparative sites referenced in syntheses are Mán Bạc, Phùng Nguyên, Đồng Đậu, Hòa Bình, Ban Chiang, Dong Son, and Gò Cầm; laboratory collaborations involve Vietnam National University, Peking University, and École Normale Supérieure. Ongoing projects by international consortia from University College London, Australian National University, and Seoul National University aim to refine chronologies and analyze metallurgical sequences with advanced techniques such as isotopic sourcing and residue analysis.
Category:Archaeological cultures of Southeast Asia