In the reign of the 18th Hung King, residents of Se village, in what is now Da Sy commune, were already forging cold steel weapons such as knife-shaped lances and swords for paladins and the nation’s military defenders. They also hammered out farm implements and tools.
It was in the 13th century under the Tran dynasty that the village rose to prominence after two blacksmiths named Nguyen Thuat and Nguyen Thuan from Thanh Hoa province taught the locals advanced secrets of forging.
In the middle of the 18th century, Se village was renamed Da Sy. The village is now a ward of Ha Dong District, Hanoi, and has a more urban look.
Although the village’s “golden age” has passed, local craftsmen are keeping the traditional blacksmithing craft alive.
Blacksmith Dinh Cong Doan, Deputy Chairman of the Da Sy Association of Metal Forging, said, “80% of the households in the village are engaged in the craft, making blacksmithing the village’s main source of income. Each household has its own craft secrets. Villagers assign each household to specialize in one type of product. A master craftsman can fulfill any client request. There are about 20 master craftsmen in the village.”
Da Sy products are more varied in type and design than similar products in the region. In the past, Da Sy’s biggest markets were Laos and Cambodia. Now the village also ships a lot of products to Germany, France, and the US.
Nguyen Hong Phan, a master craftsman, a 5th generation blacksmith, said, “What gives Da Sy products their reputation is the skilled steel tempering and the technique for making a knife edge. A Da Sy knife edge is paper-thin but doesn’t bend. The secrets of steel tempering are handed down from generation to generation. It takes just a few seconds, or even a tenth of a second, to temper steel using water, wind, oil, or banana tree trunk. Good steel tempered by the wind becomes very blue and shining.”
Visitors to Da Sy are surprised to find the hard work of blacksmithing being done by both men and women, both young and old. But, as is true elsewhere in society, today much of the production has been mechanized.
Artisan Doan says the village is now under Hanoi’s traditional craft development planning to ensure that its tradition will be preserved.
“We have built a 13-ha craft village industrial complex to house all the local workshops. The complex will reduce environmental pollution in the residential areas and give the villagers better access to new technology. Each year we organize training courses to help artisans improve their professional qualifications,” Doan said.
Da Sy village has been officially recognized as one of Vietnam’s typical traditional craft villages. Each year, on the 27th day of the third lunar month and the 25th day of the eighth lunar month, the death anniversaries of Nguyen Thuat and Nguyen Thuan, a festival is held to honor their contributions.
VOV5