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Dich thought the anchor might have been erected at the
entrance gate of the Red River wharf to
attract travellers on a river tour. Examining the wooden object carefully, he
found it had the dark-grey colour that aroused his curiosity.
He intended to buy that piece of log to display inside
his restaurant as a way to do PR, and he got the nod from the fisherman.
In late 1999, a strange man came to Dich’s restaurant
and offered him another wooden anchor which had only one arm. Dich agreed to
buy it and displayed together with the previous one in his house.
Priceless anchors and foreign
engagement
The value of the two anchors was disclosed after a
Chinese man came to Dich’s restaurant in 2002, expressing a desire to
purchase the two-arm anchor at US$30,000. Dich just smiled and thought the
Chinese man was making a joke.
After travelling to HCM City
for several days, the Chinese tourist returned and upped the offer to
US$150,000.
To Dich’s surprise, it was too good
to miss, but he refused again. He speculated that it might have been an
antique of great historical significance; it was not simply an inanimate
object retrieved from the river seabed.
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He immediately contacted leading Vietnamese historian
Duong Trung Quoc and sent photographs of the anchors to him. In an attached
letter, he described in detail where he bought them and asked the historian
for assistance in researching the matter.
Two days later, historian Quoc and his colleague
archaeologist Dr Vu The Long from the Vietnam Archaeology
Academy arrived at
Dich’s door.
They were all surprised by the discovery of two strange
anchors, and vowed to uncover the truth with the assistance of the world’s
latest technology and foreign experts.
Long hypothesised that the anchors quite possibly came
from Chinese war ships sunk in the Bach
Dang River
(another river running in the north of Vietnam ) during the 13th and 15th
centuries when the Mongol invaders attacked the country.
A group of six archaeological experts from the
Institute of Nautical Archaeology (INA) of the US
and Flinders University
of Australia
were invited to Dich’s house to find out the origin of the anchors.
They made a fact-finding tour of Bai Coc – an area full
of iron-tipped stakes used to resist Mongol invaders during the battle of
Bach Dang in Quang Ninh province. They also visited Bach Dang museum in Quang
Ninh and History Museum in Hanoi ,
trying to find archaeological traces of the anchors.
Randall Sasaki, a PhD student of INA, said the group
will assist Vietnam
in research methodology and even call for funding to work on this project.
Jun Kimura, a PhD research student of Flinders University ,
thought Dich’s anchors had been made long before similar wooden anchors were
retrieved in Japan
in 1994.
Dich was happy about experts’ comments because he was
aware that he was possessing unique objects of great historical value.
VOV
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