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  2. Inlay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inlay

    Intarsia inlay in wood furniture differs from marquetry, a similar technique that largely replaced it in high-style European furniture during the 17th century, [2] in that marquetry is an assembly of veneers applied over the entire surface of an object, whereas inlay consists of small pieces inserted on the bed of cut spaces in the base ...

  3. Pejeng drum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pejeng_drum

    Most of the earliest bronze objects were probably used for ceremonies e.g. highly stylized axes and kettledrums. Some drums were shaped in a form known as the Dong Son, a type of bronze drum which originate from northern Vietnam and are spread along the Sunda Islands e.g. Sumatra, Java, Nusa Tenggara and even as far as the Kai Islands near Papua.

  4. Indonesian ceremonial bronze axes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indonesian_ceremonial...

    Ceremonial bronze axes continued to be developed during the pre-Classic era from the 1st to 2nd century AD. During this period, bronze-casting industries flourished, especially in Java and Bali. These industries were probably instrumental in the manufacture of various kinds of bronze objects in Indonesia, including the ceremonial bronze axes.

  5. Dong Son drum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dong_Son_drum

    Hoàng Ha bronze drum's surface, Vietnam The Hoàng Ha drum is a notable Đông Sơn drum. [ 9 ] It was discovered in Hòa Bình Province in 1937 near the village of Hoàng Ha, with an outer panel of crane egrets and an inner panel which shows a procession similar to that described in the Ngọc Lũ drum, the most famous of the Đông Sơn ...

  6. Bronze drum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bronze_drum

    A Đông Sơn drum in Guimet Museum, Paris. The earliest written records describing the drum appeared in the Shi Ben, a Chinese book dated from the 3rd century BC.The Hou Hanshu, a late Han dynasty book dated to the 5th century AD, describes how the Han dynasty general Ma Yuan collected bronze drums from northern Vietnam to melt down and recast into bronze horses.

  7. National Treasure (Vietnam) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Treasure_(Vietnam)

    Hoang Ha bronze drum of Đông Sơn Culture (national treasure no. 2 – set 1). A National Treasure (Vietnamese: Bảo vật quốc gia) or a national precious object [1] is a tangible cultural heritage or object handed down from the past with historical, cultural or scientific value of exceptional significance to the country of Vietnam. [2]

  8. Ngoc Lu drum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ngoc_Lu_drum

    Ngoc Lu bronze drum's surface (Image), Vietnam. Ahead of the leader, there is some sort of a structure that is supported by stilts with either decorated timber walls or some sort of streamers held at the eaves. A board of gongs is being percussed by a person wearing a kilt, but is not wearing a feathered headdress.

  9. Hu (vessel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hu_(vessel)

    Hu with such pictorial illustrations were often made out copper inlay. [9] In addition, the shape of the vessel was occasionally modified, taking on a more square appearance. [12] While the use of inlay in making bronze have appeared since the Shang dynasty, it was not until the Warring States period that saw the flowering of inlay style.