High Middle Ages · Southeast Asia · Culture

1056

Vietnam Casts a Twelve-Ton Bronze Bell

1056

Emperor Ly Thanh Tong ordered the casting of an enormous bronze bell weighing twelve thousand kilograms, its surface inscribed with a text the emperor himself composed. The bell's voice carried across the Red River Delta, a sonic assertion of royal Buddhist piety and metallurgical prowess. Vietnam's bronze-casting tradition, already ancient, was being marshaled in the service of a state that understood the propaganda value of resonance.