Visit our new beta site!

Angkor

From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition  |  Date: 2008

Angkor , site of several capitals of the Khmer Empire , north of Tônlé Sap, NW Cambodia, for about five and a half centuries (9th to 15th), the heart of the empire. Extending over an area of 120 sq mi (323 sq km), the ruins contain some of the most imposing monuments in the world, including about a thousand temples, mainly Hindu and some Buddhist; the ancient city, however, had an extent perhaps nearly 10 times that size (according to satellite photographs published in 2007), and was home to perhaps 750,000 people. The earliest temples were constructed of brick, the later of stone, and many are covered with elaborate sculptures. The Angkor site also contains palaces and other buildings associated with the Khmer state. The first capital of the empire was founded by Yasovarman I (r. 889-900) and was centered around the pyramidal temple of Phnom Bak Kheng.

Angkor Wat

To the southeast of the original capital a new temple complex, Angkor Wat [Angkor temple], was created under Suryavarman II (r. 1113-50). Planned as a sepulcher and a monument to the divinity of the monarch and measuring about 1 sq mi (2.6 sq km), it is probably the largest religious structure in the world. Surrounded by a vast moat, the carved gray sandstone temple is approached by means of an extensive causeway bordered on either side by balustrades in the form of giant Nagas (divine serpents). This avenue leads to a magnificent entrance gate. The temple proper is reached through three series of galleries separated by paved courts. The middle series has four corner towers; above it, the highest series also has four corner towers and is joined to the central sanctuary by colonnades. Angkor Wat's rising series of towers and courtyards culminate in a 213-ft (65-m) lotus blossom-shaped central tower. The whole mass has been interpreted as representing the Hindu cosmos.

The architecture of Angkor Wat, derived from the stupa form, is enormously impressive, but the most remarkable feature of the temple compound is its sculptural ornament, covering thousands of feet of wall space. The decoration is in the form of low relief of impeccable craftsmanship, illustrating scenes from the legends of Vishnu and Krishna, with some historical events from the life of the king. More delicate in proportions than their Indian prototypes, many of the figures bear a resemblance to modern Cambodian dancers in their elegance of gesture and stateliness of pose. In 1177 Angkor was sacked by the Chams, and Angkor Wat fell into ruins.

Angkor Thom

Jayavarman VII (r. 1181-c.1218) established a new capital, Angkor Thom [the great Angkor], north of Phnom Bak Kheng. The buildings of an already existing city were used as residential palaces and governmental buildings; an excellent system of moats and canals was constructed. At the four entrances of the capital, there are gateways; they open onto four avenues that meet at the Bayon, the temple in the center of the city. Before each gateway is a bridge decorated with a balustrade in the shape of a giant Naga, supported on each side by 27 carved figures. Above the gates are carved imposing stone faces, generally thought to symbolize the Bodhisattva Lokesvara.

Jayavarman VII erected the Bayon as a Buddhist sanctuary, but it underwent alterations during a later Hindu period. The central tower bears a giant image of Buddha, which has been interpreted as the incarnation of Jayavarman VII. Surrounding the main structure is a forest of more than 50 smaller towers studded with multiple heads of the king as a Buddhist god. The buildings are covered with elaborate decoration, more spontaneously and realistically rendered than that at Angkor Wat and again illustrating historical episodes from the king's life.

Abandonment and Restoration

Angkor was raided in the 14th and 15th cent. by the Thai, and was abandoned for Phnom Penh in 1434. Overgrown by the jungle, the ruins were discovered by the French in 1861. Many of the monuments were subsequently restored to their former glory; restoration has been ongoing. The Indian government embarked on a restoration program in 1986, and in 1992 the complex was named a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Nonethless, many of the structures at Angkor remain in jungle-choked ruins, and some are inaccessible due to unexploded land mines left over from the fighting of the late 20th cent.

Bibliography

See M. Giteau, Khmer Sculpture and the Angkor Civilization (1966); B. Groslier and J. Arthaud, The Arts and Civilization of Angkor (rev. ed. 1966); J. Myrdal and G. Kessle, Angkor: An Essay on Art and Imperialism (1971); J. Audric, Angkor and the Khmer Empire (1972); E. F. Gardner, ed., Angkor (1986); E. Mannikka, Angkor Wat: Time, Space and Kingship (1996); H. I. Jessup and T. Zephir, ed., Sculpture of Ankor and Ancient Cambodia (1997); D. Rooney, Angkor: An Introduction to the Temples (1998); C. Jacques, Angkor: Cities and Temples (1998) and Angkor (1999).

Author not available, ANGKOR., The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008

Related articles from HighBeam Research:

VISITORS TO ANGKOR CAN HELP SAVE CAMBODIA'S ANCIENT, INTRICATE TEMPLES
The Boston Globe; 2/17/2002; Christine Temin, Globe Staff; 2001 words; ANGKOR, Cambodia - "Adopt" used to mean "children." Recently ... stone at the Preah Khan Temple Complex, part of the vast Angkor Archeological District. The World Monuments Fund, which ... generation must be taught. People making the pilgrimage to Angkor's temples usually stay in Siem Reap, the nearest city ...
Angkor and the Khmer Civilization.(Book Review)
Asian Perspectives: the Journal of Archaeology for Asia and the Pacific; 9/22/2005; Rooney, Dawn F.; 1876 words; Angkor and the Khmer Civilization. Michael D. Coe. New ... 2003. 240 pp., 130 illustrations (22 color), 14 maps. ISBN 0-500-02117-1. This excellent book, written ... balance to the increasing number of publications on Angkor. Although it is aimed at the general public, the ... on the Khmer civilization at its ...
God-kings and temple-mountains: the grand majesty of Angkor; built with indigenous sandstone, mud stone and other local materials, the architectural treasures of Angkor provide a look into Cambodia's rich Asian culture. (The Stone Traveler).
Stone World; 4/1/2003; Sabel, Pennie; 1588 words; The Angkor complex of temples, monasteries and archaeological sites in ... probably unfamiliar to many Westerners. The best known is Angkor Wat, but the great royal city of Angkor Thom -- with walls decorated in thousands of bas relief carvings ...
Vegetation and land-use at Angkor, Cambodia: a dated pollen sequence from the Bakong temple moat.(Research)
Antiquity; 9/1/2006; Penny, Dan Pottier, Christophe Fletcher, Roland Barbetti, Mike Fink, David Hua, Quan; 5882 words; Introduction Angkor was the location of the capital of the ... sixteenth centuries AD. By the twelfth century Angkor had become a vast low-density urban complex ... canals and embankments (Figure 1). Within Angkor, successive rulers built major temples ...
Virtual Angkor: Visualizing the past in 3D
Australian Screen Education; 7/1/2004; Rizzo, Maria T; 1616 words; REVIEW OF SACRED ANGKOR: STEREOGRAPHIC PANORAMAS OF THE TEMPLE ... leaving the comforts of Earth. Sacred Angkor: Stereographic Panoramas of the Temple ... site of World Heritage-listed ruins of Angkor; the 1000 square kilometre temple complex ...
In Search of TOMB RAIDERS.(Angkor Thom, Cambodia)
Camcorder & Computer Video; 12/1/2001; Hollitzer, Holli; 2005 words; Shooting on Location in Angkor Thom--After the Movie Crew Left My slow pan along the causeway to Angkor Thom revealed a long row of antiquated stone ... separated from their torsos at many other Angkor monuments. Indeed, whole stone sculptures ...
A scrub too far. (restoration of Angkor Wat temples being implemented with abrasive chemicals)
The Economist (US); 6/1/1991; 702 words; THE great temple of Angkor Wat is a symbol of much that is wrong with Cambodia. To build the Angkor temple complexes, spread over 77 square miles ... impoverished their subjects. Since the sack of Angkor by the Thais in 1431, Cambodians have nursed ...
METROPOLIS ANGKOR, THE WORLD'S FIRST MEGA-CITY ; The discovery that the famous Cambodian temple complex sits in the midst of a vast settlement the size of London, which flourished until the 15th century, has astounded archaeologists - but also baffled them: why did it disappear? By Kathy Marks ++ A medieval miracle
The Independent - London; 8/15/2007; Kathy Marks; 1596 words; The huge sandstone temples of Angkor, built nearly 1,000 years ago and unearthed ... be, it tells only part of the story of Angkor: a thriving metropolis, the world's first ... largest medieval city. The "lost city of Angkor" was painstakingly uncovered by French ...
IN AWE OF ANGKOR.(Angkor, Cambodia)(includes information for travelers)
Town & Country; 4/1/1999; KAYE, DENA; 3408 words; ... Cambodia's next to last capital before Phnom Penh, Angkor Thom rose under the reign of Jayavarman VII ... account, by Chinese emissary Zhou Daguan, told of Angkor Thom's golden towers, a bridge of gold guarded ... and many golden Buddhas. My next stop within Angkor Thom's walls was the Bayon, a massive, ...
Angkor Wat Q&A.
Chicago Tribune (Chicago, IL); 1/9/2003; 641 words; ... What else was happening in the world around the time Angkor Wat was rising? A. In the mid-1100s, Moscow was being ... were under construction in Paris. Q. Why is it called Angkor Wat ? A. Angkor is derived, somehow, from the Sanskrit nagara, variously ...
Great Angkor temples face a renewed threat
Chicago Sun-Times; 9/3/1989; Adam Tanner; 499 words; ANGKOR, Cambodia Deep inside the jungle, troops with automatic ... of ancient temples, one of the world's great monuments. Angkor has suffered years of neglect and vandalism. In the months ... magnificent temples, built between the 9th and 13th centuries. "Angkor is the main target of our enemy," defense ...
Ancient City's Fall Has a Modern Ring; Scientists Say Problems That Led to Angkor's Demise Apply to Today's Urban Areas
The Washington Post; 6/20/2004; Miranda Leitsinger; 802 words; ... Cambodia's greatest city and civilization -- temple-studded Angkor -- was dealt a death blow with its final sacking in ... Fletcher, an archaeologist working on the Greater Angkor Project. Angkor city, the capital of several Hindu kings who ruled ...
Trampled temples: tourists visiting the World Heritage-listed ruins of Angkor in northwestern Cambodia bring much-needed foreign cash to one of Southeast Asia s poorest countries. But numbers are growing more rapidly than at any other World Heritage site, putting unprecedented pressure on these important monuments.(Temples of Angkor)(Cover story)
Geographical; 9/1/2007; Tyler, Leisa; 2039 words; ... director of UNESCO in Cambodia. 'When we first came to Angkor, we were concerned about stabilising the temples ... the temples, that are the gravest issues facing Angkor. Most building regulations are negotiable and hotels ... that surrounds Sokimex, the company that controls Angkor's admission centre ... .
Archaeologists See Angkor Reliving Past; Stress of Tourism Mirrors Earlier Ecological Abuse
The Washington Post; 2/17/2008; Ker Munthit; 834 words; ... farmland, inhabitants of the wondrous city of Angkor lit the fuse to an ecological time bomb ... research into the ancient civilization of Angkor. And they are warning that history could ... dollars from tourists flocking to see Angkor's fabled monuments. "It's just a weird ...
Society, Economics, and Politics in Pre-Angkor Cambodia: The 7th-8th Centuries.(Book review)
The Journal of the American Oriental Society; 10/1/2004; Brown, Robert L.; 2741 words; Society, Economics, and Politics in Pre-Angkor Cambodia: The 7th-8th Centuries. By MICHAEL ... eighth centuries that we call the pre-Angkor period, and of the extensive secondary ... sustained argument regarding the nature of pre-Angkorian art. Actually, he hardly uses art as evidence ...

See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.

Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:

Archaeology from a space craft: radar specialists at NASA have transformed archaeologists' views of Angkor in Cambodia. Samson Spanier reports on the remarkable discoveries being made from space.
Apollo; 10/1/2004; Spanier, Samson; 1030 words;
Delight.(THE PHNOM BAKHENG TEMPLE COMPLEX AT ANGKOR WAT.)
The Architectural Review; 5/1/2005; 381 words;
Temples of the god-kings.(Angkor Wat)
Current Events, a Weekly Reader publication; 12/6/2002; 324 words;
Angkor tours in ruins as poll draws near.
Business Asia; 7/20/1998; 298 words;
The origins of the civilization of Angkor; v.1: The excavation of Ban Lum Khao.(book)(Brief Article)(Book Review)
Reference & Research Book News; 2/1/2006; 160 words;
U.S. funds for Angkor restoration.(Brief Article)
Art in America; 3/1/2005; 191 words;
In the Shadow of Angkor Wat.(Video Recording Review)
Arts & Activities; 1/1/2003; Herberholz, Barbara; 171 words;
Angkor Wat airport closed after runway incident.(Brief Article)
Airline Industry Information; 7/6/2005; 103 words;
Angkor Wat airport reopened after runway incident.(Brief Article)
Airline Industry Information; 7/7/2005; 116 words;
In Pol Pot Land: Ruins of varying types.(Cambodia)
National Review; 9/29/2003; Daniels, Anthony; 1216 words;
Browse by alphabet: