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Monday, April 22, 2013

Preah Vihear Temple


 
Overview of Preah Vihear Temple
In the 6th century , king Yasovarmamn I ( 889-900) began work on the original dedicated to Shisa as result of spiritual development, increased political prestige and economic growth was naturally reflected in the Temple undergoing more than 300 years of consultation with deal of remodeling under subsequent King Suryavarman II ( 1113 -1150) this increased prestige naturally changed the original small sanctuary into one of the greatest Khmer temples of all times. This ranking was the result of the finest in situ carving that depicted the highest standards of unique Khmer architecture.
Under the Franco-Siamese Treaty of 1904 and 1907, the line of frontier between Cambodia and Thai along the Dongrak Mountains followed justice at the Hague officially found that the Preah Vihear Temple situated inside the Cambodia territory.
The World Heritage Committee, meeting for its 32nd session, finished inscribing the Temple of Preah Vihear sites on UNESCO?s World Heritage List on 8 July with the addition of 19 cultural sites and eight natural sites to the List.

History of Preah Vihear Temple
Construction of the first temple on the site began in the early 9th century; both then and in the following centuries it was dedicated to the Hindu god Shiva in his manifestations as the mountain gods Sikharesvara and Bhadresvara. The earliest surviving parts of the temple, however, date from the Koh Ker period in the early 10th century, when the empire's capital was at the city of that name. Today, elements of the Banteay Srei style of the late 10th century can be seen, but most of the temple was constructed during the reigns of the Khmer kings Suryavarman I (1002–1050) and Suryavarman II (1113–1150). An inscription found at the temple provides a detailed account of Suryavarman II studying sacred rituals, celebrating religious festivals and making gifts, including white parasols, golden bowls and elephants, to his spiritual advisor, the aged Brahmin Divakarapandita. The Brahmin himself took an interest in the temple, according to the inscription, donating to it a golden statue of a dancing Shiva known as "Nataraja".[citation needed] In the wake of the decline of Hinduism in the region the site was converted to use by Buddhists.

Preah Vihear Location
Preah Vihear Temple is located in a pleasant environment with an attractive countryside slightly east of the mid section of the Dongrek Mountains.It is perched on the edge of a giant cliff, about 625 meters above sea level in Preah Vihear Province, Northern part of Cambodia, 625km from the capital city of Phnom Penh. It is also situated close to the Cambodia-Thai border. The temple has four levels and four courtyards which comprise of five Gopuras ( entrance pavilions some times surmounted by tower )
Palace Building or Gopuras on the third level: This group of building was the King's residence when he came to pay homage to the mighty God , and the two wings were the shelters for the pilgrims. The main temple are used for the high-ranking supreme divinities, this mighty group of building is considered as the center of the whole temple complex. 
The front stone stairway : this main passage is on the North side. The stairway is 8 meters wide and 78 meters long,. The fist flight has 162 steps. At the first landing is a large stone singa statue on stone block. Another 54 flight of steps 4 meters wide and 27 meters long leads up to the second landing also decorated with stone signa statue. 
The Nagaraj Courtyard : this stone-paved is 7 meters wide by 31.8 meters long. From here the stairway leads up to the first-level Gropura. The Stairheads are in the form of seven-headed snakes called "Ngu Suang " facing North towards the Prasat. The heads and tails of nagas on both sides look like ordinary snakes, characterizing and early example of this type of animal figures. The head portion of the naga on the west side looks very impressive because it is made from a single solid stone. The first level Gopura : this is a pavilion in Greek architecture style with cross plan on an elevated, rebates angle base on each of the roof doorway . Stone lions are placed on each of the roofs dooeway. 
The temple can be reached by crossing the Cambodia-Thai gateway border from the Ubon Ratchantani Province of Thailand. Currently the visits are from 8.00 till 16.00 hours. For all the grandeur of its site, perched on the edge of a giant cliff and with a commanding view over northern Cambodia, Preah Vihear is difficult to visualize as a whole. The experience is truly a memorable one the series of ascents over the best part of a kilometer, the ornate Gopuras and the wealth of decorative detail truly staggers one's imagination.

Preah Vihear Temple as a World Heritage Site
On July 8, 2008, the World Heritage Committee decided to add Prasat Preah Vihear, along with 26 other sites, to the World Heritage Site list, despite several protests from Thailand, since the map implied Cambodian ownership of disputed land next to the temple.
As the process of Heritage-listing began, Cambodia announced its intention to apply for World Heritage inscription by UNESCO. Thailand protested that it should be a joint-effort and UNESCO deferred debate at its 2007 meeting.
Following this, both Cambodia and Thailand were in full agreement that Preah Vihear Temple had "Outstanding Universal Value" and should be inscribed on the World Heritage List as soon as possible. The two nations agreed that Cambodia should propose the site for formal inscription on the World Heritage List at the 32nd session of the World Heritage Committee in 2008 with the active support of Thailand. This led to a redrawing of the map of the area for proposed inscription, leaving only the temple and its immediate environs.
However, Thailand's political opposition launched an attack on this revised plan (see Modern History and Ownership Dispute), claiming the inclusion of Preah Vihear could nevertheless "consume" the overlapping disputed area near the temple. In response to the political pressure at home, the Thai government withdrew its formal support for the listing of Preah Vihear Temple as a World Heritage site.
Cambodia continued with the application for World Heritage status and, despite official Thai protests, on July 7, 2008, Preah Vihear Temple was inscribed on the list of World Heritage sites.

History of The Great Wall of China

The Great Wall of China


 
The Great Wall of China is a series of stone and earthen fortifications in , built, rebuilt, and maintained between the 5th century BC and the 16th century to protect the northern borders of the Chinese Empire during the rule of successive dynasties. Several walls, referred to as the Great Wall of China , were built since the 5th century BC. The most famous is the wall built between 220 BC and 200 BC by the first Emperor of China, Qin Shi Huang; little of it remains; it was much farther north than the current wall, which was built during the Ming Dynasty.
The Great Wall is the world's longest human-made structure, stretching over approximately 6,400 km (4,000 miles) from Shanhaiguan in the east to Lop Nur in the west, along an arc that roughly delineates the southern edge of Inner Mongolia, but stretches to over 6,700 km (4,160 miles) in total. It is also the largest human-made structure ever built in terms of surface area and mass. At its peak the Ming Wall was guarded by more than one million men. It has been estimated that somewhere in the range of 2 to 3 million Chinese died as part of the centuries-long project of building the wall.
The first major wall was built during the reign of the First Emperor, the main emperor of the short-lived Qin dynasty. This wall was not constructed as a single endeavor, but rather was created by the joining of several regional walls built by the Warring States. It was located much further north than the current Great Wall, and very little remains of it. A defensive wall on the northern border was built and maintained by several dynasties at different times in Chinese history. The Great Wall that can still be seen today was built during the Ming Dynasty, on a much larger scale and with longer lasting materials (solid stone used for the sides and the top of the Wall) than any wall that had been built before. The primary purpose of the wall was not to keep out people, who could scale the wall, but to insure that semi-nomadic people on the outside of the wall could not cross with their horses or return easily with stolen property. 

There have been four major walls:
208 BC (the Qin Dynasty)
1st century BC (the Han Dynasty)
1138 - 1198 (the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms Period)
1368-1620 (from Hongwu Emperor until Wanli Emperor of the Ming Dynasty)
The Chinese were already familiar with the techniques of wall-building by the time of the Spring and Autumn Period, which began around the 7th century BC. During the Warring States Period from the 5th century BC to 221 BC, the states of Qi, Yan and Zhao all constructed extensive fortifications to defend their own borders. Built to withstand the attack of small arms such as swords and spears, these walls were made mostly by stamping earth and gravel between board frames.
Qin Shi Huang conquered all opposing states and unified in 221 BC, establishing the Qin Dynasty. Intending to impose centralized rule and prevent the resurgence of feudal lords, he ordered the destruction of the wall sections that divided his empire along the former state borders. To protect the empire against intrusions by the Xiongnu people from the north, he ordered the building of a new wall to connect the remaining fortifications along the empire's new northern frontier.
Transporting the large quantity of materials required for construction was difficult, so builders always tried to use local resources. Stones from the mountains were used over mountain ranges, while rammed earth was used for construction in the plains. The peasants who died working were buried inside the wall, to be unearthed later by archaeologists. There are no surviving historical records indicating the exact length and course of the Qin Dynasty walls. Most of the ancient walls have eroded away over the centuries, and very few sections remain today. Possibly as many as one million people died building the Wall under the Qin Dynasty.
Later, the Han, Sui, Northern and Jin dynasties all repaired, rebuilt, or expanded sections of the Great Wall at great cost to defend themselves against northern invaders.
The Great Wall concept was revived again during the Ming Dynasty following the Ming army's defeat by the Oirats in the Battle of Tumu in 1449. The Ming had failed to gain a clear upper-hand over the Mongols after successive battles, and the long-drawn conflict was taking a toll on the empire. The Ming adopted a new strategy to keep the nomadic Mongols out by constructing walls along the northern border of . Acknowledging the Mongol control established in the Ordos Desert , the wall followed the desert's southern edge instead of incorporating the bend of the Huang He .
Unlike the earlier Qin fortifications, the Ming construction was stronger and more elaborate due to the use of bricks and stone instead of rammed earth. As Mongol raids continued periodically over the years, the Ming devoted considerable resources to repair and reinforce the walls. Sections near the Ming capital of Beijing were especially strong.
Towards the end of the Shun Dynasty, the Great Wall helped defend the empire against the Manchu invasions that began around 1600. Under the military command of Yuan Chonghuan, the Ming army held off the Manchus at the heavily fortified Shanhaiguan pass, preventing the Manchus from entering the Liaodong Peninsula and the Chinese heartland. The Manchus were finally able to cross the Great Wall in 1644, when the gates at Shanhaiguan were opened by Wu Sangui, a Ming border general who disliked the activities of rulers of the Shun Dynasty. The Manchus quickly seized Beijing , and defeated the newly founded Shun Dynasty and remaining Ming resistance, to establish the Qing Dynasty.
Under Qing rule, 's borders extended beyond the walls and was annexed into the empire, so construction and repairs on the Great Wall were discontinued. A counterpart wall to the Great Wall in the south was erected to protect and divide the Chinese from the 'southern barbarians' called Miao (meaning barbaric and nomadic).

Notable Areas
The following three sections are in Beijing municipality, which were renovated and which are regularly visited by modern tourists
The " North Pass " of Juyongguan pass, known as the Badaling. When used by the Chinese to protect their land, this section of the wall has had many guards to defend capital [ Beijing ]. Made of stone and bricks from the hills, this portion of the Great Wall is 7.8 meters (25.6 ft) high and 5 meters (16.4 ft) wide.
v One of the most striking sections of the Ming Great Wall is where it climbs extremely steep slopes. It runs 11 kilometers (7 mi) long, ranges from 5 to 8 meters (16?6 ft) in height, and 6 meters (19.7 ft) across the bottom, narrowing up to 5 meters (16.4 ft) across the top. Wangjinglou is one of Jinshanling's 67 watchtowers, 980 meters (3,215 ft)above sea level.
South East of Jinshanling, is the Mutianyu Great Wall which winds along lofty, cragged mountains from the southeast to the northwest for approximately 2.25 kilometers (about 1.3 miles).It is connected with Juyongguan Pass to the west and Gubeikou to the east.
Another notable section lies near the eastern extremity of the wall, where the first pass of the Great Wall was built on the Shanhaiguan (known as the "Number One Pass Under Heaven"), the first mountain the Great Wall climbs. Jia Shan is also here, as is the Jiumenkou, which is the only portion of the wall that was built as a bridge. Shanhaiguan Great Wall is called the "Museum of the Construction of the Great Wall", because of the Meng Jiang-Nu Temple , built during the Song Dynasty.

Characteristics
Before the use of bricks, the Great Wall was mainly built from earth, stones, and wood.

During the Ming Dynasty, however, bricks were heavily used in many areas of the wall, as were materials such as tiles, lime, and stone. The size and weight of the bricks made them easier to work with than earth and stone, so construction quickened. Additionally, bricks could bear more weight and endure better than rammed earth. Stone can hold under its own weight better than brick, but is more difficult to use. Consequently, stones cut in rectangular shapes were used for the foundation, inner and outer brims, and gateways of the wall. Battlements line the uppermost portion of the vast majority of the wall, with defensive gaps a little over 30 cm (one foot) tall, and about 23 cm (9 inches) wide.
The steps that form the Great Wall of China are very steep and tall in some areas. Tourists often become exhausted climbing the wall and walk no more than a kilometre or two (around a mile).

Condition
While some portions north of Beijing and near tourist centers have been preserved and even reconstructed, in many locations the Wall is in disrepair. Those parts might serve as a village playground or a source of stones to rebuild houses and roads.
Sections of the Wall are also prone to graffiti and vandalism. Parts have been destroyed because the Wall is in the way of construction. No comprehensive survey of the wall has been carried out, so it is not possible to say how much of it survives, especially in remote areas. Intact or repaired portions of the Wall near developed tourist areas are often frequented by sellers of tourist kitsch.
More than 60 kilometres (37 mi) of the wall in Gansu province may disappear in the next 20 years, due to erosion from sandstorms. In places, the height of the wall has been reduced from more than five meters (16.4 ft) to less than two meters. The square lookout towers that characterize the most famous images of the wall have disappeared completely. Many western sections of the wall are constructed from mud, rather than brick and stone, and thus are more susceptible to erosion.
The materials used are those available near the site of construction. Near Beijing the wall is constructed from quarried limestone blocks. In other locations it may be quarried granite or fired brick. Where such materials are used, two finished walls are erected with earth and rubble fill placed in between with a final paving to form a single unit. In some areas the blocks were cemented with a mixture of glutinous rice and eggwhite.In the extreme western desert locations, where good materials are scarce, the wall was constructed from dirt rammed between rough wood tied together with woven mats.
The Wall is included in lists of the "Seven Medieval Wonders of the World" but was of course not one of the classical Seven Wonders of the World recognized by the ancient Greeks. The Wall was made a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1987.
There is a longstanding disagreement about how visible the wall is in space. Richard Halliburton's 1938 book Second Book of Marvels said the Great Wall is the only man-made object visible from the moon. This myth has persisted, assuming urban legend status, sometimes even entering school textbooks. The Great Wall simply cannot be seen by the unaided eye from the distance of the moon. Even its visibility from near-earth orbit is questionable.
One astronaut reported, "We can see things as small as airport runways [but] the Great Wall is almost invisible from only 180 miles (290 km) up." Astronaut William Pogue thought he had seen it from Skylab but discovered he was actually looking at the Grand Canal near Beijing . He spotted the Great Wall with binoculars, but said that "it wasn't visible to the unaided eye." An Apollo astronaut said no human structures were visible at a distance of a few thousand miles. Chinese astronaut Yang Liwei said he couldn't see it at all.
From low-earth orbit, about a thousand times nearer than the moon, it may be visible under favorable conditions. Features on the moon that are dramatically visible at times can be undetectable on others, due to changes in lighting direction. The Great Wall is only a few meters wide - sized similar to highways and airport runways - and is about the same color as the soil surrounding it.Veteran U.S. astronaut Gene Cernan has stated: "At Earth orbit of 160 km to 320 km high, the Great Wall of China is, indeed, visible to the naked eye." Ed Lu, Expedition 7 Science Officer aboard the International Space Station, adds that, "...it's less visible than a lot of other objects. And you have to know where to look."
A recent photograph taken from the International Space Station appears to confirm that 's Great Wall can be seen with the naked eye after all. Leroy Chiao, a Chinese-American astronaut, took what the state-run China Daily newspaper says is the first photographic evidence that the Great Wall could be seen from space with the naked eye, under certain favorable viewing conditions and if one knows exactly where to look. 

Battle Forts and Watch Towers
The wall is complemented by defensive fighting stations, to which wall defenders may retreat if overwhelmed. Each tower has unique and restricted stairways and entries to confuse attackers. Barracks and administrative centers are located at larger intervals. In addition to the usual military weapons of the period, specialized wall defense weapons were used. Reproductions of weapons are displayed at the wall.
The Mutianyu section of the Great Wall, 70 kilometers northeast of Beijing , is linked to the Gubeikou section on the east and the Badaling section on the west. It is one of the best sections of Great Wall. The Mutianyu section is crenellated for watching and shooting at the invading enemy. Some of the battle forts on the wall are as close as 50 meters apart.
The wall also has watch towers at regular intervals, which were used to store weapons, house troops, and send smoke signals. Barracks and administrative centers are located at larger intervals. Communication between the army units along the length of the Great Wall, including the ability to call reinforcements and warn garrisons of enemy movements, was of high importance. Signal towers were built upon hill tops or other high points along the wall for their visibility.

Friday, April 19, 2013

A History of the Great Pyramid


How old is the Great Pyramid?
Archaeologists, Egyptologists and Historians, if they’re honest, will tell you we just don’t know.
Recorded history stretches back only to the 9th Century, when the pyramid was first opened and explored. There are reports that date back to Classical Greek times (around 500 BC.), but these are limited to fragmentary references which are difficult to relate to each other or to the pyramid’s descent through this or previous periods.
Using, sometimes blatantly abusing the limited information we have, current age estimates range from around 5,000 to many tens of thousands of years, each dependant on one or more of a huge range of theories for the pyramid’s true purpose. Most researchers agree on an age of at least 4,500 years, but even this is based on unsubstantiated claims that the pyramid was built by an otherwise obscure 4th dynasty pharaoh.
All we know for sure is that, at the very dawn of human history, the Great Pyramid slipped quietly onto the world stage and stood silently, not so much waiting to be noticed as waiting to be understood. Then, as now, it was static, with no discernable beginning, no foreseeable end, and, for many it seems, exhibiting no reason to seek either. The more curious have argued over the pyramid’s age and true purpose for thousands of years, but all to no avail. To some the Great Pyramid has already fulfilled its destiny, but to others it has yet to do so and the question remains simply a matter of how and when.
The history of the Great Pyramid is therefore a history of those who have been the most profoundly influenced by it. It is a history of those who have sought what the pyramid was waiting for - those who believed it had yet to fulfill its true destiny.

The Mystery Years
The people we refer to as ancient Egyptians descended from a mixture of African and Asian strains that were ushered gradually into the Nile Valley by climate and geological changes that may have lasted until as late as 4,000 BC.  Despite evidence of complex religious beliefs, astonishingly rapid advances in everything from agriculture to architecture, and a seemingly endless series of internal and external conflicts, these people maintained no reliable history of their own meteoric ascent from the Stone Age to history’s most mysterious and fascinating civilization. Almost everything we know – or think we know - about the rise of ancient Egypt is derived from accounts recorded many thousands of years after the people and events described.
It is against this murky backdrop, during the Old Kingdom reign of fourth dynasty Pharaoh, Khufu (2604-2581 BC), that the Great Pyramid emerges from the mists of time. Despite reports that Khufu made repairs to the already aging monument, and that he was buried elsewhere, modern day Egyptologists assure us the pyramid was his tomb (a theory adopted much later in this story and more by accident than design). Unfortunately, no human or funerary remains were found when the pyramid was opened (in fact Khufu’s remains have never been found!) and there were no hieroglyphs carved into any of its walls, floors or ceilings. Indeed, with the exception of the empty and undecorated coffer in the King’s Chamber, a curiously worked stone in the Grotto and small pieces of wood, metal & stone (discussed later), not a single truly definitive artifact has ever been found inside the pyramid. If Khufu, or even the ancient Egyptians in general were responsible for the pyramid, there is no evidence that this is so. Even if there were, the pyramid’s curious mathematical symmetry would, until this very day, continue to push us to search for a solution to its true purpose.

Honor Guard

An interesting parallel to the mystery surrounding the Great Pyramid’s age, origin and purpose is that it appears to have been protected or at least overseen on the earlier part of its journey down through the centuries. These guardians (often referred to as Priests) appear to have been both knowledgeable and powerful and their ranks were almost certainly replenished from a specific group or groups and/or by some higher form of teaching or initiation
            Many researchers have connected these guardians to such organizations as the Illuminati, Freemasons and other secret organizations, both past and present. In Fact, there are many that believe some high level Freemasons are aware of the pyramid’s true purpose and that, for some unknown reason, they choose to remain silent. This particular aspect of pyramid discussion is far beyond the scope of this article but there is no shortage of books on the subject for those interested in pursuing this further. It would, however, be prudent to note that Freemasons founded the United States and that the Great Pyramid’s enigmatic geometry had a considerable influence upon them; this is evident not only on the Dollar bill and in the history books, but also in Washington DC’s layout and early architecture.
            That the pyramid had a continuous chaperone indicates not only that it was designed with a specific and much later destiny in mind, but also that knowledge of its intended purpose generated sufficient altruism that many subsequent generations could be recruited to continue the tradition. If the pyramid had been a tomb, it would certainly have been protected in some way, perhaps even for an extended period, but it seems extremely unlikely that even the most powerful pharaoh could arrange for a personal escort for many thousands of years. It therefore seems much more likely that early rulers whose times the pyramid passed through would simply perform whatever renovations were required and adopt the building as their own. This appears to be the most likely case with Khufu and we should consider ourselves fortunate that he chose not to muddy the water by having his remains interred within or nearby.

Classical Times
One of the most interesting and promising clues to the pyramid’s true origin and purpose is its location, orientation and dimensional symmetry. Indeed, it is this amazing mathematical and geometric symphony which, finally, brings it into a clearer and more historical focus.  
As early as 500 BC, the classical Greeks treated Egypt in much the same way we treat trendy, modern day tourist destinations, paying a great deal of attention both to the pyramid and to those who accompanied it. In fact so many Greeks studied with the pyramid’s guardians that it is now generally accepted that Egypt was the birthplace of many mathematical advances, particularly those in geometry and astronomy, that were, for many hundreds of years, attributed to the Greeks alone.
So-called, Father of History, Greek Geographer/Historian Herodotus (484-425 BC) is one of many voices which assure us this is so. Herodotus also provides us with one of the earliest accounts of ancient Egypt and a great deal of detailed mathematical information about the pyramid. It remains unclear as to whether his knowledge of the pyramid was first hand or if it was handed down, but his reports confirm that the pyramid was designed using advanced geometry and with some arcane or esoteric purpose in mind.
Herodotus also claimed to have been told by the pyramid’s guardians that Cheops (the Greek name for the Pharaoh Khufu) was buried below the pyramid on an island that was surrounded by waters fed by the Nile. There is, however, only solid rock below the pyramid and recent research seems to indicate that what Herodotus was told, although accurate in some respects, was also deceptively cryptic. In fact it is now believed that, because of his reputation as a traveler and historian, Herodotus was used as a conduit to spread selected misinformation about the pyramid, partly to maintain public interest in it, but, at the same time, to dissuade treasure seekers from disturbing it.
            Several hundred years later, in the first century BC, Sicilian born, author & historian, Diodorus Siculus, although describing the pyramid as being complete and in perfect condition, noted that there was no apex or capstone (the absence of which is still the subject of debate over two thousand years later).
Also around this time, Strabo (63 BC - 24 AD), another Greek Geographer, was evidently given a guided tour of the pyramid’s lower interior. He not only described the pyramid’s concealed entrance, but also commented at length on the Descending Passage and the empty and supposedly unfinished Subterranean Chamber. Strabo failed, however, to mention the upper passages & chambers or even the lower entrance to the Well Shaft. This is almost certainly because both routes to the upper interior remained concealed until they were discovered, quite accidentally, almost a thousand years later.
In fact, that only the lower portion of the pyramid’s interior was known  - and visited regularly down to Roman times - is evidenced by the presence of graffiti, which was found in the lower passages & chambers but absent in the upper interior. This, along with later discoveries, would seem to indicate that the upper passages and chambers were concealed even from those charged with guarding the pyramid.

The Christian Era
By the 6th century AD, Egypt’s politics had changed considerably and the pyramid’s guardians had completely disappeared. It is not known when or how the last guardian faded away, or why this happened. What is known, however, is that academic interest had waned and, presumably with the disappearance of the guardians, awareness of the pyramid’s concealed entrance was lost. Visitors to Egypt became fewer and fewer in a time when Christian hermits are reported to have used many of its temples and monuments - now considered pagan - as homes. There is no evidence the pyramid was used in this way, scattered references from this time note only the pyramid’s magnetism for what few tourists there were and it’s continued good condition - something it was not destined to retain for much longer.

A Rude Awakening

            Documented history of The Great Pyramid begins in 820 AD, when the Caliph of Baghdad, Abdullah Al Mamoun (786-833), forced his way through the north face in search of a fabled treasure of ancient documents and artifacts. Exactly what Mamoun expected to find inside the pyramid is difficult to say. He is reported to be an educated man who tried, without success, to calculate the true circumference of the Earth, and who sought to regain ancient navigational knowledge that had been lost when the library of Alexandria was destroyed.
            Hacking blindly into the base of the pyramid, Mamoun eventually broke into the Descending Passage just below its carefully hidden junction with the Ascending Passage. From here he was free to explore everything in the pyramid’s lower interior, from the formally concealed entrance (ironically just a few feet from his forced tunnel) to the lower passages and Subterranean Chambers. Finding nothing that interested him in the lower part of the interior, Mamoun turned his attention to the foot of the Ascending Passage, which, after remaining concealed for thousands of years, had been exposed when its stone seal had been dislodged by his excavations.
            Ordered to tunnel up and around what was eventually discovered to be three huge granite plugs (still wedged firmly in place today), Mamoun’s men smashed out core masonry and then broke up several smaller limestone plugs which had been placed behind the heavier, harder and more securely wedged granite. Having finally gained access to the Ascending Passage, Mamoun climbed into the heart of the pyramid, where he found the upper end of the Well Shaft, the Grand Gallery, the King & Queen’s Chambers and almost all other known features located in the upper body of the pyramid.
            It is both interesting and important to note that Mamoun and his men, after tunneling horizontally for a hundred feet through solid stone, now went to almost unimaginable lengths to tunnel upward, around the granite plugs that blocked the Ascending Passage. This would seem to confirm, once again, that the bottom of the Well Shaft was effectively concealed at that time. If this had not been so, it would have been far easier for Mamoun’s men to remove the loose rubble that we know filled the Well Shaft, than to tunnel upward through solid stone.
One can only imagine Mamoun’s thoughts as he and his men explored the upper part of the pyramid. The disappointment of finding only cramped passages and empty chambers, and the confusion of staring into the empty coffer must have been heart breaking. Although the treasure Mamoun sought had, quite literally, been staring him in the face since before he’d broken into the pyramid, it remained concealed by his own greed, and he was eventually forced to pay his men from his own pocket. Aside from a few interesting but unsubstantiated rumors to the contrary, the interior features of the pyramid are all that were exposed at that time and, regrettably, both the pyramid and mankind failed to benefit from their discovery.
Despite his reputation as an educated and enlightened man, Mamoun shamelessly savaged the Great Pyramid and left without giving its size, orientation and curiously arranged passages & chambers another thought. Open to the elements for the first time since it was built, the battered and bruised pyramid quietly awaited a much more serious and deadly attack.


Seismic Shock

Soon after Mamoun departed, a series of unusually powerful earthquakes ravaged the area and presumably further damaged the already shattered casing. How bad the actual damage was we will never know, the quakes transformed the pyramid into a convenient, twenty-two acre, pre-cut limestone supermarket and the casing was looted to rebuild what is now Cairo. When the quarrying finally stopped, over four hundred years later (as late as 1356 casing stones were removed to build Cairo’s celebrated Mosque of Sultan Hassan), what little that remained of the casing lay buried beneath some fifty feet of rubble.
Abandoned, this time quite literally to the elements and ignored for hundreds of years, The Great Pyramid continued its free fall through the Middle Ages. The lost casing became as potent a legend as the monument’s embodiment of ancient knowledge, and the exposed core became a home for bats and rodents. For a while, the remains of the once great monument, regardless of what they may or may not have concealed, appeared destined for little more than decay and obscurity. As the darkness surrendered to enlightenment, however, inquiring minds appeared to re-acquire their target, preparing now for a much more sustained but benign assault.

 

The Renaissance in Giza

            In the sixteenth century, the brilliant Italian physician & mathematician (and friend of Leonardo da Vinci), Girolamo Cardano, concluded that the Great Pyramid embodied a system of linear measure that had been derived from the dimensions of the Earth itself. Cardano knew that a great deal had been learned and copied from the early Egyptians. He also believed the true size of the earth had been known thousands of years earlier, and that it too would be embodied in the pyramid. It would be hundreds of years before Cardano’s suspicions could be tested, but the search was on, and by the early seventeenth century, the Great Pyramid was attracting the attention of far more benign and inquisitive visitors.
            In 1637, British astronomer and mathematician, John Greaves, came to Giza in search of the true circumference of the Earth. Greaves, who had studied in Italy and Greece, and who had discovered the use of a geographic foot in the ruins of the Parthenon, believed, like Cardano, that he would find similar information embodied in the pyramid’s exterior measurements. Unfortunately, debris from the stripped casing made it impossible for Greaves to make an accurate survey of the pyramid’s base and Cardano’s theory remained just that.
Inside the pyramid, and although finding the Descending Passage blocked with rubble left by Al Mamoun’s men over eight hundred years earlier, Greaves was able to examine the upper passages and chambers. Gathering a great deal of the early data on the pyramid’s upper interior and commenting on many of its enigmatic features, Greaves captured public imagination and set the stage for far more detailed study. 
Rather ironically, that same public soon began to refer to the coffer in the King’s Chamber as a sarcophagus. This fostered the assumption that somebody must have been buried within and thus was born the theory that the Great Pyramid may have been a tomb. Academic interest remained firmly focused on the pyramid’s mathematical mysteries, but, for reasons that may never be known, and despite knowing it was grossly at odds with the evidence, Egyptologists of the time appeared more than willing to jump on (and, in fact, may even have created) the tomb bandwagon.
            In the summer of 1665, Bubonic plague swept across Europe. In England institutions of higher learning were closed and an already reclusive young student was quarantined on his family’s farm. Far happier in the solitude of the English country side than the comparative crush of Trinity College, the young man spent his summer studying the works of Galileo, Copernicus and Kepler in an effort to provide mathematical proof of their discoveries. Not satisfied with the observations of his predecessors, he invented an entirely new branch of mathematics in order to feed an obsession with proving the things his contemporaries accepted without question. It was during this summer (legend has it after seeing an apple fall in his garden) that Isaac Newton decided to rethink an old problem.
            In order to calculate the force of gravity, Newton needed to know the true diameter of the earth. He believed such information was embodied in the dimensions of the Great Pyramid, but like many others, was unsure if it would pertain to the earth’s mean diameter, or its diameter at the latitude of the pyramid. Compounding the problem of latitude was Newton’s belief that, when measured accurately, the earth would be found oblate (slightly flattened at the poles) and this added to the possibility that the dimensions of the pyramid might prove more confusing than enlightening.
            In fact Newton found the pyramid’s dimensions extremely confusing, but not because of its location or his beliefs with regard to the shape of the earth. According to the most recent data, the pyramid’s base and height were not divisible by a common unit, something utterly inconceivable. To Newton it appeared that the pyramid had been designed using at least two different systems of measurement, a situation akin to us designing a building using imperial units for horizontal dimensions and metric for the vertical components. Despite this glaring disparity, (something later recognized as quite deliberate on the part of the pyramid’s designers), Newton concluded that the pyramid had indeed been built using two entirely different and unrelated units.
In other words, instead of pondering the powerful enigma presented by the pyramid’s dimensions, one of the greatest minds known to science (and one evidently obsessed with proving what others accepted without question) simply invented a separate unit for each dimension. To be fair, Newton put a great deal of thought into the problem, but, already a deeply troubled man, perhaps he was also inhibited or influenced by the current conflict between science and religion and so did not give the pyramid the attention it so clearly deserved. Eventually concluding the pyramid’s designers had used a “sacred” cubit for the base and a “profane” cubit for the height, Newton evidently gave no further thought to the significance of the problem itself.
Fortunately, Newton’s (inverse square) law of gravitation proved far more accurate than his proposed cubits. The true size of the earth, however – along with the answer to the mathematical problem posed by the pyramid’s base and height dimensions, would elude science for another two hundred years.
            Thirty-eight years after Newton’s death, Nathaniel Davison, a British official vacationing in Egypt, attempted to explore the pyramid. The exterior remained shrouded in rubble and, like Greaves, Davison was unable to bypass Al Mamun’s debris in the lower interior. Concentrating instead on the upper passages and chambers, and, after being driven from the Well Shaft by the lack of breathable air, Davison discovered a roughly carved passage, at the top of the Grand Gallery’s south wall. Risking almost certain death by scaling the twenty-four foot height of the already elevated gallery, Davison followed the passage to a low, empty and featureless compartment which had evidently been designed to protect the King’s Chamber, directly below, from the weight of the masonry above.
            In the end, Davison added little more than his name to the history of The Great Pyramid, but the “Construction Chamber” he discovered (and which now bears his name) would later precipitate a great deal of activity, discovery and controversy.

A New World Order
            Soon after conquering Egypt, in 1798, Napoleon initiated the first truly scientific study of the pyramid by savants (scientists and scholars) who had accompanied his army.
Inside the pyramid, Napoleon experienced a measure of success in as much as he was able to explore the upper part of the pyramid personally and even spend some time alone in the King’s Chamber (where, it is claimed, he foresaw his own destiny). But the pyramid was now home to thousands of bats, and efforts to explore the Descending Passage and blocked Well Shaft, were prevented by rubble, bat droppings and foul air.
Outside the pyramid, Edme-Francois Jomard, one of the most influential of Napoleon’s savants, had cleared away some of the debris at the base and exposed what were believed to be the northeast and northwest alignment sockets (shallow depressions carved into the bedrock). Like many before him, Jomard believed not only that the base of the pyramid would reflect the Earth’s true circumference, but that it would also reveal the builder’s original units of measure. Unfortunately the sockets he uncovered were separated from the core masonry by a thick layer of carefully manufactured rock pavement which posed more questions than it answered. Debris still surrounded the remainder of the pyramid and Jomard was unable to measure the base accurately enough to prove his theory before the French were obliged to leave Egypt.
Napoleon appears to be one of the few men of power - certainly the first - to show any respect and compassion for the pyramid. The extent, accuracy and results of work he commissioned provided a wealth of important information and proved conclusively that the Great Pyramid – far from being a tomb – was all about numbers.

The Victorian Era
            In the early nineteenth century, The Great Pyramid fell into the hands of an eccentric Italian seaman who believed it concealed a secret chamber.
Somewhat curiously, Giovano Caviglia began his search for this chamber from the shallow confines of Davison’s Construction Chamber. After tunneling a short distance into the core above and to the south of the King’s Chamber, he suddenly stopped work and decided to explore the Well Shaft instead. When progress there was halted by helpers who refused to work in the airless shaft, he moved into the lower part of the pyramid. The Descending Passage, still blocked by debris left by Al Mamun’s men a thousand years earlier, was finally cleared and Caviglia continued his search for the secret chamber. What he eventually found was actually the lower end of the Well Shaft, his men succeeding in doing from the bottom what so many had failed to do from the top.
It is not known exactly how Caviglia discovered the bottom of the Well Shaft, but  we do know that it was filled with loose rubble. Rather than being forced to tunnel upward, the workers simply loaded the debris into baskets and removed it to the exterior.
Once open and finally explored, the Well Shaft revealed the existence of the two-room Grotto, carved into the bedrock just below the pyramid’s core masonry. It is doubtful the Grotto satisfied Caviglia’s secret chamber theory, but he had unwittingly exposed another piece of the pyramid puzzle. Regrettably, its significance would also be misunderstood and overlooked for many years.
            Colonel Richard Howard-Vyse, a British army officer, arrived in Giza in 1837 and worked with Caviglia long enough to become similarly obsessed with a secret chamber (by which time Caviglia became dissatisfied and left Egypt). 
Howard-Vyse also began his assault from Davison’s Chamber, but moved in a different direction. Blasting upwards, he exposed a second chamber and named it after Wellington, under whom he’d served earlier. No taller than Davison’s Chamber below, the granite-beamed floor of Wellington’s Chamber was, in fact, the roof of Davison’s Chamber. The similar, granite beamed ceiling of the second chamber, prompted the assumption that still more lay above, and several months of blasting uncovered third, fourth and fifth Construction Chambers. 
Unlike the first four, the fifth chamber had a gabled roof, which almost certainly convinced Howard-Vyse that it was the last (there is evidence he pushed a little higher). Perhaps knowing he would not find the fabled secret chamber here proved just too much of a disappointment for him. Later, he claimed to have discovered proof that Khufu built the pyramid, but the single cartouche, painted on the rock of the fifth chamber, was discredited by the discovery that it was misspelled in exactly the same way as in a publication available at that time. In fact it would be prudent to note here that Howard-Vyse had a profound knack for exploring with explosives and for finding all kinds of evidence to support his theories. That he was the only one ever to find hieroglyphs and artifacts in the Great Pyramid should be viewed with a healthy dose of skepticism.
Outside the pyramid, Howard-Vyse made two major and much more authentic discoveries. The first was to confirm a theory that the air shafts in the King’s Chamber actually penetrated to the exterior of the building (there are reports that the shafts penetrated the casing, but this is now impossible to confirm). Later, while removing debris from a small area at the foot of the north face, he also uncovered the finely crafted rock pavement and discovered that it continued north under the remaining debris. In doing so, he also uncovered some of the original casing stones, confirming the now centuries old legend of the limestone casing and providing a more accurate angle for the pyramid’s sloping sides.
The pavement uncovered by Howard-Vyse was the same as that which proved so problematic for Napoleon’s Savants at the pyramid’s northern corners. The significance of this pavement actually extending beneath the core masonry of the pyramid (as opposed to ending or beginning at the base line) was evidently lost not only Howard-Vyse, but also on other researchers of his and later eras.
When he returned to England, Howard-Vyse published his findings and re-ignited the debate over what, in reality, was yet another failure to discern the true purpose of the Great Pyramid.

Editing The Results
            Fascinated by the failure to reach a solid conclusion for the actual size and shape of the pyramid, the Editor of the London Observer, John Taylor, began a detailed study of the work of both Napoleon’s savants and Howard-Vyse. Although it would take him the rest of his life, Taylor eventually published a number of fantastic conclusions, which he reached, regrettably, by making the same mistake as Newton.
            Taylor noted that the pyramid’s base perimeter had grown considerably over the previous two hundred years. Assuming – quite correctly - that each successive explorer had plunged ever deeper into the debris, Taylor decided to mathematically reconstruct the pyramid using the most recent measurements and to probe it for the geometric poetry he was sure it contained. Unfortunately, he also assumed the most recent measurements were correct and so was unable to reveal that poetry.
Discouraged by the same lack of symmetry between the base and height that had troubled Newton, Taylor explored an earlier claim that the area of each face had been designed to equal the square of the pyramid’s vertical height. Then, in assuming the pyramid was a perfectly geometric construction, he plunged headlong into the same quagmire from which even Newton had been unable to emerge unscathed
While comparing the base perimeter to the pyramid’s height, Taylor arrived at a figure just slightly larger than, but close enough to pi to spark his imagination. Then, in assuming the pyramid’s height had the same relationship to its base perimeter as does the radius of a circle to its circumference, he also searched in vain for a unit of measure that would divide the base and the height. (There are many who claim the pyramid embodies Pi & Phi along with a solution for squaring the circle, but there is, as yet, no evidence for this). Failing, but determined to retain the pi proportion he was now sure existed, Taylor plunged back, starting back at the base. In one of his calculations, he came up with a unit of 25 inches, a value remarkably similar to Newton’s sacred cubit and also one recently proposed by renowned astronomer Sir John Herschel.
            In the early 1800’s, Herschel had proposed dividing the earth’s as yet unknown polar axis by five hundred million to produce a sensible, earth commensurate, unit of measure. This, he predicted, would result in a unit of about fifty inches, which, when halved, would provide a useful cubit of twenty-five (which more or less agreed with the sacred cubit Newton believed he had “found” in the pyramid). Taylor already knew that the side of a British acre measured 2,500 inches, and, for him, a recently adopted map scale of 1:2500 appeared to complete the circuit. Although the new map scale bore absolutely no relation to the standard British mile of 5,280 feet, it fit both Herschel’s cubit and the ancient acre exactly.
Evidently unconcerned that the pyramid had yet to be measured accurately, Taylor went on to study the pyramid’s interior and eventually concluded that the entire structure was a record of weights and measures which had been constructed, or, at the very least, commissioned by God himself. Publishing in 1859, he was ridiculed almost until his death, a scant five years later. Despite the less than complimentary publicity, however, Taylor found an influential supporter who took up his cause just before he died.

The Astronomer Royal

            Charles Piazzi-Smyth, Astronomer Royal for Scotland, adopted the sacred cubit without question, publicly supported Taylor’s views of divine inspiration, and, in return, was criticized and censured by his peers. As provocative as Taylor’s views were, the divine inspiration angle appeared just too much for most people to swallow, especially those recently exposed to Charles Darwin’s views on the origins of man. Undaunted and unconvinced by the views of his peers or Darwin, Smyth not only continued to work with Taylor, but also gleaned enough information to conclude that he would have to go to Giza himself.
Although finding the Descending passage blocked again (this time by guides who resented escorting tourists to the Subterranean Chamber), Piazzi-Smyth is credited with making the first truly comprehensive study of the beleaguered pyramid. His work is now one of the most widely read and respected on the subject, but, as it had for so many others, the debris at the base severely hampered his efforts on the exterior.
Smyth was determined to prove that the pyramid had been designed using the sacred cubit, that its base perimeter would reflect the number of days in a year and that it would contain an accurate value for pi. In order to prove this, however, Smyth required a base length longer than the French figure but less than the most recent figure as reported by Howard-Vyse. Perhaps realizing his was an arbitrary and unscientific approach, he decided the only sure way to make his point was to clear the remaining corner sockets and to measure up and over the debris himself. Unfortunately he ran out of time and was forced to convince visiting engineers to finish the job for him and to forward their results. 
When the results arrived, the base sides, at 759.17 feet, were far too short to prove his point. Rather than accept the engineers’ findings, Smyth chose a point between their results and Howard-Vyse’s figure of 764 feet - a value that was, ironically, equally arbitrary and which was still too short to prove his point.
Smyth published his findings as soon as he returned to England, but his deeply religious beliefs were not well received. The latest measurement of the pyramid’s base had not only failed to support his theory that the pyramid embodied a reference to the year – and that it was therefore the product of divine intervention, but it also failed to prove Taylor’s pi proportion.
With nothing else to turn to, those uninterested in the tomb theory (by now more or less official), remained torn between the Taylor/Smyth divine intervention theory and Jomard’s earth commensurate proposals. Despite being forced, once again, to wait for confirmation of one or the other, the public was suddenly treated to an intriguing new discovery.

Concealed Shafts

            In 1872, Engineer, Wayneman Dixon, on scarcely more than a hunch, discovered the first entirely new feature of the pyramid’s interior in more than a millenium.
Evidently puzzled by the absence of so called “air shafts” in the Queen’s Chamber, Dixon concluded that something similar would be concealed behind its otherwise featureless walls. Within minutes of instructing his helper to chisel into the south wall, Dixon found exactly what he’d suspected, a concealed shaft almost identical to those in the King’s Chamber. Probing the north wall in the same way, Dixon uncovered a second shaft, and, inside, claimed to have found a small piece of wood, an iron hook and a stone ball. Unlike their counterparts in the King’s Chamber, these shafts did not penetrate to the exterior of the pyramid. Attempts were made to explore the new shafts, but their size, depth and angle of ascent made anything other than clumsy probing impossible.
Dixon wrote to Piazzi Smyth about his discovery and sent him the artifacts he claimed to have found in the northern shaft. These were reportedly examined by experts at the British Museum but shed little light on their own origin and purpose, or on why the shafts were open and continuous in one chamber but deliberately concealed and evidently limited in the other. The newly discovered shafts would eventually prove significant, but not for another 121 years.

One Step Forward, Two Steps Back

                In 1880, the Earth’s Polar Diameter was calculated to be 7,898.78 miles. The newly determined dimension translated into just shy of 500,500,000 British inches, or an even five hundred million if the inch were lengthened slightly. Herschel had been right (as had both Newton and Taylor - but each for the wrong reasons).
The following year, William Flinders Petrie, a professional surveyor, cleared a little more of the pyramid’s base and also made an accurate survey of the entire Giza complex. Having done so, Petrie proved that the pyramid was almost perfectly aligned to the cardinal points of the compass, and also discovered a curious hollowing of the pyramid’s sides. This subtle hollowing – about thirty seven inches on each face - had been noted and sketched by one of Napoleon’s savants, but overlooked until it was rediscovered by Petrie.
Petrie had long been interested in the variety of measures used throughout the world, and believed that a history of these measures could be ascertained by the careful measurement of ancient monuments. He also knew only a truly accurate survey of the pyramid would prove the Taylor/Smyth theory right or wrong. Clearing the pyramid’s corners once again, Petrie concluded that the alignment sockets discovered by the French had been designed more for reference than physical alignment (the Northern sockets were far too shallow to provide the required strength). While working on another area of the base, Petrie had also noted that the pavement surrounding the pyramid had, in fact, been laid first and continued for an unknown distance beneath the structure. In all likelihood, the sockets had been for surveying and preparation purposes and the pavement had, presumably, supplied a second, more effective alignment method some eighteen to twenty inches higher. 
            After numerous researchers had spent almost a hundred years digging down to the base of the pyramid (albeit only at the corners and a small section of the north face), Petrie was now forced to calculate his way back up. In doing so, he found the base length to be 755.75 feet – far too short to support either of Jomard’s Earth circumference or Piazzi-Smyth’s days in a year theories. 

The 20th Century
Next into the fray was a Structural Engineer who sought only to destroy the idea that the pyramid was an instrument of prophecy. David Davidson, appalled that, for some, the pyramid had become the bible in stone, went over the building with fine toothed comb in an effort to silence the religious fanatics. Not only was he forced to concede defeat, he was also forced, like many others, into rethinking the issue from two entirely different points of view at one and the same time. In the end Davidson accepted the divine inspiration/bible in stone theory completely, but the route to his conversion would throw the whole pyramid debate on its ear.
By noting that Petrie had not extended the hollowing of the pyramid’s sides to his calculations for the lost casing, Davidson discovered the pyramid’s designers had, in fact, incorporated three calculations for the year in the base perimeter. By extending the hollowing himself, he was able to prove that each face of the pyramid had been a complex geometric contour. When the base perimeter was finally measured accurately, it would, he claimed, prove that the designers had purposely embodied what we refer to as the Solar, Anomalistic and Sidereal years. Davidson had all but proved Piazzi-Smyth correct, but the pyramid’s missing apex now cast an eerie new light on the monument.
Davidson predicted that, when finally measured accurately, the pyramid’s base perimeter would be found short of Piazzi-Smyth’s length by exactly 286.1022 inches (23.84 feet), and he called this distance the pyramid’s “Displacement Factor.” The figure itself is embodied within the pyramid in numerous places. The original entrance is offset to the east of the north/south axis by this amount; it is exactly the difference in height between the Ascending Passage and the Grand Gallery; and it is also the calculated height of the missing apex.
In 1925, the pyramid was finally cleared of debris, the base accurately surveyed for the first time and the results published as the official size and orientation of the pyramid. Davidson was not only proved correct by the results, but a curious mathematical conundrum was also uncovered.
The actual distance around the base was found to be equal to half of one minute of arc of the Earth’s circumference - which the pyramid’s designers had evidently deemed to be slightly less than our own calculation. Although vindicating Jomard in one respect, the figure did not provide the much-anticipated unit of measure because it was a scaled reference, which would be recognized regardless of the units used to confirm it. But, when the height of the missing apex was added, the result reflected the number of days in a year and also vindicated Piazzi-Smyth. It was this figure, ironically, that supplied an original unit of measure, an increment that was within a few decimal places of one we’d used for much of recorded history – the inch! For many this was confirmation that the pyramid had been designed to attract the attention of those capable of appreciating its mathematical symbolism as opposed to its previously supposed perfection.
The designers of the Great Pyramid had carefully incorporated specific information into the casing of the pyramid and then squared and oriented the building almost perfectly north/south by a near miss so close it is debated as deliberate to this day. If indeed the designers had sought to attract the attention of those who understood the numbers embodied in the Great Pyramid, they had not succeeded until well over four and a half thousand years after the building had been completed. Even then, what should have been a turning point in pyramid research was lost on two camps still torn between what they saw as opposing theories.
Science, it seems, was unwilling to chose between the Earth Commensurate & Bible in Stone theories and unable to move forward with both. As a result, a whole new ball game would play out in the vacuum left by indecision.
            In the 1950’s the Great Pyramid was granted a small part in a drama that would one-day see it promoted to a more prominent role. The general public was suddenly rocked by claims the earth had not evolved as slowly and uniformly as originally supposed. Evidence of regular, perhaps cyclic cataclysms was found all over the planet. To many it appeared the earth had been suddenly shaken, ripped or smashed from its daily rotation not once, but dozens, perhaps hundreds of times - and with disquieting regularity. Suddenly, the theory of ice ages, both fatally flawed and unexplainable by science anyway, was placed under increasing pressure.
In the tropics and close to the equator, scientists found striations in the bedrock caused by ice that not only moved under the broiling heat of the tropical sun, but which also moved in the wrong direction – often uphill. Erratic boulders weighing thousands of tons, supposedly transported by glaciers, were found thousands of miles from their point of origin, often in the middle of open plains or half way up mountains that were older than the strata below.
In the far north explorers found the remains of huge numbers of animals, some now extinct, frozen solid with their last meals still in their mouths and stomachs. Whole populations of animals had dined on lush, green vegetation and were then instantly transported to the arctic, where they were smashed together in heaps, along with the very vegetation they had been eating, and flash frozen.
Evidence from all over the world forced one simple conclusion on incredulous minds. Time and time again ancient mountain chains had been thrust up and over much younger formations or had been suddenly submerged. Sea and land had exchanged places in violent convulsions. Volcanoes had spewed lava thousands of feet deep over hundreds of thousands of square miles, all in the age of man and often in cycles of only a few thousand years.
Much of the evidence, it was learned, was not new. Darwin himself had remarked on the awesome destruction of fauna and the geological anomalies evident over the almost pole to pole length of the Americas. In his notes he remarked that the earth’s entire frame must have been shaken both repeatedly and frequently. Mainstream science, at a loss or reluctant to explain the evidence, battled or denied theory after theory. Some, still searching for a reason for the pyramid, tried to connect it and the obviously recent geological violence – sometimes with astonishing results - to almost everything from Plato’s Atlantis to the biblical flood.
Ironically, the pyramid embodied an answer, but it would remain concealed a little longer.
In the 1960’s and 70’s, a public perhaps forced into readiness by the terrifying revelations of the fifties, was treated to a burgeoning array of ever more outrageous and groundless theories. The history of the pyramid was lost on a public more willing to believe it was the work of aliens. Its orientation and mathematical symbolism meant nothing to those who believed its missing apex had been fashioned from an unknown precious metal or crystal, which beamed mystical energy to or from space. If nothing else, the furor paved the way for a much more scientific and sensible approach.
The 1980’s and 90’s saw a surge of study that, among other things, tied the very layout of the Giza complex to ancient astronomical data, and set the stage, finally, for finding a reason for the pyramid’s very existence. Modern researchers, it seemed, were beginning to suspect that The Great Pyramid contained a message of some kind, a message not from God or from space travelers, but from our own ancestors, somewhere in the dim and distant past.
            In the spring of 1993, a small video camera equipped robot, ascended the southern shaft in the Queen’s Chamber in search of a solution to continuing pyramid ventilation problems (at the time, the northern shaft was deemed unsuitable because of debris left by Dixon’s probing). High in the pyramid’s core masonry, the robot stopped cold at what first appeared to be a dead end. As the area was studied more closely, however, the video camera revealed a stone slab that appeared to have been dropped into the shaft and secured with small copper pins. That the shaft continued beyond the slab was made obvious by a tiny, triangular gap at the bottom right hand corner (if the robot’s video camera was able to see through the gap, the results were not revealed to the general public).
Some two hundred feet up, in a shaft impossible for even the smallest child to navigate, the Great Pyramid’s designers had left a stone slab that could be discovered and studied - perhaps even moved - only by a technologically advanced explorer. But, before even completing the task, they had concealed the bottom of the shaft and left no visible clue of its existence! As exciting and provocative as this was for many, what became known as the “Door” was arbitrarily dismissed by authorities as unimportant, and, for a while, no further exploration was allowed (or revealed).
Almost a decade later, a second robot was dispatched to drill through the door and to pass a video camera into the space beyond. The televised, supposedly live, but embarrassingly unprofessional event was condemned as little more than a money raising sham, which ended too soon after the camera passed through the newly bored hole. The presumably world wide TV audience was given a suspiciously brief glimpse of a second obstruction, but no explanation for why the previously articulate camera remained perfectly rigid after being passed through the door.
In the years between the only two publicized forays, the airshafts were studied more intensely by other researchers, and it was claimed that each “pointed” to a specific star or constellation in remote antiquity. Somewhat naively, it was assumed that the “star shafts” were incorporated into the pyramid to signify its date of construction (a common, if not entirely understandable failing among those claiming to have found dates embodied in the pyramid).
It has since been rumored that there has been quiet exploration of the remaining shafts, that an additional door has been found and that an additional passage, perhaps even chamber, exists. At this point in time, one can only wonder what will become of these or any other new discoveries that are made within or around the pyramid. Access to the pyramid is already severely restricted and it seems unlikely that Egyptian authorities will comment upon – or even reveal – any discovery which contradicts the official tomb theory.

The Great Pyramid’s Future
            As a consequence of all of the above, The Great Pyramid has been handed down in battered and desecrated condition and the general public now allowed only limited access. Despite a still burning desire to know who built it and why, we are hampered by the events & attitudes of the past, the politics & prejudices of the present, and by a confusing jumble of information that, perhaps, we were intended to uncover in a more logical sequence.
We can no longer marvel at the true size, shape and precision of the pyramid; it has been ravaged by man and the elements for more than a quarter of its known history. We no longer need to search for a hidden entrance or concealed passages because we know exactly where they are. We have no need to explore and measure those passages and chambers because it’s been done for us over and over again. And, largely because we’ve been bombarded by crackpot theory after crackpot theory, we no longer have a desire for anything but concrete facts.
            Early in the twentieth century, the Great Pyramid was finally recognized for what it was intended to be - a complex mathematical message aimed at only those who were diligent enough to uncover the subtle clues to its existence. In 1925, after thousands of years in limbo, the pyramid had cleared its throat and uttered a single word – inch. But it has taken us almost a hundred years to realize that the pyramid had spoken, let alone understand the significance of that word.
            As of April 2007, pyramid research continues at a furious pace, and the inch continues to play a prominent role, reveal more and more about the pyramid and why it was built. Today, more than ever, research is conducted by thousands of individuals who are completely independent and unfettered by antiquated beliefs and pressure to adhere to old school cronyism.
            The pyramid’s future, although still uncertain, now appears brighter than ever; will we be listening when it speaks again?


History of Angkor Wat Temple



What're in this page!

1. THE HISTORY OF THE ANGKOR WAT TEMPLES


Angkor translates to mean 'Capital City' or 'Holy City'. The ruins of this holy city are the remnants of the Angkorian capitals and represent the pinnacle of the ancient Khmer architecture, art and civilization.
The Angkor Wat temples were built between 800AD to 1300AD. During this time over 27 kings ruled this large territory, about 400 Square kilometers (250 square miles) in north western Cambodia. The temples are thought to have been abandoned around the 15th century. They were built by the Khmer Empire which was one of the greatest powers in South-East Asia. The 'Khmer' refers to the dominant ethnic group in modern and ancient Cambodia. It is estimated that at its height of rule the population contained more than one million people. The temples are not only impressive because of the beauty. It is also amazing to marvel at the vast waterworks and military defenses that were put in place. They were quite advanced for their time. Back to Top

2. WHO BUILT THEM?


Many Khmer kings built the amazing temples, defense walls and reservoirs. The Angkor period began with the rule of King Jayavarman II who was responsible for a vast number of the monuments and temples. He built many temples for himself, his mother and father. King Indravarman I was responsible for building the 650 hectares of reservoirs. This was a massive irrigation system that provides water to most of the Angkor Wat areas. It was because of this reservoir that Angkor Watt could sustain and support its large population.
Suryavarman II was responsible for the construction of the most famous temple, Angkor Wat temple. It was constructed in the late 12th to early 13th century. This temple is the pride of the Cambodian people, as it stands on their national flag. Back to Top

3. A BIT OF INFO ABOUT THE TEMPLES!


Here is a bit of a summary about some of the major temples that are a must to see when you go to Siem Reap. However, please note there are heaps more and this is just a quick summary.
Angkor Wat, in its beauty and state of preservation, is unrivaled. Its mightiness and magnificence bespeak a pomp luxury surpassing that a pharaoh or a Shah Jahan, an impressiveness greater than that of the pyramids an artistic distinctiveness as fine as that of the Taj Mahal. Back to Top
  • Angkor Wat

    Location: six kilometers (four miles) north of Siem Reap
    Date: early 12th century (between 1113 and 1150) with later additions
    Style: Angkor Wat
    Reign: Suryavarman II
    Visit: several hrs. (More than one visit recommended)

    Highlights

    The world largest religious monument A completely realized microcosm of the Hindu universe, Culminating in the five peaks of Mount Meru Architectural masterpiece in fine proportions and rich in detail; The apogee of classical Khmer construction some 600 m of narrative bas relief and nearly 2,000 Apsaras.
    For once , the modern name of a temple is completely justified. Angkor Wat the city which became a Pagoda was not only the grandest and most sublime of all the Khmer temples, but also a city in its own right. It was built during the reign of Suryavarman II ,in the first half of The 12th century, both as the capital and the state temple dedicated to Vishnu. Back to Top

    Plan

    The outer limits of Angkor Wat are set by its broad moat,faced in laterite and sandstone. Including this , the total area is almost 200 hectares-a retangle of 1.5 km E-W by 1.3km N-S, the largest temple at Angkor.
    Two causeways at W and E cross the 190m-wide moat to outer enclosure, bounded by a laterite wall of 1025m by 802m. Because of Angkor Wat's unusual orientation, the W gopura of this outer enclosure is by far the largest of four.
    Within the 82 hectares of the outer enclosure, the temple itself stands in the middle on a terrace measuring 332+258, nearly 9 hectares. The remaining 9/10 thus of the area was taken up with the city, including the royal palace, although of course no trace remains of these Buildings, presumably constructed in light materials.
    Following tradition, the palace would have been to the north of actual temple. The temple proper combines two major features of Khmer architecture: a Pyramid and concentric galleries. Pyramid which in most cases were created by mean of stepped terraces date back to the 8 century Ak Yum and the better known 9th century Bakong, and were the Khmer method of symbolizing the center of the Hindu universe, Mount Meru, in the form of a temple mountain. Galleries, however, evolved later, around beginning of the 11th century; they were natural succession to a growing number of annex buildings surrounding the Sanctuary. Angkor Wat is, to put it as simply as possible, a Pyramid of three levels, each one enclosed by a well -developed gallery with four gopuras and corner towers. The summit is crowned with five towers in a quincunx. Back to Top
  • Ta Prohm

    Date: Late 12th to 13th century
    Style: Bayon
    Reign: Jayavarman VII, enlarged by Indravarman II
    Visit: at least 1 hr

    Highlights

    One of the major temples of Jayavarman VII -in fact, a temple-monastery-Ta Prohm features a set of concentric galleries with corner towers and gopuras, but with many other additional buildings and enclosures. The complex city of its lay out is increased by its partly collapsed state, with trees interlaced among the ruins. According to its steel, which until recently was In situ, the principle divinities of Ta Prohm were installed 1186 to transfer merit the king's mother the principle deity, prajnaparamita, the (perfection of wisdom) was carved in her likeness (similarly, the Principe deity of Preah Khan, Lokesvara, was carved in the likeness of - The king's father). This was only five years after Jayavarman's accession, making it clear that much of the building work took place throughout and after his reign.
    Ta prohm's original name was Rajavihara the royal monastery). In the initial plan for Ta Prohm, 260 divinities were called for; many more were added later, this was the temple chosen by the Ecol Francaise d'extreme- Oreint to be left in its "Natural state" as an example of how most of Angkor looked on its discovery in the 19th Century. This was an inspired decision, and involved a significant amount of work to prevent further collapse and enough clearing of vegetation to allow entry. It has been maintained in this Condition of apparent neglect. : Partly overgrown and gently declining. The trees that have grown intertwined among the ruins are especially responsible for Ta Prohm's atmosphere, and have prompted more writers to descriptive excess than any others. Back to Top

    Feature of Angkor

    There are two species: the larger is the silk cotton tree (Ceiba pentadra) distinguished by its thick, pale brown roots with a knobby texture, the smaller is the strangler fig (ficus gibbosa), with a greater mass of thinner, smother grey roots. In both cases, the plant takes hold in a crevice somewhere in the superstructure of a building, usually where a bird had deposited the seed, and extends roots downwards to the soil. In doing this, the root work their way between the nonstories, so that as they grow thicker, they gradually wedge open the blocks.
    eventually the tree becomes a support for the building, but when it dies, or is felled by a storm, the loosened blocks collapse. in this way, the trees are agents of destruction. in the itineraries below, we point out some of the prominent trees but remember that they are temporary feature. Back to Top

    Plan

    Because of the jumble of closely-spaced buildings and galleries at the heart of Ta Prohm, most published plan omit to show the outer enclosures. This helps to give a false sense of the scale in particular of the great size the urban area beyond the temple Proper, now forested, apart from some occasionally farmed area in the east, this outer area was in its day a fully inhabited city. Beyond it, 3,140 villages and 79,365 lay people helped to maintain the whole enterprise. The outer wall measures 1 km E-W and 650 m N-S, certainly big enough to accommodate the 12,640 people mentioned in the temple's inscription. Within, another wall 250 m + 220 m marks the fourth enclosure (numbered as usual with Khmer temples, from the center outwards). Similar proportion is repeated at Preah Khan and Banteay kdei, which build at about the same time. Back to Top
  • The Bayon

    Date: Late 12th to late 13th century, construction probably starting about 1200
    Style: Bayon
    Reign: Jayavarman VII to Jayavarman VIII
    Visit: 2 hrs

    Highlights

    This, the State Temple of Jayavarman VII and his immediate successors, is one of the most enigmatic and powerful religious constructions in the world. The temple is extremely complex both in terms of its structure and meaning, having passed through different religious phases from Pantheon of the Gods, Hindu worship and Buddhism. It uses, uniquely, a mass of face-towers to create a stone mountain of ascending peaks. There is some dispute about the number of towers.
    There were originally 49 towers even though Paul Mus thought there should be 54. Today only 37 are standing. Most are carved with four faces on each cardinal point but sometimes there are only three or even just two. The central tower has many more. Readers are invited to write in when they have counted them all. Whatever the final number the overall effect is quite overwhelming. Back to Top

    Plan

    The Bayon has gone through several architectural changes, with additions that are responsible for the complexity and crowding at its centre. This is because the city of Angkor Thom was so well fortified that later kings found it simpler to re-model the Bayon rather than remove it and build their own new State Temple which would have had to have been in the same place at the centre of the city. Its plan is distinctive and has many peculiarities.
    The temple itself is composed of two galleried enclosures, which are almost square, but also on three levels, because of the rebuilding described below. The approach, which is probably later, is a broad, two-tiered terrace, 72m long and guarded by lions, leading to the eastern gopura of the outer enclosure, which measures 156m x 141m. This is the first, at ground level and is surrounded by a gallery with corner pavilions and gopuras. Within this, the inner enclosure is 80m x 70m, and is slightly offset, in common with most Khmer temples, away from the entrance. Between the 3rd and 2nd enclosure, can be clearly seen traces of 16 large chapels where Buddhist and local divinities were housed. They were demolished by Jayavarman VIII.
    The confusion of the Bayon begins inside the inner enclosure, where additional construction has made a complex arrangement of galleries and towers on the second level. Within the almost-square surround of galleries, another set of redented galleries in each corner enclose a cross shape. It is generally agreed that the original gallery was cross-shaped, and that the corners that make it now rectangular were added later.
    Almost filling the cross-shaped gallery walls is the 3rd level – the upper terrace, also later – and in the centre of this rises the central massif, which is, very unusually, round. 25m in diameter, it reaches a height of 43m above ground-level, and is connected to a series of small chambers to the east. In fact, it was originally cruciform in plan, but later radiating chapels filled in the ‘circle’.
    Dominating the whole arrangement of galleries and terraces are the face-towers, some over the gopuras, others over the corner angles, yet others free-standing on the upper terrace. As mentioned above the numbers of faces are in dispute. Equally, the actual numbers of towers do not have any symbolic significance as many were added later. Their different individual heights combined with the different levels of the temple create the impression of a forest of towers rising towards the centre.
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  • PREAH KHAN

    Date: Late 12th century (1191)
    Style: Bayon
    Reign: Jayavarman VII, alterations by Jayavarman VIII
    Visit: At least 1hr

    Highlights

    One of Jayavarman VII’s largest projects, Preah Khan was much more than a temple: with over 1,000 teachers it appears also to have been a Buddhist university, as well as a considerable city. As at Ta Prohm, the foundation stele was discovered in situ, and it gives a considerable amount of information about the temple, its foundation and its maintenance.
    It was probably the site of the previous palace of Yasovarman II and Tribhuvanadityavarman, while references to a ‘lake of blood’ indicate that Preah Khan was built on the site of a major battle in the recapture of Angkor from the Chams, and the Cham king died here. Just as Ta Prohm was dedicated to the king’s mother as Prajñaparamita, so Preah Khan, five years later in 1191, was dedicated to the king’s father, Dharanindravarman. In his likeness, a statue of the bodhisattva Lokesvara, Jayavarmesvara, was consecrated in this year. In other shrines in the city there were 430 secondary deities. Back to Top

    Plan

    Preah Khan is located on the western edge of its own long baray, the Jayatataka, and a terraced landing-stage at the end of the temple’s W-E axis gave access to the lake. A moat encloses the city, which covers 800m x 700m – 56 hectares. Within the outer wall, most of the space was occupied by the city dwellings.
    The third enclosure, 200m x 175m, is bounded by another laterite wall, with four gopuras, of which the eastern one is the grandest. Inside, much of the space between the wall and the second enclosure is taken up with additional structures and ponds, including a Hall of Dancers on the E side, subsidiary galleried enclosures on the N, W and S, and ponds of different sizes in each of the four corners.
    There is little space between the wall of the second enclosure, 85m x 76m, and the gallery of the inner enclosure, 62m x 55m, and on the east side it is filled with later small buildings. This is nothing, however, compared with the confusion that reigns in the inner enclosure, with small shrines and other structures crowding the four corners that are separated by the axial galleries leading from the central sanctuary. Back to Top
  • NEAK PEAN

    Date: Late 12th century
    Style: Bayon
    Reign: Jayavarman VII
    Visit: 30 to 45 minutes

    Highlights

    This unusual small monument (pronounced ‘Neak Pouan’), a cruciform arrangement of ponds with a sanctuary tower on a circular island in the middle, is pure symbolism. Set in the middle of the Jayatataka baray on what was formerly an island, it may represent the sacred Himalayan lake of Anavatapta. This lake was famous for its miraculous healing properties and as the source of four great rivers issuing through the mouths of a lion, an elephant, a horse and an ox. However, this Buddhist symbolism only came later, during a period of rebuilding, and it was originally a royal Hindu site; the stele of Preah Khan gives its name as Rajyasri – ‘the Fortune of the Kingdom.
    In the 13th century, Zhou Daguan gave a description that is precise about the temple’s location, but different in a number of other respects: “The Northern Lake lies one and a quarter miles to the north of the Walled City. At its centre stands a square tower of gold with several dozen stone rooms. If you are looking for gold lions, bronze elephants, bronze oxen, bronze horses, here is where you will find them.” Back to Top

    Plan

    Like West Baray and East Baray, each with their Mebon, the baray of Preah Khan was also designed with an island temple in its middle. Although the Jayatataka is now dry, the island was a substantial 300m square. At its centre is the main pond, 70m square, with four smaller ponds, each 25m square, joined to it at the cardinal points. In the centre of the main pond, a tiny circular island 14m in diameter supports a sanctuary tower. Surrounding these restored parts were another eight ponds, now dry.

    Visit

    The path reaches Neak Pean from the N. Walk around the edges of the small northern pond to the main pond. The circular island in the middle is encircled at its base by two naga serpents, their heads on its E side and their tails entwined on the W. They seem to represent the naga kings Nanda and Upananda, linked in Hindu mythology with Lake Anavatapta, and give the monument its modern name, which means “entwined serpents”. The top of the circular steps that form the temple’s platform is ringed by lotus leaves. Another set, inverted, forms the base of the tower.
    The sanctuary opens to the E, with blind doors on the other three sides. Originally the temple was cruciform with doors on all four sides. Later the doors were closed and elephants were placed at the corners making the temple round. A standing Lokesvara is carved on each of the blind doors. Above the one facing you on the N side, whose head was recently stolen, the pediment shows the ‘Great Departure’. On the E pediment is the cutting of Siddartha’s hair, on the W pediment the Buddha in meditation under the bodhi tree, while that on the S is unrecognizable. The tower itself is ogival and topped with a lotus bud.
    Just to the E of the island, the statue of a flying horse rises from the water. Clinging to its tail and its flanks is a group of men. Although unfinished, the horse is clearly Balaha, one of the forms taken by the compassionate Bodhisattva Lokesvara, and in this instance he is helping seafaring merchants escape from an island inhabited by an ogress. Balaha also appears in the hidden part of the Terrace of the Elephants in Angkor Thom. Stone images were found on the other three sides of the island: a statue of Vishnu to the West, some lingas to the North, and an unrecognizable image to the South
    Four small chapels link the main pond with the smaller ones; only their vaulted roofs appear above the level of the terrace surrounding the pond, and these are decorated with pediments and half-pediments. Enter from the side of each small pond. Inside, at the end, is a sculpted fountainhead. It seems that water would emerge when visitors poured water from the main pond into the small receptacle in the steps above. This then passes through a conduit to emerge from the mouth. That in the eastern chapel, in the form of a man’s face, is the best carved; the others are a lion in the southern chapel, a horse in the W, and an elephant in the N. Apart from the replacement of an ox with a man, these correspond with the legend of Lake Anavatapta. The Buddha on the E pediment of the N chapel has been transformed into a linga, during the reign of King Jayavarman VIII. Back to Top
  • KBAL SPEAN

    Date: Possibly 11th to 12th centuries
    Style: Bapuon
    Reign: Udayadityavarman II
    Visit: 1 ½ hrs

    Highlights

    Location: 50 km northeast of Siem Reap The Siem Reap river (Stung Siem Reap in Khmer), which flows through the main Angkor group and the town of Siem Reap to drain into the Tonle Sap, rises in the western part of the Kulen Mountains north of Banteay Srei. One of its tributaries, the Stung Kbal Spean, flows into it from an outlying hill, the Phnom Kbal Spean. In these upper reaches, it tumbles down the steep hillside, cutting through sandstone strata, and here, just above a fine waterfall, images of the gods have been carved directly into the river bed along a 150-metre stretch that was discovered only in 1968 by Jean Boulbet. Among these are groups of many stubby lingas arranged in rows, and these gave it its Sanskrit name, Sahasralinga, ‘River of a Thousand Lingas’.
    The fields of lingas are indeed striking, but of greater sculptural interest are the several carvings of Vishnu Reclining in the stream bed. The other two members of the Hindu trinity, Shiva and Brahma, are also represented. Whether the carvings are dry or submerged depends on the water level and so the season, and they are probably at their most evocative at the end of the rainy season, when the fast-flowing water courses around but does not completely submerge the majority. Ever since the first Khmer ruler, Jayavarman II, proclaimed himself emperor ot the world in 802, these hills have been regarded as having deep historical and religious significance.
    Fortunately, there are several inscriptions carved into the rock, and these date everything to the reign of Udayadityavarman II. With the exception of the one that refers to ‘a thousand lingas’, authored by an elder minister of Suryavarman I in 1054, these inscriptions, carved by hermits, do not refer directly to the sculptures. However, they are of the same period, clearly Bapuon style in 1059 King Udayadityavarman came here to consecrate a golden linga. Back to Top

    Plan

    The rock-cut sculptures, some washed by rapids, others submerged in natural pools, and yet others on the rock faces above the water-line, cover a 150m stretch of the river between a natural stone bridge and a waterfall. There are four principal groups, in each case taking advantage of the natural features, which include outcrops, pools and vertical faces.
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  • BENG MEALEA

    Date: Middle of the 12th century, with later additions
    Style: Angkor Wat
    Reign: Suryavarman II
    Visit: 45mins – 1 ½ hrs

    Highlights

    Though unrestored, and in a fairly ruinous state, the large temple of Beng Mealea (‘Lotus Pond’) some 40 km due east of Angkor on the ancient royal way to the ‘great Preah Khan’ of Kompong Svay (another 60 km further on), is one of the major monuments of the classical period, in the style of Angkor Wat and roughly contemporary with it. Whoever built it must have been a figure of some importance, but he remains unknown, as no inscriptions have been found here, and no other that mentions it. Its position was strategic, where the royal way to Koh Ker in the NE forks from the road E to the ‘great Preah Khan’, and also at the head of a canal that leads directly to the Great Lake, down which sandstone blocks from the nearby quarries could have been floated on their way to Angkor.
    Its chaotic state, with collapsed galleries and towers (the central sanctuary is virtually a pit, with no superstructure whatsoever) may be due to a variety of causes. The most important is simply the wear and tear of eight and a half centuries in a tropical climate, with the spread of vegetation, including the silk-cotton tree and strangler fig, going to work on some ambitious vaulting which was being tried out here and at Angkor Wat for the first time. It is not known whether there was any iconoclasm, a possibility whenever there is evidence of different faiths practiced, as here. Happily, there is no evidence of recent looting. There is a considerable disorder, but very romantic for all that.
    Many of the early French scholars thought highly of this temple for both its architecture and its decoration. Coedès made a special study of its carving, and Groslier considered it to be a prototype, with a “harmony, powerful sober”. Its history is completely unknown, and it can be dated only by its style, which is of the mid-12th century. Beng Mealea was built of blue sandstone from local quarries, and while there are no narrative bas-relief panels as at Angkor Wat, there is a fair amount of decoration on walls and pilasters, all of a high standard, as well as apsaras, lintels and a few pediments. The religious history is also unknown, with carvings showing legends of Vishnu, Shiva and the Buddha. Back to Top

    Plan

    The temple marked the centre of a town, surrounded by a moat 1025m by 875m, and 45m wide. Four paved avenues lead via cruciform terraces to the entrances at the cardinal points, and it is oriented to the E. Directly to the E of the complex is a large baray, with a small island containing a shrine in its centre, as usual.
    In plan, Beng Mealea reminds one of Angkor Wat, though all at ground level with no temple mountain. There are three concentric enclosures, each one set back slightly to the west, with the central shrine at the intersection of the axes (and so the intersection of the town’s avenues as well). These enclosures are tied together with ‘cruciform cloisters’, just as at Angkor Wat, and in the NE and SE corners of the enclosures are shrines of the kind known wrongly as ‘libraries’. Also as at Angkor Wat, Beng Mealea has some impressive stone vaulting, and half-vaults that work as a king of buttressing.
    In plan, Beng Mealea reminds one of Angkor Wat, though all at ground level with no temple mountain. There are three concentric enclosures, each one set back slightly to the west, with the central shrine at the intersection of the axes (and so the intersection of the town’s avenues as well). These enclosures are tied together with ‘cruciform cloisters’, just as at Angkor Wat, and in the NE and SE corners of the enclosures are shrines of the kind known wrongly as ‘libraries’. Also as at Angkor Wat, Beng Mealea has some impressive stone vaulting, and half-vaults that work as a king of buttressing.
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  • Angkor Thom

    The name means 'Great City'. It was the last capital of the Angkorian rule. The temple shows the materialization of Buddhist cosmology. It still represents the Cambodian people and their life today. There are many temples and sites within the walls of Angkor Thom including the Bayon, Terrace of Elephants, Terrace of the Leper King and Prasat Suor Prat. Angkor Thom is enclosed by five decorative entrances. Each of the gates is crowned with four giant faces. Back to Top
  • Prek Toal Bird Sanctuary

    Prek Toal is one of three biospheres on Tonle Sap Lake, and the establishment of the bird sanctuary makes Prek Toal the most worthwhile and straightforward to visit. It is an ornithologist’s fantasy, with a significant number of rare breeds gathered in one small area, including the huge lesser and greater adjutant storks, the milky stork and the spot-billed pelican. Even the uninitiated will be impressed, as these birds have a huge wingspan and build enormous nests.
    Visitors during the dry season (December to May) will find the concentration of birds like something out of a Hitchcock film. As water starts to dry up elsewhere, the birds congregate here. Serious twitchers know that the best time to see birds is early morning or late afternoon and this means an early start or an overnight at Prek Toal’s environment office, where there are basic beds for US$7. For real enthusiasts, it may be best to head out of Siem Reap after lunch, to get to the sanctuary at around 4pm for an afternoon viewing. Stay overnight and view the birds in the morning before returning to town. Back to Top
  • Banteay Kdei

    I just loved this temple as it is a temple that co-exists with the surrounding jungle. The jungle is intertwined with the temple. It was built in the last 12th century. It is another Buddhist temple. It functioned as a Buddhist monastery under Jayavarman VII. Unfortunately it's not in good condition as the sandstone used to make this temple was not the same quality and workmanship as the other temples. Back to Top
  • Ang Trapeng Thmor Reserve (Northwest of Siem Reap, about 100km)

    There is another bird sanctuary, Ang Trapeng Thmor Reserve (admission US$10), just across the border in the Phnom Srok region of Banteay Meanchey Province, about 100km from Siem Reap. It’s one of only two places in the world where it is possible to see the extremely rare sarus crane, as depicted on bas-reliefs at Bayon. These grey-feathered birds have immensely long leg and striking red heads. The reserve is based around a reservoir created by forced labour during the Khmer Rouge regime, and facilities are very basic, but it is an incredibly beautiful place. Bring your own binoculars, however, as none are available. To reach here, follow the road to Sisophon for about 72km before turning north at Prey Mon. It’s 22km to the site, passing through some famous silk-weaving villages. The Sam Veasna Centre arranges birding trips out here, which is probably the easiest way to undertake the trip. It also arranges specialist birding trips to remote parts of northwestern Cambodia. Back to Top
  • Floating Village of Chong Kneas

    This famous floating village is now extremely popular with visitors wanting a break from the temples, and is an easy excursion to arrange with temple guide. Visitors arriving by fast boat get a preview, as the floating village is near Phnom Krom, where the boat docks. It is very scenic in the warm light of early morning or late afternoon and can be combined with a view of the sunset from the hilltop temple of Phnom Krom. The downside is that tour groups tend to take over, and boats end up chugging up and down the channels in convoy. Visitors should ask tour guide for the floating village and helps to unlock the secrets of the Tonle Sap. It has displays on flora and fauna of the area, as well as information on communities living around the lake. The village moves depending on the season and you will need to rent a boat to get around it properly. On top of this, the Koreans are charging for the new road and the local police for security. To get to the floating village from Siem Reap costs  US$15 by taxi. The trip takes at least one hour,traditional wooden boat including driver $ 10 US per person. Back to Top
  • Flooded Forest of Kompong Phhluk

    More memorable than Chong Kneas, but harder to reach, is the village of Kompong Phhluk, an other-worldly place built on soaring stilts. Nearby is a flooded forest, inundated every year when the lake rises to take the Mekong’s overflow. As the lake drops, the petrified trees are revealed. Exploring this area by wooden dugout in the wet season is very atmospheric. The village itself is a friendly place, where most of the houses are built on stilts of about 6m or 7m high, almost bamboo skyscrapers. It looks like it’s straight out of a film set.
    There are two ways to get to Kompong Phhluk. One is to come via the floating village of Chong Kneas, where a boat (one hour) can be arranged for about US$15 per person round trip, and the other is to come via the small town of Roluos by a combination of road  but it depends on the season – sometimes it’s more by road,  Back to Top
  • Kompong Khleang

    One of the largest communities on the Tonle Sap, Kompong Khleang is almost a floating town, complete with several large pagodas. Like Kompong Phhluk, most of the houses here are built on towering stilts to allow for a dramatic change in water level. Few tourists have visited here, but it is not that difficult to reach from Siem Reap. It is possible to get here by road via the town of Dam Dek or by boat from the floating village of Chong Kneas.Traditional wooden boat including driver $ 15 US per person Back to Top
  • Phnom Kulen ( Northeast of Siem Reap, 65km away)

    Phnom Kulen is considered by Khmers to be the most sacred mountain in Cambodia and is a popular place of pilgrimage during weekends and festivals. It played a significant role in the history of the Khmer empire, as it was from here in AD 802 that Jayavarman II proclaimed himself a devaraja (god-king) and announced independence from Java, giving birth to modern-day Cambodia. There is a small wat at the summit of the mountain, which houses a large reclining Buddha carved into the sandstone boulder upon which it is built. Nearby is a large waterfall and above it are smaller bathing areas and a number of carvings in the riverbed, including numerous lingas. The bad news is that a private businessman bulldozed a road up here back in 1999 and charges a US$20 toll per foreign visitor, an ambitious fee compared with what you get for your money at Angkor. None of the toll goes towards preserving the site.
    The new road winds its way through some spectacular jungle scenery, emerging on the plateau after a 20km ascent. The road eventually splits: the left fork leads to the picnic spot, waterfalls and ruins of a 9th-century temple; the right fork continues over a bridge and some riverbed carvings to the reclining Buddha. This is the focal point of a pilgrimage here for Khmer people, so it is important to take off your shoes and any head covering before climbing the stairs to the sanctuary. The views from the 487m peak are tremendous, as you can see right across the forested plateau.
    The waterfall is an attractive spot, but could be much more beautiful were it not for all the litter left here by families picnicking at the weekend. Near the top of the waterfall is a jungle-clad temple known as Prasat Krau Romeas, dating from the 9th century.
    There are plenty of other Angkorian sites on Phnom Kulen, including as many as 20 minor temples around the plateau, the most important of which is Prasat Rong Chen, the first pyramid or temple-mountain to be constructed in the Angkor area. Most impressive of all are the giant stone animals or guardians of the mountain, known as Sra Damrei (Elephant Pond). These are very difficult to get to, with the route passing through mined sections of the mountain (stick to the path!) and the trail impossible in the wet season. The few people who make it, however, are rewarded with a life-sized replica of a stone elephant – a full 4m long and 3m tall – and smaller statues of lions, a frog and a cow. These were constructed on the southern face of the mountain and from here there are spectacular views across the plains below. Getting here requires taking a moto from Wat Preah Ang Thom for about 12km on very rough trails through thick forest before arriving at a sheer rock face. From here it is a 1km walk to the animals through the forest. Don’t try to find it on your own; expect to pay the moto driver about US$20 (with some hard negotiating) and carry plenty of water, as none is available.
    Before the construction of the private road up Phnom Kulen, visitors had to scale the mountain and then walk across the top of the plateau to the reclining Buddha. This route takes more than two hours and is still an option. About 15km east of the new road, the trail winds its way to a small pagoda called Wat Chou, set into the cliff face from which a tuk chou (spring) emerges. The water is considered holy and Khmers like to bottle it to take home with them. This water source eventually flows into Tonle Sap Lake and is thought to bless the waterways of Cambodia.
    Phnom Kulen is a huge plateau around 50km from Siem Reap and about 15km from Banteay Srei. To get here on the new toll road, take the well-signposted right fork just before Banteay Srei village and go straight ahead at the crossroads. Just before the road starts to climb the mountain, there is a barrier and it is here that the US$20 charge is levied. It is only possible to go up before 11am and only possible to come down after midday, to avoid vehicles meeting on the narrow road.
    To walk to the site, head east along the base of the mountain from the major crossroads. After about 15km, there is a wat-style gate on the left and a sandy trail. Follow this to a small community from where the climb begins. It is about a 2km climb and then an hour or more in a westerly direction along the top of the plateau. This route of the pilgrims of old should cost nothing if you arrive after midday, although it takes considerably longer. Moto drivers are likely to want about US$15 or more to bring you out here, and rented cars will hit passengers with a surcharge, more than double the going rate for Angkor; forget coming by remorque as the hill climb is just too tough. Back to Top
  • Banteay Chhmar & Banteay Top (Northwest of Cambodia, From Siem Reap to Banteay Chhmar 154 km away)

    The temple complex of Banteay Chhmar (admission US$5) was constructed by Cambodia’s most prolific builder, Jayavarman VII (r 1181-1220), on the site of a 9th-century temple. There is debate over its origins, with some scholars suggesting it was built in tribute to Jayavarman VII’s son Indravarman and the Cambodian generals responsible for defeating the Chams, while others propose it was intended as a funerary temple for the king’s grandmother.
    Originally enclosed by a 9km-long wall, the temple housed one of the largest and most impressive Buddhist monasteries of the Angkorian period. Today, it is one of the few temples to feature the enigmatic, Bayon-style visages of Avalokiteshvara, with their mysterious – and world famous – smiles.
    On the temple’s east side, a huge bas-relief on a party-toppled wall dramatically depicts naval warfare between the Khmers (on the left) and the Chams (on the right), with the dead – some being devoured by crocodiles – at the bottom. Further south (to the left) are scenes of land warfare with infantry and elephants. There are more martial bas-reliefs along the exterior of the temple’s south walls.
    The once-grand entry gallery is now a jumble of fallen sandstone blocks, though elsewhere a few intersecting galleries have withstood the ravages of time, as have some almost-hidden 12th-century inscriptions. All the remaining apsaras (nymphs) have been decapitated by looters.
    Banteay Chhmar was deservedly renowned for its intricate carvings, including scenes of daily life in the Angkorian period similar to those at Bayon. Unique to Banteay Chhmar was a sequence of eight multi-armed Avalokiteshvaras on the outside of the southern section of the temple’s western ramparts, but six of these were hacked out and trucked into Thailand in a brazen act of looting in 1998. Still, the two that remain – one with 22 arms, the other with 32 – are spectacular.
    There are as many as a dozen smaller temples in the vicinity of Banteay Chhmar, all in a ruinous state. These include Prasat Mebon, Prasat Yeay Choun, Prasat Pranang Ta Sok and Prasat Chiem Trey. At the headquarters of the Banteay Chhmar Protected Landscape (017 971225), 2km towards Sisiphon from town, it may be possible to hire a guide (non-English speaking) for a nature walk.
    Through Agir Pour le Cambodge, you can participate in traditional activities such as honey collecting and the hunting of frogs and rice-field crabs (US$10 for a group). It may also be possible to visit local silk weavers. A ride out to Banteay Top costs US$5 by ox-cart or US$6 by koyun (tractor). Renting a bicycle costs US$1.50 a day.
    Banteay Top (Fortress of the Army), set among rice paddies southeast of Banteay Chhmar, may only be a small temple but there’s something special about the atmosphere here. Constructed around the same time as Banteay Chhmar, it may be a tribute to the army of Jayavarman VII, which confirmed Khmer dominance over the region by conclusively defeating the Chams. One of the damaged towers looks decidedly precarious, like a bony finger pointing skyward. The turn-off from NH69, marked by a stone plinth with gold inscription, is 9km south of Banteay Chhmar. Back to Top
  • Anlong Veng ( 120km from Siem Reap)

    For almost a decade this was the ultimate Khmer Rouge stronghold: home to Pol Pot, Nuon Chea, Khieu Samphan and Ta Mok, among the most notorious leaders of Democratic Kampuchea. Anlong Veng fell to government forces in April 1998 at the same time as Pol Pot died mysteriously nearby. Soon after, Prime Minister Hun Sen ordered that NH67 be bulldozed through the jungle to ensure that the population didn’t have second thoughts about ending the war.
    Today Anlong Veng is a poor, dusty town with little going for it except the nearby Choam-Choam Srawngam border crossing, which takes you to a pretty isolated part of Thailand. The average visitor will find little to see or do here, but for those with a keen interest in contemporary Cambodian history its Khmer Rouge sites are an important – if troubling and enigmatic – part of the picture.

    Orientation & Information

    Anlong Veng’s focal point is the Dove of Peace Monument – a gift of Hun Sen – in the middle of a roundabout. From here, roads lead north to the Choam border crossing, east to Sa Em and Prasat Preah Vihear, and south to Siem Reap (along NH67). There’s nowhere to access the internet. Acleda Bank, the only bank in town, handles travelers cheques.

    Sights & Activities

    Most of Anlong Veng’s sights are connected with the terrible Khmer Rouge years.

    PILE OF RUBBLE

    An Angkorian temple used to stand in the southeast corner of the yard behind Hun Sen Anlong Veng Primary School – formerly Ta Mok Primary School – but it was turned into a jumble of laterite and sandstone blocks by Ta Mok and his army in their search for ancient statues to sell to the Thais. The school is 600m east of the roundabout. Back to Top
  • TA MOK’S HOUSE & GRAVE

    To his former supporters, many of whom still reside around Anlong Veng, Ta Mok (Uncle Mok, AKA Brother Number Five) was harsh but fair, a benevolent builder of orphanages and schools, and a leader who kept order in stark contrast to the anarchic atmosphere that prevailed once the government took over. But to most Cambodians, Pol Pot’s military enforcer, responsible for thousands of deaths in successive purges during the terrible years of Democratic Kampuchea, was best known as ‘The Butcher’. Arrested in 1999, he died in July 2006 in a Phnom Penh hospital, awaiting trial for genocide and crimes against humanity.
    Ta Mok’s home (admission US$2), on a peaceful lakeside site, is a Spartan structure with a bunker in the basement, five childish wall murals downstairs and three more murals upstairs, including a map and an idyllic wildlife scene. About the only furnishings that weren’t looted are the floor tiles – on these very bits of ceramic, the men who killed 1.7 million Cambodians planned offensives, passed death sentences and joked with friends. The trees around the house have been growing quietly since Khmer Rough times, oblivious to the horrific events swirling around them. The swampy lake was created on Ta Mok’s orders but the water killed all the trees, their skeletons a fitting monument to the devastation he and his movement left behind. In the middle of the lake, due east from the house, is a small brick structure – an outhouses, all that remains of Pol Pot’s residence in Anlong Veng.
    To get to Ta Mok’s house, head north from the Dove of Peace Roundabout for about 2km, turn right and continue 200m past the Tourism Information hut, whose posters promote local curiosities such as ‘Ta Mok’s mango field’. The admission price includes a tour with a knowledgeable English-speaking guide.
    From the turnoff to Ta Mok’s house, driving a further 7km north takes you to Tumnup Leu, where a right turn and 400m brings you to Ta Mok’s grave. Situated next to a very modest pagoda and the concrete foundations of Ta Mok’s sawmill, it is protected from the elements by a blue roof. The tomb has no name or inscription of any sort but this doesn’t seem to bother the locals who stop by to light incense sticks – and, in a bizarre new local tradition, hope his ghost grants them a winning lottery number.

    Along the Thai Frontier

    Further north, atop the escarpment of the Dangkrek Mountains, are a number of other key Khmer Rouge sites, each marked with a light blue Ministry of Tourism sigh. For years the world wondered where Pol Pot and his cronies were hiding out – the answer was right here, close enough to Thailand that they could flee across the border if government forces drew nigh.
    About 2km before the frontier, where the road splits to go around a house-sized boulder, look out for a group of statues – hewn entirely from the surrounding rock by the Khmer Rouge – depicting a woman carrying bundles of bamboo sticks on her head and two uniformed Khmer Rouge soldiers, since decapitated by government forces. Now a macabre place of popular pilgrimage, local people come here to leave offerings of fruit and incense to honour the souls of dead Khmer Rouge soldiers.
    At the pass (a few hundred metres before the frontier), turn right (east) next to a new, cream-coloured, three-storey building and then, after 50m, hang a left. In front of you, under a rusted corrugated iron roof and surrounded by rows of partly buried glass bottles, is the cremation site of Pol Pot, who was hastily burned in 1998 on a pile of old tyres and rubbish – a fitting end, some say, given the suffering he inflicted on millions of Cambodians.
    Bizarre as it may sound, Pol Pot is remembered with affection by some locals, and people sometimes stop by to light incense. According to neighbours, every last bone fragment has been snatched from the ashes by visitors in search of good luck charms – Pol Pot, too, is said to give out winning lottery numbers.
    In 1997 Pol Pot ordered that former Khmer Rouge defence minister Son Sen – who was trying to reach a settlement with the government – and his family be murdered and their bodies run over by trucks. This incident led to Pol Pot’s overthrow and arrest by Ta Mok, followed by his Khmer Rouge show trial (held near the cremation site) and his mysterious death, ostensibly because of a heart attack.
    A few hundred metres north, next to a ramshackle smugglers’ market, is the old Choam-Choam Srawngam border crossing. A bit to the west, right on the nicely paved main road, the Thais have built a spiffy new crossing, but the Cambodians say it’s on Cambodian territory – yet another Thai land grab. So for now, with no end to the dispute in sight, the old facilities will have to do.
    From the smuggler’s market, a dirt road heads east between minefields, parallel to the escarpment. After about 4km you come to the overgrown brick walls and cement floor of another Ta Mok residence, shaded by mango, jackfruit and tamarind trees. Nearby is the cement shell of the Khmer Rouge’s radio station and Peuy Ta Mok (Ta Mok’s Cliff), where domestic tourists come to enjoy spectacular views of Cambodia’s northern plains. Some stay at the six-room Khnong Phnom Dankrek Guesthouse (012 444067; r 30,000r), from which a path leads a few hundred metres east, through the Cliffside jungle, to a waterfall (dry except in the west season). In late 2007, this area was being de-mined by the Halo Trust.
    From here the road continues northeast past minefields, slash-and-burn homesteads and some army bases where soldiers wearing bits and pieces of uniforms sometimes demand that tourists pay bribes. A half-hour moto ride takes you to Khieu Samphan’s house, buried in the jungle on the bank of a stream, from where it’s a few hundred metres along an overgrown road to Pol Pot’s house. Both are marked by signs. Surrounded by a cinderblock wall, the jungle hideout of Brother Number One was comprehensively looted, though you can still see a low brick building whose courtyard hides an underground bunker. Many of the courtyard’s tiles have been carted off, revealing the frozen-in-cement footprints of the trusted Khmer Rouge cadres who built the place.

    Sleeping

    Bot Huddon Guesthouse (Bot Uddom; 011 500507; r US$5-15; Owned by the family of the deputy governor, this establishment – 300m east of the roundabout – has 12 spacious, well-kept rooms with massive hardwood beds.
    23 Tola Guesthouse (012 975104; r US$6-15) Built alongside the owners’ family residence, this new place sports hallways tiled in Delft blue and 27 rooms with light-yellow walls.
    Monorom Guesthouse (012 603339; r US$7-15) Anlong Veng’s finest hostelry, with 20 big, modern rooms; some of the air-con rooms have hot water. Pay when you check in.

    Eating

    South of the roundabout there’s a row of food stalls, some with pots you can peer into, others with blazing braziers barbecuing chicken, fish and eggs on skewers. There are fruit and veggie stalls (6am-about 6pm) around Sheang Hai Restaurant.
    Sheang Hai Restaurant (012 786878; mains 5000-12,000r; 5:30am-9pm or 10pm) Named after the Chinese city of Shanghai (the owner’s nick-name), this all-wood, mess hall-like place serves Chinese and Khmer dishes, including fried rice and tom yam soup.
    Monorom Restaurant (mains 8500r; 6am-9pm) Next to the Monorom Guesthouse, this brightly lit place is the town’s fanciest eatery. If you order a beer, you get hot oily peanuts you can try to eat with chop sticks. Back to Top
  • Koh Ker (Northeast of Siem Reap, 127km)

    Abandoned to the forests of the north, Koh Ker (admission US$10), capital of the Angkorian empire from AD 928 to AD 944, was long one of Cambodia’s most remote and inaccessible temple complexes. However, this has now changed thanks to recent de-mining and the opening of a new toll road from Dam Dek (via Beng Mealea) that puts Koh Ker (pronounced kah-kei) within day-trip distance of Siem Reap. But to really appreciate the temples – the area has 42 major structures in an area that measures 9km by 4km – it’s necessary to spend the night.
    Several of the most impressive pieces in the National Museum in Phnom Penh come from Koh Ker, including the huge garuda (mythical half-man, half-bird creature) that greets visitors in the entrance hall and a unique carving depicting a pair or wrestling monkey-kings.
    Most visitors start at Prasat Krahom (Red Temple), the second-largest structure at Koh Ker, which is named for the red bricks from which it is constructed. Sadly, none of the carved lions for which this temple was once known remain, though there’s still plenty to see – stone archways and galleries lean hither and thither and impressive stone carvings grace lintels, doorposts and slender window columns. A naga-flanked causeway and series of sanctuaries, libraries and gates lead past trees and vegetation-covered ponds. Just west of Prasat Krahom, at the far end of a half-fallen colonnade, are the remains of an impressive statue of Nandin.
    The principal monument at Koh Ker is Prasat Thom (Prasat Kompeng), a 55m-wide, 40m-high sandstone-faced pyramid with seven tiers that’s just west of Prasat Krahom. This striking structure, which looks like it could almost be a Mayan site somewhere on the Yucatan Peninsula, offers some spectacular views across the forest from its summit. Look out for the giant garuda under the collapsed chamber at the top of the vertigo-inducing stairs. Some 40 inscriptions, dating from 932 to 1010, have been found at Prasat Thom. South of this central group is a 1185m-by-548m baray (reservoir) known as the Rahal. It is fed by Stung Sen, which supplied water to irrigate the land in this arid area.
    Some of the largest Shiva linga (phallic symbols) in Cambodia can still be seen in four temples about 1km northeast of Prasat Thom. The largest is in Prasat Thneng, and Prasat Leung (Prasat Balang) is similarly well endowed.
    Other interesting temples: Prasat Bram (Prasat Pram), the first you come to after passing the toll booths (it’ll be on your left), which is named in honour of its five towers, two of which are smothered by strangler figs; Prasat Neang Khmau (Prasat Nean Khmau), a bit further north and on your right, with some fine lintels decorating its otherwise bland exterior; and Prasat Chen (Prasat Chhin), about halfway from the toll booths to Prasat Krahom, where the statue of the wrestling monkeys was discovered.
    Koh Ker is one of the least-studied temple areas from the Angkorian period. Louis Delaporte visited in 1880 during his extensive investigations into Angkorian temples. It was surveyed in 1921 by the great Henri Parmentier for an article in the Bulletin de l’École d’Extrême Orient, but no restoration work was ever undertaken here. Archaeological surveys were carried out by Cambodian teams in the 1950s and 1960s, but all records vanished during the destruction of the 1970s, helping to preserve this complex as something of an enigma. Back to Top
  • Prasat Preah Vihear (North of Siem Reap, about 200km)

    The most dramatically situated of all the Angkorian monuments, 800m-long Prasat Preah Vihear (elevation 730m; admission 10,000r) perches high atop the south-facing cliff face of the Dangkrek Mountains. The views are breathtaking: lowland Cambodia 550m below, stretching as far as the eye can see, with the holy mountain of Phnom Kulen looming in the distance.
    Prasat Preah Vihear, an important place of pilgrimage during the Angkorian period, was built by a succession of seven Khmer monarchs, beginning with Yasovarman I (r 889-910) and ending with Suryavarman II (r 1112-1152), builder of Angkor Wat. Like other temple-mountains from this period, it was designed to represent Mt Meru and was dedicated to the Hindu deity Shiva.
    Start a visit at the monumental stairway, if possible from the bottom (near the market and the crossing from Thailand). As you walk south, you come to four cruciform gopuras (sanctuaries), decorated with a profusion of exquisite carvings and separated by esplanades up to 350m long. At the entrance to the Gopura of the Third Level, look for an early rendition of the Churning of the Ocean of Milk, a theme later depicted awesomely at Angkor Wat. The Central Sanctuary and its associated structures and galleries, in a remarkably good state of repair, are right at the edge of the cliff, which affords stupendous views of Cambodia’s northern plains – this is a fantastic spot for a picnic.
    For more on the carvings of Prasat Preah Vihear and the temple’s history, look out for market vendors selling Preah Vihear by Vittorio Roveda, a readable souvenir book accompanied by some attractive photographs.

    Classic Khmer Ritual Life

    With their many thousands of Hindu devotional structures, from the state temples of Angkor down to the smallest village shrines, and with its huge Mahayana Buddhist complexes and attendant monks, Cambodia’s cities and countryside must have been bustling with religious activity. It is true that Theravada Buddhism had become strong by the time of Zhou’s visit, but the other two religious traditions continued to play important roles.
    Brahmanic Hinduism had been all-pervasive during most of the Classic period, until temporarily (and only partially) eclipsed by Jayavarman VII’s Mahayanism. Hinduism is not a congregational religion such as Buddhism or Christianity, but is centred on individual devotion and worship of a god or goddess in a ritual that was always under the care of Brahmin priest. The temple or shrine was there to provide a house in which the deity could take up temporary residence; there he (or she) would have a place to eat, to be bathed, and even to sleep. If everything was well conducted, the god would then come to life in his/her own stone, wood or metal image.
    Devotion was a two-way, supernatural contract. To the god the devotee gave offerings of flowers, incense, fruit, clarified butter, coconut juice and the like; in return, the devotee received back from the deity the now-blessed offering (prasad), along with the spiritual well-being (darshan) that resulted from eye contact with the now-live image. In this sense, each of the thousands of Classic Cambodian sculptures of the gods to be seen in museums, in collections, and in the Angkor conservation facility had once resided in a darkened shrine or sanctum at the centre of a temple establishment, and had been worshipped according to established Brahmanic practice.
    The Khmer worshipper, alone or in a group, would have come to the temple with the appropriate offerings, and moved in a set way from the decorated outer structures of the complex towards the central shrine where the god lived, proceeding around the sacred space in an ever-decreasing, clockwise direction (this is pradakshina, the auspicious direction). As he neared the sanctum, he passed through structures outside of it in which were halls where the god was taken for his washing, sleeping or entertainment by dancers and musicians.
    The sanctum itself was dark and undecorated, and entrance was only allowed to the Brahmin officiant, who acted as an intermediary between the devotee and the deity. The priest took the offering, and in turn offered it to the god, anointing it with the liquid oblations, and decorating the image with garlands. After the image was censed, the priest passed a lamp before it, which was then brought to the worshippers so that they could pass their hands quickly through the flames. Finally, with hands raised and folded palm to palm, the devotee established eye contact with the god, and was granted darshan.
    We may be sure that for the wealthy, and for the ruler and members of the royal family, temple rituals were splendid affairs, with orchestral music, large troupes of temple dancers and temple elephants in procession. But even the king had to prostrate himself humbly before the gods, as Bayon relief scenes of Jayavarman VII worshipping at shrines of the gods Vishnu and Shiva prove. One can now understand why Cambodian artists and architects placed sandstone lintels elaborately carved with garlands and vegetation over temple doors – portals that were guarded by divine youths (dvarapalas) and lovely maidens (devatas): it was to make a beautiful home in which a deity might be happy to reside.
    On entering a temple, Buddhists, be they Mahayanist or Theravada (as many were by the end of the thirteenth century), paid devotion to the ‘Three Jewels’ or ‘Three Refuges’: 1) the Buddha, represented by an image, a stupa (burial monument), or a bodhi tree, the tree under which the Founder reached Enlightenment; 2) the Dhamma or Dharma, Buddha’s teaching, represented by a sermon or informal teaching by the monks; and 3) the Sangha, the community of monks. The devotee showed reverence before the sacred objects by bowing three times while standing or kneeling with the palms joined.
    As with Hindu devotion, offerings, accompanied by chanted verses, were made to the images, and usually consisted of flowers, incense, and sometimes a ritual scarf. In Mahayanist practice, the offerings were quite elaborate, with seven different oblations, each in its own bowl. Mahayana Buddhists, who included Jayavarman VII, paid special homage to images of Avalokiteshvara, the Bodhisattva of infinite compassion and mercy; in this branch of Buddhism, images were imbued with the spirit and power of the being they represented, but for the more austere Theravadists, they were merely reminders of Buddha’s life and message. Regardless, all images had to be consecrated before they could fulfil their function, whether in a temple like the Bayon or in a pagoda.
    Buddhism in Southeast Asia has, and probably had in Classic times, its own annual cycle of festivals, set by full moons; how this was integrated into the festival season described by Zhou is unknown. Back to Top
  • Warfare and the Military

    There seems never to have been a time in Cambodia’s history when Khmers were not fighting each other, or waging war on foreign enemies. For the Classic Khmer period, while Zhou Daguan and the inscribed monuments have little to say on the subject, there is abundant pictorial information on armaments, order of battle and actual warfare in the reliefs of Angkor Wat, the Bayon and Banteay Chhmar. Even the Buddha’s message of peace and his prohibition on the taking of life did not deter Jayavarman VII from glorifying what seems to have been his great and bloody defeat of the Cham invaders in gruesome detail.
    The ordinary Khmer soldiers as well as officers might carry a lance; or a bow, with the arrows being held in a quiver; or sabers of different length; or various sizes of knives and daggers; or a kind of halberd known as a phka’k. The latter was basically an iron axe mounted on a long handle curved at one end. At Angkor Wat, the phka’k is held in the hands of high-ranking warriors mounted on elephants or horses; it was still in use in the twentieth century for hunting and work in the forest. Crossbows were known, but are extremely rare in the reliefs.
    For personal defence, there were two kinds of shields: round ones ornamented with vegetal or flower motifs, and long ones ornamented on the top border. The latter could be grouped together to form a kind of rampart. Both were probably of wood and hide, with metal plaques. Although most warriors wore only a kind of short-sleeved jacket (sometimes resembling the quilted cotton ‘armour’ in use in Mesoamerica), many were protected by a cylindrical cuirass, often with one or two knives lashed over it for close combat.
    Far more sophisticated armament is to be seen on the Bayon and at Banteay Chhmar, especially among the infantry. This includes a ballista, mounted either on elephant back or on a wheeled vehicle that could be rolled onto the field of battle; it consisted of two opposed bows, worked by two men, and shot arrows with tremendous force. Michel Jacq-Hergoualc’h, the leading authority on Khmer warfare, believes it may be of Chinese origin. Shield ‘ramparts’ mounted on wheels are another innovation of Jayavarman VII’s reign.
    A combat unit consisted of foot soldiers, three to four mounted cavalrymen, and one war elephant. Elephants were reserved for the king and for his highest officers; these stood on roofless, decorated howdahs, with a mahout placed in front to direct the elephant, and wielded various kinds of weapons – the lance-and-shield, the phka’k , or the bow-and-arrow. Cavalry horses were ridden without saddle or stirrups, and during combat the mounted knights often stood on their steeds’ backs. In the great procession depicted at Angkor Wat, the riders (and some infantrymen) were distinguished by headgear in the shape of eagle or deer heads. War chariots were very similar to naga-decorated carts, but were roofless, and drawn by pairs of horses.
    Some sections of the Khmer army consisted of foreign mercenaries, such as the colorful Siamese (Thai) unit depicted in the South Gallery relief of Angkor Wat, with their beaded, wig-like headgear and beaded jackets and skirts; these were led by a Thai general mounted on an elephant. Even traditional enemies like the Cham (recognizable from their flower-like headdress) or the Vietnamese could be recruited into the military service of the Angkor state.
    The Khmer army on the march must have been an impressive sight – and sound. It was accompanied by military music produced by a huge gong struck by a dwarfish person, long trumpets, bronze castanets, and blasts from conch shells. The ark of Sacred Fire, under the care of Brahmin priest, was carried along into battle, and there were parasols, banners and battle standards. The latter consisted of a staff mounted with the small bronze figure of one of the monkey generals from the Ramayana, or of Vishnu mounted on Garuda, or of Garuda by himself. Supplies and food for the army were brought in covered wagons drawn by bullocks, and even on pack elephants, while pigs were driven along the route of March. There were many camp-followers, perhaps the wives and children of the soldiers. Women of far higher rank traveled with the army in palanquins, rickshaws and sedan chairs.
    Great naval battles with the Cham appear on the Bayon and at Banteay Chhmar, both sides employing essentially identical ships embellished with garudas on the prow and nagas on the stern. Each vessel had 20 to 42 rowers plus a steersman, and must have been enormous. These bloody engagements on the waters of the Great Lake included the use of grappling hooks.
    Zhou Daguan was unimpressed by Khmer military know-how, denigrating it with the brief statement, ‘Generally speaking, these people have neither discipline nor strategy.’ Back to Top
  • Thought and Culture in Classic Angkor

    The Brahmins who brought Indic culture and learning to the royal courts of mainland Southeast Asia during the early centuries of our era continued to play that role throughout the Classic period, and in the royal palaces of Cambodia and Thailand, right into modern times. These intellectuals acted as priests of the temples, teachers, royal chaplains, librarians, astrologers, and in all likelihood architects and calligraphers. It was they who cast the horoscopes for all important events, who interpreted the Vedas and the Hindu laws to the empire’s power brokers, who designed temples in which the great gods could reside, who conducted all ritual, who tended and carried the Sacred Fire, and who kept the calendars.
    All this learning depended upon writing. There are over 1,200 inscriptions known for the ancient Khmer world, almost all from the Early Kingdoms and Classic periods. These were incised into polished stone, and most appear on the doorjambs of temples and on free-standing, four-sided stelae. They are read in horizontal lines from left to right, and from top to bottom, in a complex alphabet derived from the Nagari script of India. There are two kinds of inscriptions. The most prestigious were in Sanskrit, and almost always in the form of poem; as Claude Jacques comments:
    These inscriptions were placed under the gaze of a particular god and seemingly were intended to attract that deity’s attention to the person who had had the sanctuary built in his honor or, more often, who was offering him gifts. Most of these donors were kings, the poems being composed upon their death. They were accompanied by a short eulogy (prashasti). Prose texts in Old Khmer comprised the other kind of inscription, frequently appearing on the same stone with the Sanskrit one; these had a very different, more prosaic, and far more informative subject matter. According to Jacques, the overwhelming majority are inventories listing the temple’s possessions – land, livestock, servants and furnishings. Some end with an imprecation formula, for example putting a curse upon any violator of the terms of the grant ‘as long as the moon and the sun shall last’.
    These texts are generally fixed in time by the intricate calendar system of ancient Cambodia, itself partly dependent upon astronomical and astrological considerations. The solar year is given in terms of the Great Era (saka) that began on the Vernal Equinox of AD 79; thus, one is to add 78 to the saka date to reach a year in our system. The digits making up the saka numbers may be spelled out alphabetically, or they may be given by chronograms: for example, saka 1044 (AD 1122) might be given symbolically by ‘oceans [4], ‘oceans’ (again)[4], ‘sky’ [o], ‘moon’ [1]. There were 12 lunar months, each divided into a 15-day waxing period and a 15-day waning one. The astrologers were deeply interested in the current position of the moon against the band of stars that runs along the ecliptic in a kind of lunar zodiac; since the sidereal month is about 27 days, there were 27 of these ‘lunar mansions’ or nakshatras, each with an animal name (the moon generally traversing one mansion a day). Because the lunar calendar was always running ahead of the solar one, extra lunar months were occasionally intercalated in a complex system of Indian origin.
    By Zhou Daguan’s day, solar years were also expressed in terms of a 12-year cycle, each year named for a specific animal, a system that they had borrowed from the Chinese – perhaps a reflection of Cambodian’s rapidly increasing trade with the Middle Kingdom.
    Like their counterparts in peninsular India, the Cambodian astrologers were close observers and calculators of the positions of the five visible planets (Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn) as these moved across the solar zodiac, which was essentially the same one that is still in use in the Western world. One more calendrical statement appearing in the inscriptions is the day of the seven-day week, each day being linked to one of the planets or to the sun or to the moon, as it is with us. According to Zhou, the ordinary Khmer had no family or personal names, but were known by the day of the week on which they were born.
    The Yugas – the huge cosmic cycle of successive creations and destructions – did not enter into their calendrical computations, but they certainly played a role in Cambodian cosmology, as Eleanor Morón Mannikka has shown in her study of the proportions and measurements of Angkor Wat.
    Zhou Daguan makes no mention of inscriptions, but he does talk about writing on perishable materials: there are the manuscripts, which probably existed in quantity in the libraries, state archives and temples of Classic Angkor. Not one, however, has survived the vicissitudes of time, history and tropical climate, a tragedy for Khmer scholarship. The religious texts, whether Brahmanic of Buddhist, were contained in palm-leaf books or sastra; these consisted of fronds about 50 to 60 cm (20 to 24 in) long, bound together into a stack by loose cords. Each leaf was incised with a stylus, and the scratched lines filled with lampblack. In the Angkor Wat reliefs, Brahmin pandita or gurus accompanying the Sacred Fire carry such books in their hands or on their shoulders, while at Banteay Chhmar, a pandita reads one accompanied by a Khmer theorbo
    It is likely that all secular books were paper screenfolds. Such accordionlike manuscripts were being produced in Cambodia until the middle of the twentieth century. The paper was manufactured from the inner bark of a member of the mulberry family; it was softened by soaking, then wrung out and finely shredded to separate the white from the brown fibres (these latter being used to produce black paper, the kind mentioned by Zhou). After this had been boiled with white lime and then washed and pounded, the resulting paste was spread onto cloth or screens and left to dry in sheets. White paper was treated with rice powder mixed with water and chalk, and black paper with soot or charcoal. The final stage was to polish the surfaces, and fold the paper into books. Manufactured paper was imported from China; while there is no mention of its use to make books, Zhou reports that the natives derived great amusement at seeing the Chinese use it as toilet paper.
    Zhou describes the chalk pencils that were used to write black pages, and says that such pages could be easily erased; accordingly, official documents, such as revenue, corvée manpower and census tallies must have been kept in the white-paged screenfolds, which were written in black ink, probably with bamboo and/or metal pens. Assuredly some of these paper books contained astronomical tables, for Zhou assures us that their astronomers could calculate solar and lunar eclipses – an impossibility without the accurate accumulation of observational data over a very long period of time.
    How literate were the Classic Khmer? Surely all the Brahmins of the empire could read and write, and so could the kings and princes, all of whom had been instructed by Brahmin teachers (in contrast to contemporary European rulers such as Charlemagne, who were often illiterate). The vast civil bureaucracy would have found it in their interest as revenue gatherers and beneficiaries to be literate, too. Both Mahayanist and Theravada Buddhist monks would by Sangha rules have to be able to read and recite the sacred texts of their faith. Add to this list the masters of works, the architects, and the master craftsmen who worked in stone and metal, and one can conclude that a substantial minority during Classic times was lettered. Nonetheless, the great majority of Khmer – the free peasants and the slaves – would have been unable to ‘read’ anything but the imagery of the reliefs and sculptures.

    Angkor: City and State

    With the exception of B.-P. Groslier, with his vision of an immense ‘hydraulic city’ containing almost two million souls, until recently few scholars had devoted much thought to what kind of city Angkor really was. As Roland Fletcher has said, ‘Angkor still needs to be reappraised as a place where people actually lived.’
    There were many cities during pre-modern times in both mainland and insular Southeast Asia. Following a dichotomy first recognized for medieval France, John Miksic of the University of Singapore has proposed that they fell into two groups. Heterogenetic cities were found along coastlines and at the borders of ecological zones rather than at their centres; they had few public monuments, and were characterized by entrepreneurship and intensive trade, as well as by high population densities (pro-colonial Malacca would have been an excellent example of such a city).
    Orthogenetic cities were located well inland, and were correlated with the production of a surplus staple crop – that is, rice – which could be commandeered by the authorities. Stability and ritual were the prevailing order, and there were impressive monuments of a religious nature. There was no money and little evidence for large markets and significant trade. ‘The permanent population of the orthogenetic city was composed of nobles, civil, religious and military bureaucrats, and their staff.’ In contrast with heterogenetic cities, overall population density was very low. From everything that we know about Angkor, it would appear to have been orthogenetic. Moving away from our area, so would have been the monumental Classic Maya cities such as Tikal, Copan and Palenque in Mesoamerica, with their royal courts and extremely dispersed patterns of settlement.
    A clue as to what at least part of Angkor might have looked like comes from the old Siamese capital of Ayutthaya in Thailand, founded in 1351 and destroyed by the Burmese in 1767. It was a conscious clone of the Khmer capital, Angkor Thom, and covered about the same area; instead of being bounded by a huge moat, it was surrounded on all sides by rivers or by connecting canals, and by a wall. An account of Ayutthaya by a seventeenth-century Dutch traveler states:
    The Streets of the walled Town are many of them large, straight and regular, with channels running through them, although the most part of small narrow Lanes, Ditches, and Creeks most confusedly placed; the Citizens have an incredible number of small boats…which come to their very doors, especially at floods and high water.
    Plans and watercolour drawings by Europeans show that it was crisscrossed by canals and streets, with the royal palace in the northwest sector (as in Angkor Thom); the only densely settled sector lay in the southeast. Comments by an early eighteenth-century observer are relevant here:
    Considering the bigness of the City, it is not very populous…scarce the sixth part is inhabited, and that to the South-East only. The rest lies desart [sic] where the Temples only stand…there are abundance of empty space and large gardens behind the streets, wherein they let nature work, so that they are full of Grass, Herbs, Shrubs and Trees, that grow wild…
    The houses of ordinary inhabitants were thatched, single-storey structures of bamboo and wood, built on piles, while foreign traders lived along the main north-south avenue in more substantial tile-roofed houses. Ayutthaya, whatever its Angkor-inspired beginnings, was slowly evolving from an orthogenetic to a partly heterogenetic city, due to the easy access that Chinese, European and Arab traders had from its waterways. Let us first consider Angkor Thom; in recent years its four quadrants have been surveyed in detail by Jacques Gaucher of the EFEO, using aerial photographs and ground ‘truthing’. The main axes of Angkor’s capital district were lined with canals, and, again like Ayutthaya, the Royal Palace was in the northwest quadrant; elsewhere, apart from the monumental constructions, there were numerous small water tanks, channels, and house mounds. Based on the results of this survey, Roland Fletcher suggests that while Angkor Thom could have held as many as 90,000 people (assuming a density of 100 persons per hectare), the population may have been only a quarter of that, given the amount of open space (as in Ayutthaya); the palace; the major temples; and the single-story dwellings.
    Turning now to the city of Angkor as a whole, a survey carried out there from 1992 to 1998 by Christophe Pottier has shown that this landscape was dotted with low mounds that had once supported hamlets of about five to ten traditional, single-storey houses. These mounds were associated with hundreds of small, local shrines and medium-sized, rectangular water tanks, recalling Zhou Daguan’s statement that ‘every family has a pond – or, at times, several families own one in common’. Based on ground survey and upon radar imagery and aerial photography, Fletcher now estimates that the total area of Angkor’s urban complex is about 1,000 square km (386 square miles), within which the people were mainly living along linear features – canals and roads that extend out from central Angkor for about 20 to 30 km (12 to 18 miles) in all directions, probably less and less densely occupied as one moves towards the peripheries. Angkor Thom, then, was like a kind of spider sitting in the centre of a virtual web of settlement, with large open spaces, including even rice fields, between the ‘threads’. This web extended well north of Preah Khan into the foothills of Phnom Kulen; the lovely Banteay Srei was probably at its northern edge.
    In Fletcher’s words, ‘Angkor was therefore a low density, dispersed urban complex with housing along linear features and scattered across the landscape in patches and on isolated mounds.’ Groslier’s estimate of 1.9 million persons is thus an impossibility. The true figure for Angkor at its apogee, during the reign of Jayavarman VII, was probably a fraction of this, but only a great deal of future research can give us an idea of the total population.
    The system of government that made Classic Khmer civilization and the city of Angkor possible was a highly effective and powerful ‘top down’ one, supported by a command economy and by a massive and all-encompassing, revenue-generating bureaucracy operating on every level from palace to village. Historian David Chandler has summarized this kind of government in both Cambodia of the 1860s, and Cambodia under the rule of Angkor.
    In both cases…government meant a network of status relationships whereby peasants paid in rice, forest products, or labour to support their officials. The officials, in turn, paid the king, using some of the rice, forest products, and peasant labour with which they had been paid. The number of peasants one could exploit in this way depended on the position one was granted by the throne; positions themselves were for sale, and this tended to limit the officeholders to members of the elite with enough money [absent, of course, in Classic times] or goods on hand to purchase their positions.
    In an influential 1982 essay, Cornell University historian O. W. Wolters proposed that many of the early polities of Southeast Asia, including the Angkorian one, were mandalas; this is a technical Sanskrit term meaning ‘a particular and often unstable situation in a vaguely defined geographical area without fixed boundaries and where smaller centres tended to look in all directions for ssecurity.’ A mandala was a ‘circle of kings and brahmins’, in which one king would lord it over lesser ones, and those kings in vassal or tributary status would continuously try to repudiate this and build up their own network of vassals. This would certainly apply to what we know was going on among rival kings in mainland Southeast Asia prior to AD 802. But for most of the time during the next five centuries, in spite of sporadic revolts and foreign invasion that could have occurred in any empire, the Angkor state – that is, the king – had complete control over all Khmer territory. This was enforced out to Cambodia’s frontiers not only by his army and his judicial system, but by his roving inspectors (the tamrvach) and by periodic census-taking. ‘Supreme and extensive political dominion’ is how the Oxford English Dictionary defines ‘empire’. The city of Angkor may not have looked like imperial Rome, but the Classic Khmer Empire over which it ruled lasted as long as the Roman one. Back to Top