Korean wind chimes (ko|풍경||translit=punggyeong|lit=wind bell) are various traditional bells hung from the exterior corners of Korean Buddhist temples, and functioning as a wind chime. The bell's clapper is often in the shape of a fish, an auspicious sign in Buddhism.[1] [2]
An elaborate gilt bronze style of Korean wind chime and dragon's head finial became a type of object in later Silla / early Goryeo art.[3]
Hung from the eaves, and rung by the wind, it is a form of awakening practitioners of Buddhism to the external world.[4]