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Xieng
Khouang is located in the north of Laos. Most of
its landscape consist of mountains and hills.
XiengKhouang province offers the awesome beauty
of high green mountains and rugged karst
formations. The original capital city, Muang
Khun, was almost totally obliterated by US
bombing and consequently, the capital was moved
to nearby Phonsavanh. Of several Muang Khun
Buddhist temples built between the 16th and 19th
century, only ruins remain. Vat Pia Vat,
however, survived the bombing and can be
visited.
The
Plain of Jars is a large group of historic
cultural sites in Laos containing thousands of
stone jars, which lie scattered throughout the
Xieng Khouang plain in the Laotian Highlands at
the northern end of the Annamese Cordillera, the
principal mountain range of Indochina. In the
context of the Vietnam War and the Secret War,
the Plain of Jars typically refers to the entire
Xieng Khouang plain rather than the cultural
sites themselves.
Archaeologists
believe that the jars were used 1,500–2,000
years ago, by an ancient Mon-Khmer race whose
culture is now totally unknown. Most of the
excavated material has been dated to around 500
BC–800 AD. Anthropologists and archeologists
have theorized that the jars may have been used
as funeral urns or perhaps storage for food.
Lao
stories and legends claim that there was a race
of giants who once inhabited the area. Local
legend tells of an ancient king called Khun
Cheung, who fought a long, victorious battle
against his enemy. He supposedly created the
jars to brew and store huge amounts of lao lao
rice wine to celebrate his victory.
The
first westerner to survey, study and catalogue
the Plain of Jars was a French archaeologist,
Madeleine Colani of the École française d'Extrême
Orient in the 1930s. She excavated the area of
jars with her team and found a nearby cave with
human remains, including burned bones and ash.
Her work is still the most comprehensive
although there have been other excavations.
An
American bomb damaged the cave during the
Vietnam War, when the Pathet Lao used it as a
stronghold — the surrounding area still has
trench systems and bomb craters. The land is
littered with metal shrapnel. The town of Xieng
Khouang was utterly destroyed during the
fighting between the Pathet Lao and American
backed anti-communist troops. A new town was
built in the mid 1970s, known to foreigners as
Phonsavan. |