Qua Giang Communal House
17/06/2016 21:10Qua Giang Communal House is located in Qua Giang Hamlet, Hoa Phuoc Commune, Hoa Vang District. Built in the year of Tan Ty (1821), it worships Quan Thanh and the forefathers of the Dinh, Le, Tran, and Nguyen families who followed the Nguyen kings to the southern regions to expand their territories. These forefathers established Quang Giang Village, which consists of Qua Giang, Giang Nam, Tra Kiem, An Luu and Con Mong.
The communal house is divided into two parts: the forecourt and the sanctuary. They are connected by two corridors with roofs that make a self-contained rectangle. The forecourt is constructed with a “chong ruong - gia thu” structure. The pillars are decorated with lotus carvings and ornamental pumpkins at their bases. Two rows of 5 metre high pillars, two pillars to each row, support the beams, and two rows of smaller posts support two secondary roofs. The rafters are carved with trees, flowers, animals, eight valuable objects, and different ornamental lines. There is the design of a carp changing to a dragon on every rafter’s end.
The sanctuary is divided into three sections with four lean-tos and a pantile roof. Four 5 metre high pillars, eight 3 metre high secondary posts, and 16 small poles support the rafters. On the sanctuary’s front roof are carvings of four supernatural creatures - a well-matched pair of phoenixes and two dragons looking towards each other.
Local people organise ceremonies on the 20th day of the second lunar month and the 12th day of the seventh lunar month in memory of their ancestors.
Qua Giang Communal House was recognised as a national relic by the Ministry of Culture and Communication on 1 February 2000.
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