Baekje Kingdom’s iconic incense burner gets its own museum hall

In 1993, at an old temple site in Buyeo, South Chungcheong Province, archaeologists uncovered an unexpected marvel during the construction of a parking lot: a gilt-bronze incense burner from the Baekje Kingdom (18 BC–660 AD), buried beneath more than a thousand years of accumulated soil. Preserved in astonishingly pristine condition, the 6th-century relic startled excavators not only with its size — standing 62.3 centimeters tall — but also with the precision of its craftsmanship, enough for the state to designate it a National Treasure just three years later. Three decades after its chance discovery, the iconic burner now glows in its own sanctuary at the Buyeo National Museum, where a three-story hall was built solely to house this masterpiece. Fashioned through sophisticated lost-wax casting and mercury amalgam gilding, the incense burner contains an entire microcosm shaped by Taoist and Buddhist ideals. Across its surface rise jagged mountain ridges and winding waterfalls; lotus blossoms emerge amid the terrain, while Chinese phoenixes, dragons, tigers and crocodiles roam amon