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Photos on this page by W. Poerner,
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Angkor Wat - Angkor Thom
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Environ -
Map of Angkor
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Angkor by
Radar
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Ta Prohm
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Angkor Cambodia, Angkor Thom, anchor
Cambodia, Angkor, Angkor 12th century, Cambodia
Angkor, Angkor Wat
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Angkor Thom,
Cambodia,
was created in the 12. th century
under a
great Khmer King his name was Jayavarman VII
( 1181 - 1219). The layout
of this piece of Cambodian art is a fortified city with heavy protection walls centered
around the Bayon Palace - Temple in Angkor - Cambodia.
From the
distance the Bayon Temple in Angkor - Cambodia give the impression of a
glorious pile of rubble, that changes after one walk
through the entrance.
The 216 huge
somehow smiling heads of the Angkor Thom Temple in
Angkor - Cambodia are grouped around the temple, it looks
like the King wanted to tell everyone, I am watching you
! - last picture below -.
The Bayon palace - temple Cambodia is decorated
with beautiful bas relief, all relief together
are a little bit longer than 1 km and
incorporate more than 10.000 figures.
All is here, from the attractive temple dancer
to the huge elephants, scenes from several
campaigns and many other
motives.
Of all the Angkor
temples, it was the Bayon, at the centre of
Angkor Thom,
which most
confounded the archaeologists. In earlier
chapters, when discussing the
chronology of the monuments, we touched briefly
on the debate that ran with respect to the
dating of its construction, based, until 1923,
on the false identification of the “Central Mountain”
mentioned in the inscription of Sdok Kak Thom -
which referred in fact to Phnom Bakheng and not
to the Bayon.
This latter was
therefore no longer assumed to be the
“temple-mountain” of
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Yasodharapura, the capital of king Yasovarman
dating from the end of the 9th century, and was
instead recognised as the official sanctuary of
the last city of Angkor Thom, reconstructed by
Jayavarman VII towards the end of the 12th
century following
its sacking by the Chams.
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It may seem surprising that, contrary to its
function, a temple of this size was built
without any external enclosure wall or moat -
until one appreciates that these were in effect
formed by the ramparts of the city of Angkor
Thom itself and by its moats, with the gates
taking the place of gopuras.
The
External
Enclosure
The walls of Angkor
Thom, the southern of which lies 1,700 metres
north of the axial entrance to
Angkor Wat, form
a square of 3 kilometres each side enclosing an
area of 900 hectares. Nearly 8 metres high and
topped with a parapet that has no battlements,
they are constructed in laterite and buttressed
on their inner side by an earth embankment - the
top of which forms a surrounding road.
Externally they are surrounded by a one hundred
metre wide moat, which is crossed at each of the
city gates by a causeway.
The general flow of water within the square
city was apparently established from the
north-east to the southwest, in which corner it
discharges into a kind of reservoir - the “Beng
Thom” - itself draining to the external moat
through a row of five tunnels cut through the
embankment and the wall.
The
Prasat Chrung
At the corners stand
four small temples - “the Prasat Chrung” - each
containing an inscribed stele mentioning the
foundation by Jayavarman VII of a “Jayagiri
scraping the brilliant sky at its top and of a
Jayasindhu touching at its impenetrable depth
the world of the serpents”. Mr Coedes has shown
that these referred, in the emphatic manner that
was usual for the Khmer, to none other than the
walls and the moats of Angkor Thom in
comparison to the mountains and the ocean
surrounding the earth.
Each of the Prasat Chrung
is in the style of the Bayon and was
dedicated - as was the city itself - to the
bodhisattva Lokesvara. In the form of a
sanctuary tower in sandstone opening to the
east, they are cruciform in plan with four
vestibules and have two upper tiers crowned with
a lotus. The walls are decorated with devatas
set in niches and with balustered false windows
partially masked by blinds. To the east is a
square planned shelter for the stele, open to
four sides and vaulted with a cloistered arch.
The whole
arrangement is enclosed by a wall in which
is a single opening. A visit to one of the
Prasat Chrung - perhaps to the one in the
southwest corner - can be made on horse-back or
by foot in the dry season along the wall-top
track - if it has been cleared. It is a very
pleasant walk (3 kilometres) under the shade of
the trees where, having first climbed the
embankment at the foot itself of the south gate,
one then descends at the
west gate after having skirted a quarter of the
city limits.
One can see in places the remains
of laterite steps discovered by Mr Goloubew,
corresponding to the moats of the 11th century
enclosure of Angkor Thom.
The Gates Of Angkor Thom
Very little is known about organisation of the
city, with its light-weight dwellings. Centred
on the Bayon, it was divided into four quarters
by four axial roads that were probably bordered
by moats. A fifth similar road was set on the
axis of the Royal Palace, leading to the
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Corresponding to these avenues are five
monumental gates. From the exterior, the crossing
of the moat is made, as previously
described, on a causeway. At the
northern entrance this now forms a
bridge for part of its length, following
hydrological |

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works in 1940.
“Lining either side of the causeway” - we are
told by Tcheou Ta-Kouan- “are 54 gigantic
divinities, like fearsome war-lords.
The
parapets of the causeway are in solid stone,
sculpted to represent nine-headed serpents, with
the 54 divinities holding the serpents as if to
prevent them from escaping”.
To consider the suggestion made by Mr Coedes and
Paul Mus, this double railing in the form of a naga was perhaps “one way of symbolising a
rainbow which, in the Indian tradition, is the
expression of the union of man with the world of
the gods - materialised here on earth by the
royal city. In adding the two lines of giants
- devas on the one side and asuras on the
other - the architect aimed to suggest the myth
of the churning of the ocean in unison by the
gods and demons in order to extract the elixir
of life. The representation of the churning,
with the moats for the ocean and the enclosure
wall - and specifically the mass of its gate -
for the mountain, is a kind of magic device
destined to assure victory and prosperity to the
country”.
Until now it has
only been possible to reconstruct the lines of
devas and asuras of the Victory gate (the gate
to the east centred on the Royal Palace) and the
north gate, where the grimacing faces of the
demons are particularly expressive, in sharp
contrast to the serene faces of the gods. The
five gates are all similar and were found
reasonably well preserved. Two of them, the
north and the south, were restored by M. Glaize
from 1944 to 1946 and can now be seen with their
crowning motifs - though incomplete in terms of
sculpture - in their original form. The most
pleasing in composition are the northern gate
and the western side of the Gate of the Dead (to
the east, centred on the Bayon, at the end of
the route Dufour), while the best faces are to
be seen at the west gate (route Carpeaux).
The proportion of their openings (3m.50 wide by
7 metres high) is distorted by the absence of
lintels or frontons. Originally they would also
have been furnished with double wooden doors,
mounted on pivots, which were apparently fitted
with a horizontal closing bar, the holes for
which still remain visible in the walls.

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Forming a group of three aligned towers, they
stand over 23 metres in overall height. The main
tower, with its two opposing faces, is flanked
by two other smaller towers - each with a single
face - that are set into it and correspond
internally to reinforcing walls forming guard
rooms, each with two dark back-rooms. The
ensemble responds quite apparently to the same
abstraction as do the four-faced towers of the
Bayon - with the regal power radiating to the
four cardinal points.
Finally, at the base, the four inward corners
contain the superb motif of the three headed
elephant, whose vertical trunks descend to tug
at lotuses, forming pillars. They represent none
other than the mount of Indra, whom we can see
clearly at the Victory gate, sitting between two
apsaras and holding the thunderbolt or “Vajra”.
The presence here of the god at the extremity of
the access causeway confirms the hypothesis
suggested previously, - where the naga,
imitating the rain-bow, simulates the bow of
Indra. |
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